Frontiers in Psychology (Apr 2023)

Psychosocial safety climate as a predictor of work engagement, creativity, innovation, and work performance: A case study of software engineers

  • Amy Zadow,
  • Amy Zadow,
  • May Young Loh,
  • Maureen Frances Dollard,
  • Gro Ellen Mathisen,
  • Bella Yantcheva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1082283
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionCreativity is vital for competitive advantage within technological environments facing the fourth industrial revolution. However, existing research on creativity has rarely addressed how a climate beneficial for worker psychological health, a psychosocial safety climate (PSC), could additionally stimulate the growth of workplace creativity, innovation, and performance in digital environments.MethodTo examine how individually perceived PSC influences subsequent work engagement promoting higher levels of computer-based radical and incremental creativity, innovation, and work performance, employees in a software engineering firm (N = 29, 86 observations) completed a weekly questionnaire for 4 consecutive weeks.ResultsAt the between-person level PSC was positively related to average future weekly individual fluctuations of creativity (radical and incremental), work engagement, and job performance. Additionally weekly work engagement was related to future creativity (radical and incremental). Work engagement also mediated the between-person relationship between PSC and future creativity (both radical and incremental). PSC did not predict innovation.DiscussionThis study contributes to the theory on PSC, creativity, and work performance by elucidating the individual perceived PSC-creativity relationship and suggesting PSC systems as meaningful antecedents to digital work performance.

Keywords