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Can job crafting reduce job boredom and increase work engagement?: A three-year cross-lagged panel study
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Can job crafting reduce job boredom and increase work engagement?: A three-year cross-lagged panel study

Lotta K. Harju, Jari J. Hakanen and Wilmar B. Schaufeli
Journal of Vocational Behavior, pp.11-20
01/08/2016

Abstract

job boredom Work engagement job crafting Longitudinal study
Building upon the Conservation of Resources (COR) theory, this longitudinal study examined whether job crafting behaviors (i.e. increasing structural and social job resources and increasing challenges) predict less job boredom and more work engagement. We also tested the reverse causation effects of job boredom and work engagement on job crafting and the dynamics between the three job crafting behaviors over time. We employed a two-wave, three-year panel design and included 1630 highly educated Finnish employees from a broad spectrum of occupations in various organizations. Our results indicated that seeking challenges in particular negatively predicted job boredom and positively predicted work engagement. Seeking challenges fueled other job crafting behaviors, which, in their turn, predicted seeking more challenges over time, thus supporting the accumulation of resources. Job boredom negatively predicted increasing structural resources, whereas work engagement positively predicted increasing both structural and social resources. These findings suggest that seeking challenges at work enhances employee work engagement, prevents job boredom, and generates other job crafting behaviors. Conversely, job boredom seems to impede job crafting.
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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.3 Management
6.3.48 Organizational Behavior
Web of Science research areas
Psychology, Applied
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