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Working from anywhere: yin-yang cognition paradoxes of knowledge sharing and hiding for developing careers in China

Business

Working from anywhere: yin-yang cognition paradoxes of knowledge sharing and hiding for developing careers in China

T. Chin, Y. Shi, et al.

This research by Tachia Chin, Yi Shi, Manlio Del Giudice, Jianwei Meng, and Zeyu Xing dives into the complex interplay between remote work, knowledge sharing, and career development in China's manufacturing sector. Discover how an optimal balance could enhance career trajectories in today's precarious work environment.... show more
Abstract
Digital technology coupled with the quarantines caused by the COVID-19 pandemic has made working from anywhere (WFA)—a modern form of remote working—a widespread phenomenon. Given that WFA brings new career challenges to and engenders paradoxes of knowledge exchange among employees, this research aims to examine how the interactions of remote work time (RWT), knowledge sharing (KS), and knowledge hiding (KH) affect career development (CD) from a culturally grounded paradoxical framing of yin-yang harmonizing. The data were collected from Chinese manufacturing employees, and a moderated hierarchical regression analysis was used to examine the hypotheses. The results show an inverted U-shaped relationship between RWT and CD. The interaction of KS and KH is significantly related to CD, and the inverted U-shaped RWT-CD relationship is moderated by the interaction term, in which RWT exerts the most substantial positive impact on CD when KS is high and KH is low. This study offers valuable implications for coping with perplexing employment relationships and increasing career challenges in volatile work environments. The primary originality is to adopt a novel cognitive frame of yin-yang harmonizing to examine the nonlinear effect of remote working and the symbiotic impact of KS and KH on CD, which not only enriches the understanding of flexible work arrangements in the digital economy but also provides novel insights into the interconnectedness of KS and KH and their interacting effects on HRM-related outcomes.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
May 15, 2023
Authors
Tachia Chin, Yi Shi, Manlio Del Giudice, Jianwei Meng, Zeyu Xing
Tags
remote work
knowledge sharing
knowledge hiding
career development
China
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