Author:
Scheuer Cara-Lynn,Loughlin Catherine,Ford Dianne,Edwards Dennis
Abstract
Purpose
Successful knowledge transfer (KT) between younger and older workers (YW and OW, respectively) is critical for organizational success, especially in light of the recent surge in employment volatility among the youngest and oldest segments of the workforce. Yet, practitioners and scholars alike continue to struggle with knowing how best to facilitate these exchanges. The qualitative study offers insight into this phenomenon by exploring how KT unfolds in YW/OW dyads.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors performed a reflexive thematic analysis of semistructured interviews with two samples of blue- and white-collar younger/older workers from the USA (N = 40), whereby the authors interpreted the “lived experiences” of these workers when engaged in interdependent tasks.
Findings
The analysis, informed by social exchange theory and exchange theories of aging, led to the development of the knowledge transfer process model in younger/older worker dyads (KT-YOD). The model illustrates that, through different combinations of competence and humility, KT success is experienced either directly (by workers weighing the perceived benefits versus costs of KT) and/or indirectly (through different bases of trust/distrust perceived within their dyads). Further, humility in dyads appears to be necessary for KT success, while competence was insufficient for realizing KT success, independently.
Originality/value
In exposing new inner workings of the KT process in YW/OW dyads, the study introduces the importance of humility and brings scholars and organizations a step closer toward realizing the benefits of age diversity in their workplaces.
Subject
Management of Technology and Innovation,Strategy and Management
Reference114 articles.
1. AARP (2016), “Disrupting aging in the workplace: profiles in intergenerational diversity leadership”, available at: www.aarp.org/content/dam/aarp/ppi/2016-08/Disrupt%20Aging%20in%20the%20Workforce%20Report_FINAL_WEB.pdf (accessed 07 Month 2020).
2. Old and unemployable? how age-based stereotypes affect willingness to hire job candidates;Journal of Social Issues,2016
3. Does humility facilitate knowledge sharing? Investigating the role of humble knowledge inquiry and response;Journal of Knowledge Management,2019
4. Generational difference and the developmental stake;Aging and Human Development,1971
5. A formal model of trust based on outcomes;The Academy of Management Review,1998