Options
Simon Daniel Schafheitle
Title
Dr.
Last Name
Schafheitle
First name
Simon Daniel
Email
simondaniel.schafheitle@unisg.ch
Phone
+41 71 224 7584
Now showing
1 - 10 of 37
-
PublicationSmart Tech is all Around us – Bridging Employee Vulnerability with Organizational Active Trust-Building( 2023-06-04)van der Werff, LisaPublic and academic opinion remains divided regarding the benefits and pitfalls of datafication technology in organizations, particularly regarding their impact on employees. Taking a dual-process perspective on trust, we propose that datafication technology can create small, erratic surprises in the workplace that highlight employee vulnerability and increase employees’ reliance on the systematic processing of trust. We argue that these surprises precipitate a phase in the employment relationship in which employees more actively weigh trust-related cues, and the employer should therefore engage in active trust management to protect and strengthen the relationship. Our paper develops a framework of symbolic and substantive strategies to guide organizations’ active trust management efforts to (re-)create situational normality, root goodwill intentions, and enable a more balanced interdependence between the organization and its employees. We discuss the implications of our paper for reconciling competing narratives about the future of work and for developing an understanding of trust processes.
Scopus© Citations 3 -
PublicationType: journal articleJournal: Academy of Management DiscoveriesVolume: 6Issue: 3
Scopus© Citations 67 -
PublicationThe Road to Trust. A Vignette Study on the Determinants of Citizens’ Trust in the European Commission( 2020)
;Meidert, NadineLeuffen, DirkType: journal articleJournal: Journal of Common Market StudiesVolume: 58Issue: 2DOI: 10.1111/jcms.12901Scopus© Citations 9 -
PublicationThe Challenges of Algorithm-based HR Decision-making for Personal Integrity(Springer, 2019-06)Organizations increasingly rely on algorithm-based HR decision-making to monitor their employees. This trend is reinforced by the technology industry claiming that its decision-making tools are efficient and objective, downplaying their potential biases. In our manuscript, we identify an important challenge arising from the efficiency-driven logic of algorithm-based HR decision-making, namely that it shifts the delicate balance between employees’ personal integrity and compliance toward favoring compliance. The reason is that algorithm-based HR decision-making may marginalize human sense-making, promote blind trust in rules, and replace moral imagination. We suggest that critical data literacy, ethical awareness, the use of participatory design methods, and private regulatory regimes within civil society can help overcome these challenges. Our paper contributes to literature on workplace monitoring, critical data studies, personal integrity and literature at the intersection between HR management and corporate responsibility.Type: journal articleJournal: Journal of business ethics : JOBEVolume: 160Issue: 2
Scopus© Citations 15 -
PublicationGoldgräberstimmung im Personalmanagement? Wie Datafizierungs-Technologien die Personalsteuerung verändern.(Handelsblatt Fachmedien GmbH, 2019-07-12)Type: journal articleJournal: Zeitschrift für OrganisationsentwicklungIssue: 3
-
PublicationType: journal articleJournal: Zeitschrift Führung + OrganisationVolume: 87Issue: 3
-
PublicationThe Quest for Trust in Technology-Immersed Workplaces - Determinants of Employees’ Trustworthiness Expectations and Willingness to be Vulnerable Towards Their Employer( 2023-06-15)Lisa Van Der WerffIn this paper, we analyze the determinants of employees’ perceptions of employer trustworthiness and of their willingness to be vulnerable in a technology-immersed workplace. By means of a factorial survey experiment, we investigate the causal impact of various active trust strategies based on technology and bureaucracy acceptance, trust and the leadership literature. By active trust strategies, we refer to means of the employer to actively cultivate and intensify the trust relationship in the context of technology-induced trust strain. Our analyses show that a participatory style of technology implementation and a salient experimental and error culture have a direct causal impact on employees willingness to be vulnerable; the impact of human-centered technology design and caring leadership principles, however, are mediated by trustworthiness perceptions.Type: conference paper
-
PublicationType: conference paperJournal: Proceedings of the 55th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS 2022)
-
PublicationHow leaders develop trust in high trust organizations - Many routes to active trusting( 2020-08-07)Möllering, GuidoType: conference paper
-
PublicationType: conference paperJournal: Proceedings of the 54th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS 2021)