The impacts of trust and feelings on knowledge sharing among chinese employees

Michael Jijin Zhang (Sacred Heart University)

New England Journal of Entrepreneurship

ISSN: 2574-8904

Article publication date: 1 March 2014

1729
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Abstract

This article examines the differential effects of two types of trust (affect based and cognition based) and two types of feelings (ganqing and jiaoqing) on different knowledge-sharing processes (seeking, transfer, and adoption) among Chinese employees. The influences of these different types of trust and feelings on Chinese employeesʼ propensities to seek, transfer, and adopt explicit and tacit knowledge are also analyzed and discussed. The analysis shows affect-based trust increases knowledge transfer, while cognition-based trust is more important to knowledge seeking and adoption. Affect-based trust alone can facilitate the different processes of sharing explicit knowledge. Effective sharing of tacit knowledge, on the other hand, requires the simul-taneous support from affect-based trust and cognition-based trust. Ganqing and jiaoqing are also important in knowledge transfer and adoption. Either feeling may increase the likelihood to seek, transfer, and adopt explicit knowledge by itself. The influences of both feelings on tacit knowledge seeking, transfer, and adoption hinge on the presence of cognition-based trust.

Keywords

Citation

Zhang, M.J. (2014), "The impacts of trust and feelings on knowledge sharing among chinese employees", New England Journal of Entrepreneurship, Vol. 17 No. 1, pp. 21-28. https://doi.org/10.1108/NEJE-17-01-2014-B003

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © Published by DigitalCommons©SHU, 2014


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