The Role of Employee Engagement in Revitalizing Creativity and Innovation at the Workplace: A Survey of Selected Libraries in Meru County - Kenya
Abstract
Creativity and innovation can neither be imposed nor can it be driven by disengaged employees. This
study postulated that the level of employee engagement spurs creativity and innovation in the library. It
aimed to establish the empirical evidence on whether employee engagement affects the level of
creativity and innovation in libraries. It investigated the effects of employee engagement on creativity
and innovation suggests improved model on the same. The study used descriptive cross-sectional
survey design to examine three purposively selected libraries. Structured questionnaires and semistructured
interviews were used to collect research data. Descriptive, correlation, regression, t-test and
ANOVA were used to analyze the collected data. The response rate was 91% from a sample size of 31
library staffs. Both levels of staff engagement and that of creativity and innovation from the three
libraries were found to be relatively high, 81.85% and 78.03% respectively. The mean values of these
two variables did not differ significantly and exhibited 83.1% relationship. No significant difference
was established between the two constructs but the outcome depended on how key constructs are
configured. The study concludes that employee engagement assumes a critical precursor role to
creativity and innovation at the workplace. Library leaders act as central catalysts and facilitators
during the configuration process. The study recommend need to challenge work processes,
environment, systems and patterns of thinking in library set-up, in order to nurture empowering
atmosphere. An integrated model of employee engagement on creativity and innovation has been
proposed.
URI
http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/libphilprac/1171http://repository.kemu.ac.ke/handle/123456789/831
Publisher
Library Philosophy and Practice
Collections
- Library [7]