Fostering Innovation: The Mediating Role of Need Satisfaction between Managerial Need Support and Team Innovation Behavior
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Date
2025-06-30
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Abstract
Innovation is essential for organizational survival and development. Intrinsically
motivated individuals are more likely to exhibit innovative behavior, and Self-
Determination Theory (SDT) suggests that intrinsic motivation requires three
basic psychological needs: Autonomy, Competence, and Relatedness. Thus, it
was hypothesized that managerial support of employees’ basic psychological
needs would enhance need satisfaction and thereby promote team innovative
behavior. It was further hypothesized that the autonomy relationships would be
moderated by the restrictive work design of the sample. A pre-registered analysis
was performed of 546 blue collar workers in four production companies in
Sweden. Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) was used to test the mediation
hypotheses, with multi-group analysis testing moderation. The results
demonstrated that the relationship between managers’ support of autonomy and
team innovative behavior was fully mediated by autonomy need satisfaction.
Competence and relatedness did not demonstrate mediation. Work design
autonomy did not moderate the relationships between autonomy dimensions. A
supplemental second-order factor (SOF) of need support was created due to
potential discriminant validity problems. The SOF of managerial need support
demonstrated a full mediation effect through need satisfaction onto innovative
behavior. This study demonstrated that managers could improve the innovative
behavior of their employees via supporting their psychological needs.