Abstract:
Organizational factors such as lack of leader openness to voice, lack of open
communication opportunity and defensive norms of organizational culture, may lead to the
employees’ cognitive decision to intentionally engage in silence behavior. This ultimately
results in low levels of organizational commitment. Yet, less consideration has been given
to empirically explore these mechanisms while providing theoretical underpinnings.
Hence, this study applied the theoretical lens of expectancy theory to understand how these
organizational factors influence employee’s conscious decision to intentionally engage in
silence behavior, which in turn impacts organizational commitment, in the new empirical
context of banking sector of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. Moreover, this study used
mixed method, sequential explanatory design in which first quantitative part of the study
aimed at investigating the mediating role of employee silence between organizational
factors and organizational commitment, whereas second qualitative part aimed at
explaining the reasons behind the significant and insignificant findings of the study and to
re-conceptualize expectancy theory based employee silence model. During the first
quantitative phase, probability sampling (two step stratified random sampling) was used
to get sample of 1243 bankers in 258 branches of 8 commercial banks from 12 districts of
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistan. The Questionnaire was used for data collection and
reliability / validity of the instruments were established through Cronbach alpha and
confirmatory factor analysis respectively. The regression analysis, Sobel’s test and
structural equation modeling were used for mediation analyses. Furthermore, in the
qualitative phase, semi structured interview was conducted while incorporating thematic
coding and causal networking techniques. The results revealed that all the hypotheses
regarding the direct relation between organizational factors, employee silence and
organizational commitment were accepted, except one hypothesis. Moreover, the
hypothesized mediated models regarding the intervening role of employee silence between
organizational factors and organizational commitment were partially supported, thus
extending theory to new empirical context. Additionally, the second qualitative phase
provides immense theoretical contribution, by providing explanation for significant and
insignificant findings of the study, and presents expectancy theory based employee silence
models for the banking sector of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. Thus, through
triangulation of data, the findings of this study add to the existing body of knowledge and
provides valuable insights for bank management, policy makers and HR managers in
identifying the areas that needs their attention. Thus, all these factors make this research
work significant and, also timely. The limitations, future research avenues, and
implications are also discussed.