Co-produced decentralised surveys as a trustworthy vector to put employees' well-being at the core of companies' performance
Assessing employees' well-being has become central to fostering an environment where employees can thrive and contribute to companies' adaptability and competitiveness in the market. Traditional methods for assessing well-being often face significant challenges, with a major issue being th...
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Zusammenfassung: | Assessing employees' well-being has become central to fostering an
environment where employees can thrive and contribute to companies'
adaptability and competitiveness in the market. Traditional methods for
assessing well-being often face significant challenges, with a major issue
being the lack of trust and confidence employees may have in these processes.
Employees may hesitate to provide honest feedback due to concerns not only
about data integrity and confidentiality, but also about power imbalances among
stakeholders. In this context, blockchain-based decentralised surveys,
leveraging the immutability, transparency, and pseudo-anonymity of blockchain
technology, offer significant improvements in aligning responsive actions with
employees' feedback securely and transparently. Nevertheless, their
implementation raises complex issues regarding the balance between trust and
confidence. While blockchain can function as a confidence machine for data
processing and management, it does not inherently address the equally important
cultural element of trust. To effectively integrate blockchain technology into
well-being assessments, decentralised well-being surveys must be supported by
cultural practices that build and sustain trust. Drawing on blockchain
technology management and relational cultural theory, we explain how
trust-building can be achieved through the co-production of decentralised
well-being surveys, which helps address power imbalances between the
implementation team and stakeholders. Our goal is to provide a dual
cultural-technological framework along with conceptual clarity on how the
technological implementation of confidence can connect with the cultural
development of trust, ensuring that blockchain-based decentralised well-being
surveys are not only secure and reliable but also perceived as trustworthy
vector to improve workplace conditions. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.20919 |