1. Introduction
Economic and social forces have changed the models, strategies, structures, and processes of traditional business (Muafi et al. 2021). The new business opportunities related to these developments reduce international development inequality (Tayibnapis et al. 2018), local use and spatial effects (Mossberger et al. 2022), and encourage uniformity across industries (Reuschke et al. 2022). Leadership and human resource management (HRM) are crucial for companies using digital technology because of the transformation of human capital due to technological development (Grigorescu et al. 2021). Business leaders and HR managers are agents of digital change in the world of work. These leaders must adopt effective styles in their leadership. They must serve, share, and empower their employees. Credibility, competence, communication, coordination, and participation from employees reflect the success of leadership styles in the digital era. At the same time, HR managers must work with an appropriate approach to ensure the high performance of their employees. They need to conduct dialogue-based and open HRM practices (HRMPs) to ensure acceptance from their employees. HR planning (HRP), training, compensation, and occupational safety and health (OSH) are not separate from digital transformation for companies.
Three leadership styles (LSs) for SMEs that are now emerging in the digital era are based on service from leaders to employees, interaction between leaders and employees, and empowerment from leaders to employees. These styles can be denoted as servant, shared, and empowering leadership. Different leadership styles relate to HRM from different perspectives. When servant, shared, and empowering leadership align with digitization, their relationship with IEP is interesting to study. Leadership styles are related to employee performance (Megawaty et al. 2022), as are HRMPs (Dela Cruz and Cabaluna 2022). HRP, training, compensation, and OHS are HRMPs that are important and relevant to study in the digital economy. The basic idea of high-involvement human resource management practices (HIHRMPs) is to increase employees’ motivation by developing their knowledge, skills, and abilities directly towards organizational issues (Rubel et al. 2016). HIHRMPs help employees to participate in the creation of attractive practices in companies (Renkema et al. 2021). SMEs need IT skills to prepare their digital businesses and resources (Wiliandri 2020). However, studies on the relationship between LSs, HIHRMPs, and employee performance are difficult to find.
Researchers have investigated servant, shared, and empowering leadership in various contexts, such as the digital economy and in small and medium enterprises (SMEs). For example, we found more than sixteen thousand results when we entered the keywords, “servant leadership, shared leadership, empowering leadership in the digital economy”, in Google Scholar in mid-April 2022 (14 April 2022), and more than thirteen thousand results appeared for the keywords, “servant leadership, shared leadership, empowering leadership in SMEs”. However, these results were generally studies conducted in a compartmentalized manner, offering no overarching measures to leaders seeking to apply a single leadership style. Research results that combine servant, shared, and empowering leadership are rare in various scientific journal databases, such as Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed, and Crossref, especially for the digital economy and SMEs. Meanwhile, HRMP studies on companies have not led to a viable approach that promotes dialogue and openness in these contexts. They are limited to the investigation of the role of HRM in the digital economy and, vice versa, the role of digitization in HRM.
Information technology (IT) expert Don Tapscott introduced the concept of the digital economy in his book, entitled The Digital Economy in 1994: Promise and Peril in the Age of Networked Intelligence (Teiușan and Deaconu 2021). Subsequently, Nicholas Negroponte reintroduced it from the University of Massachusetts in 1995 (Narmanov 2022). Indonesia has utilized technological developments over the last thirty years to enable all Indonesians to become part of the digital economy in Southeast Asia (Barata 2019). One of the economic effects is the increasing number of SMEs opening in Indonesia (Arief et al. 2021). These businesses drive the Indonesian economy, making up 99.9 percent of the total companies in Indonesia (Haryati et al. 2021). Furthermore, they drive digital change through their pursuit of competitive advantages in the context of sustainable competition (Fachrunnisa et al. 2020) in the era of the Industrial Revolution 4.0, characterized by the application of digital technology, big data, IoT, and robotics technology. The Indonesian government initiated a strategic plan focused on SMEs. Its aims were to encourage their participation in building the national economy, develop a roadmap of e-commerce based on the synchronization of thirty-nine strategic initiatives across eight ministries, establish friendly foreign direct investment policies to attract techno-based investment and strengthen the domestic base of venture capital, facilitate access to funding, enable the digitization of SMEs and the rapid growth of quality start-ups, and adopt pro-innovation policies (Ramli 2020). The large population and the fragmented geography of Indonesia are good reasons for SMEs to adopt e-commerce (Rahayu and Day 2017).
The adoption of digitization varies from using computers or the Internet to modern technologies such as cloud computing or big data. It even involves business models based on digital products and services, or using elements from Industry 4.0 (Zimmermann 2016). The Internet enables automation and coordination, communication and collaboration, expands trade, creates jobs, and improves access to services (Falentina et al. 2021). Lubuklinggau is a city at the westernmost district level in South Sumatra province, Indonesia. LSs and HIHRMPs for SMEs in this city are interesting to study. Based on data from the Central Bureau of Statistics of Lubuklinggau accessed on 14 April 2022, more than five thousand SMEs were operating in this city in 2020. The economy grew in 2021, with the economic structure comprising construction, wholesale and retail trade, the repair of cars and motorcycles, real estate, manufacturing, transportation, and warehousing industries.
This research aims to identify the positive effects of servant, shared and empowering leadership styles on individual employee performance (IEP) mediated by HIHRMPs. Researchers have widely studied the causal relationship between LSs, HRMPs, and EP. However, it is rare to find research explaining this relationship in the context of the digital economy. Although many studies discuss the relationship between LSs and HRMPs, they are not in the context of the digital economy. When entering the keywords of leadership styles, HRM, and digital economy into Google and Google Scholar in mid-April 2022, we found that many research results focus on leadership and HRM in digitalization. However, they did not relate to each other in this context.
After this introductory section, we describe the relationship between LSs, HIHRMPs, and IEP in the literature review section. We propose four hypotheses regarding this relationship that form the basis of the research framework in this section. The following sections are the Methodology, Results and Discussion, and Conclusions. We describe the data used and the process for collecting them, the types of statistical analysis used, and the research instruments used in the methodology section. We present the Results and Discussion sections separately for a more detailed understanding. Then, we conclude in the context of the digital economy.
2. Literature Review
Amid an economy hit by the COVID-19 crisis, company leaders and managers must think critically to maintain the performance of their employees. Researchers have proven that the main challenges faced by SMEs in the time of COVID-19 include decreased customer purchasing power, restrictions on interaction and working hours, shortages of raw materials, cancellation of orders, cash flow difficulties, and supply chain disruption (Priyono et al. 2020). Of course, this requires effective leadership styles and an effective approach of HRM to realize employee performance.
2.1. LSs and IEP
Enterprise digitization involves the ability to convert existing products into digital variants. This advantage is crucial for today and future competition. Over the past two decades, this has challenged companies of all sizes and ages (Rossato and Castellani 2020). The digital era demands all employees in companies to work with high motivation, productivity, and task performance. These three requirements represent IEP (Leroy et al. 2018; Marescaux et al. 2019; He et al. 2021). LSs and HRMPs have roles in meeting these demands.
Greenleaf, 1970, introduced the concept of servant leadership (Winston 2022). Then, Eva et al., 2019, re-explained its essence (Aboramadan et al. 2022). This leadership emphasizes ethical, spiritual, and communal values. It is a particular style of prosocial leadership (Neubert et al. 2022). It is also service-oriented, knowledge-based, participatory, process-related, ethical, and socially responsible, reducing scandals or conflicts in organizations (Tantri et al. 2021). Servant leaders fulfill the psychological needs of followers through autonomy, relatedness, and competence (Kaltiainen and Hakanen 2022). They provide psychological resources to employees to deal with their job (Ruiz-Palomino et al. 2022), place the welfare of their followers above their own (Lv et al. 2022), contribute to overall employee development (Kumar et al. 2022), and engage employees in emotion and spirit (Uymaz and Arslan 2022). Indeed, servant leaders service their employees individually, increasing credibility, competency, and communication (Russell and Stone 2002).
The idea of shared leadership has historical roots; almost a century ago, Follett suggested in 1924 that one should look not only to the designated leader but also to others on the team for leadership (D’Innocenzo et al. 2021). Then, Gibb introduced this form of leadership in 1954 (Salas-Vallina et al. 2022). Researchers have explained this leadership with different definitions and conceptualizations (Klasmeier and Rowold 2022). They have described that lateral influence among peers, team phenomenon emergence, and influence spreading across team members existing in this leadership type (Zhu et al. 2018). They have also described that while explained in any disciplines, they are still very much in their nascent stage with many theoretical approaches (Scott-Young et al. 2019). The leaders imply that members have the autonomy and discretion to make decisions and carry out actions (Liang et al. 2021) and encourage individuals to step forward to lead others or withdraw to lead others in the situation (Castellano et al. 2021). Contemporary organizational research recognizes shared leadership (Sinha et al. 2021). Indeed, shared leaders service the employee by coordinating with teamwork formally and informally (Song et al. 2020).
Researchers call for empowering leadership that creates a conducive environment that reduces feelings of powerlessness for high individual self-efficacy and control (Rohlfer et al. 2022; Lin et al. 2022). They understand that the historical development of empowering leadership coincides with leaders’ superiority and employee self-esteem (Cheong et al. 2019). Researchers have also proven that this leadership form enables employees to achieve company goals by delegating responsibility, authority, influence, and power from the leaders to them. Indeed, empowering leaders consult with their employees about strategic decisions, employee abilities, and rules and regulations (Naqshbandi et al. 2018).
Recent research results show that servant leadership relates to IEP and affects employee motivation (Tran and Truong 2021), job performance (Alahbabi et al. 2021), and employee performance (Wanta and Augustine 2021; Pratiwi and Nawangsari 2021). This relationship can indirectly occur, for example, servant leadership and task performance are mediated by work engagement (Kaltiainen and Hakanen 2022; Peng and Chen 2021), and servant leadership and job performance by trust and knowledge sharing (Kadarusman and Benjamin 2021). Shared leadership relates to employee performance (Ahmed et al. 2022; Ali et al. 2018) and individual performance (Humborstad et al. 2014). Indirectly, shared leadership relates to employee task performance and is mediated by employee feedback-seeking behavior (Qian et al. 2018) and employee motivation (Kim et al. 2018). Shared leadership also indirectly relates to adaptive performance through the mediating role of proactive behavior (Fu et al. 2020). Empowering leadership relates directly or indirectly to employee performance (Ali et al. 2018). Empowering leadership relates to employee performance (Kim et al. 2018; Ahmed et al. 2022). Researchers have found a positive relationship between employee psychological empowerment and performance over the last two decades (Shi et al. 2022). Empowering leadership is a specific set of leader behaviors about delegating authority and increasing individual motivation towards their tasks (Cheong et al. 2019). Based on the causal relationship between LSs and IEP, we assume that servant, shared, and empowering leadership improve IEP.
Positively, LSs in the scope of the servant, shared, and empowering leadership affect IEP.
2.2. HIHRMPs and IEP for Sustainability
Researchers have agreed that SHRM includes many practices such as recruitment, training, performance appraisal, career management, and compensation (Da Silva et al. 2020; Alsafadi and Altahat 2021; Shaukat et al. 2015; Tabiu et al. 2016; Manzoor et al. 2019). They have also agreed that HIHRMPs emerge when employees have well-developed skills, the motivation to apply them, and platforms through which to contribute them (Huo et al. 2015; Leroy et al. 2018). High involvement by employees supports the work of HR managers in realizing sustainability for a company.
The main objective of HRP is to ensure the best level of interaction between employees and their jobs (Gautam and Raj 2018). It is a procedure for anticipating and preparing for the departure of retiring workers and also replacing them with new workers (Ellinger and Svendsen 2021). HRP is one of the leading strategies to improve employee performance through detection (Muma et al. 2018). It is a rational and planned approach to staff recruitment, retention, utilization, and performance (Mansaray 2019). HRP includes obtaining the number of qualified employees and the appropriate employee allocation for improving productivity (Gomathy et al. 2022). Researchers have studied the relationship between recruitment and selection in HRP and employee performance (Al Qudah et al. 2014).
Training is a process relating to employee cognitive disposition to conform to an organization’s expectations (John and Dickson 2022). Researchers have explained that it can be a systematic process or a learning experience of acquiring knowledge, skills, abilities, and attitudes and behaviors to meet job requirements (Karim 2019). Training builds original HRs through developing task-related skills and knowledge in education (Sung and Choi 2018). Researchers have explained that training is a business activity, a short-term educational process, and a planning process for developing attitudes, knowledge, or artistic experience through learning to improve performance (Rahayu et al. 2019). It relates to employee performance (Pramono and Prahiawan 2022; Handayani and Kasidin 2022; Arwab et al. 2022) and motivation (Tumi et al. 2021). Training increases productivity (Abba 2018).
Compensation is a tool that organizations use to influence employee behavior to increase their contribution and achieve organizational goals (Tumi et al. 2021). It refers to all forms of financial returns, tangible services, and benefits employees receive (Mohammed et al. 2022). Researchers have revealed that compensation refers to basic salaries and additional wages such as overtime pay in meeting needs and salary satisfaction (Widhy et al. 2021). Compensation includes all employee rewards for contributions made to companies (Nguyen et al. 2020) and relates to employee performance (Ramli 2020; Pratibha 2022; Jean et al. 2017).
OSH is an aspect of employee welfare that includes happiness and relationships (De Cieri and Lazarova 2021). The superintelligence revolution, based on the Internet of Things, cyber–physical systems, and artificial intelligence (AI), requires OSH (Min et al. 2019). Occupational health systems in companies also require organizational leaders and managers to take over responsibility (Silva and Amaral 2019). Researchers have found a relationship between OSH and employee well-being (Diaz-Carrion et al. 2019). It is a core responsibility of the HRM (Fan et al. 2020) that impacts on the economy (Mwangi and Waiganjo 2017). Researchers have integrated OSH management and operations management (Hasle et al. 2021). Its implementation creates work safety, reduces accidents (Ilyas et al. 2021), determines work motivation among employees (Nkrumah et al. 2021), and improves employee performance (Ekowati 2019).
Researchers have agreed that employee performance constitutes the quality and quantity of work achieved by an employee in carrying out the responsibilities assigned based on the standards set by the organization (Idris et al. 2022). Achieving a high level of performance through productivity has become the goal for the company (Kazmi and Javaid 2022). Thus, individual performance is appropriate to study in terms of motivation, productivity, and task performance. Employee performance includes high motivation and productivity (Leroy et al. 2018) and task performance (He et al. 2021; Marescaux et al. 2019). Companies will easily achieve their target organizational performance when employees reach the predetermined target. The performance of an organization reflects the performance of the employees who work in it.
HIHRMPSs in the scope of HRP, training, compensation, and OSH positively affect IEP.
2.3. LSs and HIHRMPs
Leadership and HRM can interact when shaping various outcomes (Zhao et al. 2020), for example, they have an impact on employee performance. Indeed, leadership relates to HRMP (Demo et al. 2022). Different leadership styles relate to HRM from different perspectives, for example, green transformational leadership, green HRM (Zhao and Huang 2022), transformational leadership, and HRM practices (Kloutsiniotis et al. 2022; AlAbri et al. 2022). Thus, leadership in serving, sharing, and empowerment can relate to HRMP in the scope of HRP, training, compensation, and OSH. Rotundo and Sackett, 2002, explained that employee performance is a controlled behavior to support organizational goals (Lyubykh et al. 2022).
LSs in the scope of servant, shared and empowering leadership positively affect HIHRMPs.
HIHRMPs in the scope of HRP, training, compensation, and OSH mediate the positive relationship between LSs and IEP.
2.4. Research Framework
Based on the above hypotheses, we describe the research framework as shown in Figure 1. LSs are the independent variable that positively affect IEP and HIHRMPs. HIHRMPs are the mediating variable that positively affect IEP, which is the dependent variable.
3. Methodology
This research implements an explanatory approach that explains the relationship between the three variables measured based on existing theories. We measure LSs for the first indicator by service by the leaders in increasing credibility, competence, and communication among their employees. Formal and informal leader coordination with employee work teams indicates the sharing LS. The opportunities provided by leaders to employees to participate in making decisions characterize empowering LSs. We measure HIHRMPs by well-developed skills, motivation, and platforms owned by employees in HRP, training, compensation, and OSH. We measure IEP by motivation, productivity, and the task performance of employees. All measures of these three variables form the basis for developing a self-report questionnaire, as shown in Table 1. It contains six questions for LSs, four questions for HIHRMPs, and three for IEP. We use demographic characteristics consisting of gender, age, formal education, and work experience to describe the respondent’s profile, as shown in Table 2.
The questionnaire was created online in Google Forms format and distributed to respondents with a target of 300 people. They were employees of SMEs in Lubuklinggau. We used the snowball sampling method by utilizing the social media platforms of WhatsApp and Messenger to distribute the questionnaire to respondents from November 2021 to January 2022. This method was adequate for the development of information technology for the people in the city. We provided a 5-point Likert scale to classify their answers, namely, strongly disagree (1), disagree (2), neutral (3), agree (4), and strongly agree (5). We did not ask for respondents’ identities or their companies’ identities. The cross-sectional data that we collected came to a total of 276 samples, and was then processed using SPSS and AMOS, which are programs appropriate for covariance-based structural equation modeling (CB-SEM) with more than 200 samples.
4. Results
We tested common method bias (CMB), validity, and reliability before testing and analyzing the data. Based on the results of the CMB, the percentage of the variance was 0.65 or above 0.50. This showed that the data had a CMB, which then needed to be tested for validity and reliability. The calculated R-value of all items was 0.534 to 0.696, higher than the table R-value (DF (N-2) or 276 − 2 = 274) with a significance level of 0.05, 0.118 (X.1 = 0.677, X.2 = 0.683, X.3 = 0.604, X.4 = 0.644, X.5 = 0.647, X.6 = 1, Y1.1 = 0.618, Y1.2 = 0.601, Y1.3 = 0.534, Y1.4 = 1, Y2.1 = 0.696, Y2.2 = 0.680, Y2.3 = 1). Additionally, the Cronbach alpha of X = 0.93, Y1 = 0.849, and Y2 = 0.869.
We explain these research results in four parts: descriptive analysis, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), goodness of fit (GoF) analysis, and hypothesis analysis. The first part (Table 3) compares the mean, standard deviation, and variance of all data per indicator. The second part includes construct validity (Table 4), convergent validity and construct reliability (Table 5), average variance, and implied covariance extracted metrics (Table 6). The third part describes the chi-square model (CMIN)/the degrees of freedom (df), the root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA), comparative fit index (CFI), Tucker–Lewis fit index (TLI), incremental fit index (IFI), relative fit index (RFI), normal fit index (NFI), root mean square residual (RMR), and goodness of fit (GFI). The last part shows the direct and indirect relationship between the variables, critical ratio, probability, and decision to accept or reduce the hypotheses.
4.1. Descriptive Analysis
Based on Table 3, from a total of 13 indicators studied based on a sample of 276 (N), the answers from the respondents were spread from 1 (minimum value) to 5 (maximum value) on a 5-point Likert scale. The mean values were between 3.50 and 3.72. They reflected a statement agreeing to all statements in the questionnaire. The standard deviation values were between 1.106 and 1.182, and the variance values were between 1.224 and 1.408. These values were far below the average value, which means that the data were well distributed.
4.2. CFA
Based on Table 4, all estimated values ranged from 0.891 to 1.045. These values were more than 0.7 and well above the standard error (SE) values. This means that all indicators were constructively valid. The critical ratio (CR) values were between 13.700 and 18.227, and all probability values were 0.000. These CR values were well above 2.96, which means that all relationships between the indicators and variables were positive and significant.
Based on Table 5, all loading factor (LF) values were between 0.736 and 0.853 (>0.7). This means that, convergently, all indicators were valid. All average variance extracted (AVE) values were between 0.53 and 0.63 (>0.5). This means that all discriminatory indicators were valid. The construct reliability (CR) values were between 0.82 and 0.91, and the Cronbach Alpha (CA) values were between 0.849 and 0.93. Thus, all indicators were reliable.
Based on Table 6, all metric implied covariance values for each indicator were greater than the values on the left and below:
Y2.3 = 1.392 > all values in the lower columns (0.878, etc.);
Y2.2 = 1.220 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.878, etc.) and below (0.841, etc.);
Y2.1 = 1.236 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.841, etc.) and below (0.784 etc.);
Y1.4 = 1.220 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.784, etc.) and below (0.673, etc.);
Y1.3 = 1.220 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.673, etc.) and below (0.701 etc.);
Y1.2 = 1.270 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.701, etc.) and below (0.772, etc.);
Y1.1 = 1.253 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.772, etc.) and below (0.802, etc.);
X.6 = 1.337 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.802, etc.) and below (0.893, etc.);
X.5 = 1.329 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.893, etc.) and below (0.944, etc.);
X.4 = 1.357 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.944, etc.) and below (0.917, etc.);
X.3 = 1.338 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.917, etc.) and below (0.932 etc.);
X.2 = 1.351 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.932, etc.) and below (0.974 etc.);
X.1 = 1.403 > all values in the left-hand columns (0.974, etc.).
4.3. GoF and SEM
The results of the GoF analysis ensured that the research model was feasible to proceed to the hypothesis testing process with SEM. The CMIN value = 87.143 and the degrees of freedom (df) value = 62; thus, the CMIN/df value = 1.406 (<2). RMSEA value = 0.038 (<3); CFI value = 0.991 (>0.9); TLI value = 0.989 (>0.9); IFI value = 0.991 (>0.9); RFI value = 0.963 (>0.9); NFI = 0.971 (>0.9); RMR value = 0.027 (>0.9); and GFI value = 0.953 (>0.9). Figure 2 shows the SEM output of AMOS. The model was recursive with a sample size of 276. The number of different sample moments was 378. The number of variables was 60, with 27 observed variables and 33 unobserved variables. This could also be 31 exogenous variables and 29 endogenous variables.
Figure 2 explains the relationship between the three variables and between the indicators and variables. LSs, the independent variable, affected the two dependent variables, HIHRMPs and IEP. There were seven indicators of SLSs, four indicators of HIHRMPs, and three indicators of IEP. All values of the relationships between SLSs and IEP, HIHRMPs and IEP, SLSs and HIHRMPs were positive. These showed positive relationships.
4.4. Hypotheses
Table 7 shows two accepted hypotheses, H1 and H3, and two rejected hypotheses, H2 and H4. Thus, LSs significantly positively affected IEP and HIHRMPs. In contrast, HIHRMPs did not affect IEP significantly, and did not mediate the positive relationship between LSs and IEP. Thus, the results did not confirm the model in the research framework. It only provided a direct relationship, not an indirect relationship.
5. Discussion
LSs positively relate to IEP. Employee motivation, productivity, and task performance improve when leaders provide service, sharing, and empowerment to their employees. Additionally, LSs positively relate to HIHRMPs. Employee involvement in HRP, training, compensation, and OSH improves when leaders provide service, sharing, and empowerment to their employees.
5.1. Theoretical Implications
To improve IEP in the digital era, SME employees need support from SME leaders through service, sharing, and empowerment. Employees improve their motivation, productivity, and job performance when leaders provide services with credibility, competence, and communication skills. They also achieve high motivation, productivity, and job performance when leaders interact formally and informally in team coordination and involve their employees in making decisions.
To improve HIHRMPs in the digital era, SME HR managers need support from leaders through service, sharing, and empowerment. The involvement of SME employees in HRP, training, compensation, and OSH improves when their leader displays an understanding of their credibility, competence, and communication skills. Employee HIHRMPs also occur when leaders interact formally and informally in team coordination and involve their employees in managerial decision-making.
Thus, LSs have a crucial role in improving IEP and HIHRMPs in the digital era. Embracing digital technology in SMEs requires LSs and HIHRMPs. However, HIHRMPs do not influence IEP, nor do they act as mediators in the relationship between LSs and IEP.
Studies on the servant, shared, and empowering leadership in the digital economy and SMEs are inseparable. Multiple leadership styles are applicable in SMEs. Further researchers can apply a research framework that explains the positive relationship between LSs in servant, shared, and empowering leadership and IEP in terms of motivation, productivity, and task performance.
The positive relationship between LSs and IEP supports the results of research conducted by (Megawaty et al. 2022; Tran and Truong 2021; Alahbabi et al. 2021; Wanta and Augustine 2021; Pratiwi and Nawangsari 2021; Kaltiainen and Hakanen 2022; Peng and Chen 2021; Kadarusman and Benjamin 2021; Ahmed et al. 2022; Ali et al. 2018; Humborstad et al. 2014; Qian et al. 2018; Kim et al. 2018; Fu et al. 2020; Shi et al. 2022; Cheong et al. 2019). The positive relationship between LSs and HIHRMPs strengthens the results of the research conducted by (Demo et al. 2022; Zhao and Huang 2022; Kloutsiniotis et al. 2022; AlAbri et al. 2022).
However, the results of this study contradict the results of studies conducted by authors that have explained the interaction between LSs and HIHRMPs in improving IEP. They are (Zhao et al. 2020; Lyubykh et al. 2022; Dela Cruz and Cabaluna 2022; Muma et al. 2018; Gomathy et al. 2022; Al Qudah et al. 2014; Rahayu et al. 2019; Pramono and Prahiawan 2022; Handayani and Kasidin 2022; Arwab et al. 2022; Tumi et al. 2021; Abba 2018; Ramli 2020; Pratibha 2022; Jean et al. 2017; Min et al. 2019; Nkrumah et al. 2021; Ekowati 2019).
5.2. Practical Implications
There has been an economic impact due to the increasing number of SMEs opening in Indonesia (Arief et al. 2021). These businesses drive the Indonesian economy and comprise 99.9 percent of the total companies in Indonesia (Haryati et al. 2021). They are the subject of digital change, gaining an advantage by competing sustainably (Fachrunnisa et al. 2020) in the era of the Industrial Revolution 4.0 and applying digital technology, big data, IoT, and robotics technology. The government has initiated a strategic plan focused on SMEs. This is to encourage their participation in building the national economy; develop a roadmap of e-commerce, synchronizing thirty-nine strategic initiatives across eight ministries; establish friendly foreign direct investment policies to attract techno-based investment and strengthen the domestic base of venture capital; facilitate access to funding and enable the digitization of SMEs and the rapid growth of quality start-ups; and adopt pro-innovation policies (Ramli 2020). The large population and the fragmented geography of Indonesia have offered a good reason for SMEs to adopt e-commerce (Rahayu and Day 2017).
The SME leaders in Lubuk Linggau must serve, share, and empower their employees in post-COVID-19 globalization. They must be open to digitization for their employees. They have adopted servant, shared, and empowering leadership. They have applied combined leadership styles, which are not singular or compartmentalized. This is harmonious with the need to be digital leaders in today’s digital era. HRM in SMEs comprises high involvement in HRP, training, compensation, and OSH. HRM realizes the importance of digitalization in the digital demands of business. The employees of the SMEs in the city work with high motivation and productivity, and perform tasks optimally. Their performance is subject to servant, shared, and empowering leadership styles and HIHRMPs.
The practice of servant, shared, and empowering leadership by the CEOs of SMEs in the city, which are generally the owners and managers of the businesses, are relevant for improving IEP and implementing HIHRMPs in today’s digital era. These leadership styles support the Indonesian government’s strategic plan to build the national economy by strengthening SMEs.
The employees have used computers, the Internet, cloud computing, and big data in adopting business models based on digital products and services. These activities have reflected their involvement in Industry 4.0. They have high motivation, productivity, and job performance due to these leadership styles.
The SME leaders engaged in the construction, wholesale and retail, car and motorcycle repair, real estate, manufacturing, transportation, and warehousing industries in the city have implemented service, sharing, and empowerment LSs for their employees in today’s digital era. They support the adoption of digitalization by their employees and the use of services that improve their credibility, competence, and communication skills in working. Leaders also support this by interacting formally and informally in the coordination of employee teamwork, and involving employees in managerial decision-making.
6. Conclusions
Servant, shared, and empowering leadership styles are appropriate to be applied in SMEs to improve the individual performance of employees and employee involvement in HRP, training, compensation, and OSH in the digital era. When SME leaders apply leadership effectively, the individual performance of the employees and their involvement in HRMPs are improved.
SME leaders can apply these leadership styles to realize the high motivation, productivity, and performance of their employees. In addition, leaders can become figures who serve, share, and empower their employees by displaying their involvement in HRPs, training, compensation, and OSH, even though these HRMPs cannot realize the high individual performance of these employees.
The combination of servant, shared, and empowering leadership styles can lead to digital leadership for SMEs. HIHRMPs also clarify digital HRMPs. However, we need further study to state that these leadership styles are digital leadership styles, and HIHRMPs are digital HRMPs.
Limitations
This research framework focuses on the individual performance of employees in SMEs. When high involvement in HRMPs occurs, the teamwork performance of employees can also improve. The concept of LSs in this research frames three leadership styles and one SHRMP approach. Many researchers have examined digital leadership styles in other contexts as measures. This research was limited to one city scope for data collection. Including other cities in Indonesia in this process could offer better results for our proposed hypotheses. We included a two-month primary data collection period. Longer data collections times could show better results with our research framework. We also used an online questionnaire as the research instrument. Direct data collection could possibly reduce bias (CMB) and increase the amount of data collected. The results only showed a direct relationship between the variables, with no indirect relationship or mediation in SEMs. We still have not found that all of our hypotheses are accepted.
Conceptualization, A.C. and M.N.S.; methodology, A.C. and M.N.S.; software, A.C.; validation, A.C.; formal analysis, A.C and M.N.S.; investigation, A.C.; resources, A.C.; data curation, A.C.; writing—original draft preparation, A.C. and M.N.S.; writing—review and editing, A.C., T.M., P.S., M.N.S., J.P. and K.S.; supervision, T.M., I.H., J.P. and K.S. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Ethical review and approval were waived for this study due to the fact that we used anonymous data that were not traceable to individuals at any time.
This was waived for this study due to the fact that we used anonymous data that were not traceable to individuals at any time.
Not applicable.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Questionnaire development.
| No. | Indicators | Sources |
|---|---|---|
| LSs: The chief executive officer of my company… | ||
| 1 | Provides services to me in increasing my credibility and competence in working (servant leadership: X1.1). | ( |
| 2 | Provides services to me in improving communication skills (servant leadership: X1.2). | |
| 3 | Interacts formally in the coordination of my teamwork (shared leadership: X1.3). | ( |
| 4 | Interacts informally in the coordination of my work team (shared leadership: X1.4). | |
| 5 | Involves my participation in managerial decision-making (empowering leadership: X1.5). | ( |
| 6 | Makes managerial decisions according to my participation (empowering leadership: X1.6). | |
| HIHRMPs: I have well-developed skills, motivation, and platform to apply them in… | ||
| 7 | HRP (X2.1). | ( |
| 8 | Training (X2.2). | |
| 9 | Compensation (X2.3). | |
| 10 | OSH (X2.4). | |
| IEP: I have… | ||
| 11 | High motivation at work (Y1). | ( |
| 12 | High productivity at work (Y2). | |
| 13 | high performance in completing tasks of work (Y3). | ( |
Profile of respondents.
| Demography | Percentage (%) |
|---|---|
| Gender | Female (44.56); Male (55.43) |
| Age | 20–30 years old (23.55); 31–40 years old; (30.07); 41–50 years old (20.28); >50 years old (26.09) |
| Education | High schools (60); Universities (40) |
| Work experience | <5 years (26%); 5–10 years (55); >10 years (18.84) |
Mean, standard deviation, and variance.
| No. | Indicators | N | Minimum | Maximum | Mean | Standard Deviation | Variance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | X1.1 | 276 | 1 | 5 | 3.62 | 1.187 | 1.408 |
| 2 | X1.2 | 3.50 | 1.165 | 1.356 | |||
| 3 | X1.3 | 3.58 | 1.159 | 1.343 | |||
| 4 | X1.4 | 3.65 | 1.167 | 1.362 | |||
| 5 | X1.5 | 3.53 | 1.155 | 1.334 | |||
| 6 | X1.6 | 3.72 | 1.158 | 1.342 | |||
| 7 | Y1.1 | 3.61 | 1.121 | 1.257 | |||
| 8 | Y1.2 | 3.67 | 1.129 | 1.275 | |||
| 9 | Y1.3 | 3.67 | 1.106 | 1.224 | |||
| 10 | Y1.4 | 3.67 | 1.106 | 1.224 | |||
| 11 | Y2.1 | 3.58 | 1.114 | 1.241 | |||
| 12 | Y2.2 | 3.69 | 1.107 | 1.225 | |||
| 13 | Y2.3 | 3.63 | 1.182 | 1.397 |
Construct validity.
| No. | Correlation | Estimate | Standard Error | Critical Ratio | Probability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | X1.1 ← LSs | 1.000 | |||
| 2 | X1.2 ← LSs | 0.977 | 0.055 | 17.776 | *** |
| 3 | X1.3 ← LSs | 0.956 | 0.055 | 17.254 | *** |
| 4 | X1.4 ← LSs | 0.961 | 0.056 | 17.218 | *** |
| 5 | X1.5 ← LSs | 0.985 | 0.054 | 18.227 | *** |
| 6 | X1.6 ← LSs | 0.909 | 0.057 | 15.944 | *** |
| 7 | Y1.1 ← HIHRMPs | 1.000 | |||
| 8 | Y1.2 ← HIHRMPs | 0.928 | 0.066 | 13.973 | *** |
| 9 | Y1.3 ← HIHRMPs | 0.908 | 0.065 | 14.042 | *** |
| 10 | Y1.4 ← HIHRMPs | 0.891 | 0.065 | 13.700 | *** |
| 11 | Y2.1 ← IEP | 1.000 | |||
| 12 | Y2.2 ← IEP | 0.948 | 0.056 | 16.818 | *** |
| 13 | Y2.3 ← IEP | 1.045 | 0.059 | 17.688 | *** |
*** means that the probability < 0.001.
Convergent validity and reliability.
| Correlation | LF | AVE | CR and CA |
|---|---|---|---|
| X1.1 ← LSs | 0.843 | 0.62 | 0.91 (CR) |
| X1.2 ← LSs | 0.839 | ||
| X1.3 ← LSs | 0.826 | ||
| X1.4 ← LSs | 0.824 | ||
| X1.5 ← LSs | 0.853 | ||
| X1.6 ← LSs | 0.785 | ||
| Y1.1 ← HIHRMPs | 0.815 | 0.53 | 0.82 (CR) |
| Y1.2 ← HIHRMPs | 0.751 | ||
| Y1.3 ← HIHRMPs | 0.750 | ||
| X2.4 ← HIHRMPs | 0.736 | ||
| Y2.1 ← IEP | 0.847 | 0.63 | 0.84 (CR) |
| Y2.2 ← IEP | 0.808 | ||
| Y2.3 ← IEP | 0.834 |
Metric implied co-variances.
| Indicators | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Y2.3 | Y2.2 | Y2.1 | Y1.4 | Y1.3 | Y1.2 | Y1.1 | X1.6 | X1.5 | X1.4 | X1.3 | X1.2 | X1.1 | |
| Y2.3 | 1.392 | ||||||||||||
| Y2.2 | 0.878 | 1.220 | |||||||||||
| Y2.1 | 0.927 | 0.841 | 1.236 | ||||||||||
| Y1.4 | 0.782 | 0.709 | 0.748 | 1.220 | |||||||||
| Y1.3 | 0.797 | 0.723 | 0.763 | 0.673 | 1.220 | ||||||||
| Y1.2 | 0.814 | 0.738 | 0.779 | 0.688 | 0.701 | 1.270 | |||||||
| Y1.1 | 0.877 | 0.796 | 0.840 | 0.741 | 0.756 | 0.772 | 1.253 | ||||||
| X.6 | 0.890 | 0.807 | 0.852 | 0.715 | 0.728 | 0.744 | 0.802 | 1.337 | |||||
| X.5 | 0.964 | 0.874 | 0.923 | 0.774 | 0.789 | 0.806 | 0.869 | 0.893 | 1.329 | ||||
| X.4 | 0.941 | 0.853 | 0.900 | 0.755 | 0.770 | 0.786 | 0.848 | 0.872 | 0.944 | 1.357 | |||
| X.3 | 0.936 | 0.849 | 0.896 | 0.752 | 0.766 | 0.783 | 0.844 | 0.867 | 0.939 | 0.917 | 1.338 | ||
| X.2 | 0.956 | 0.867 | 0.915 | 0.768 | 0.783 | 0.799 | 0.862 | 0.886 | 0.960 | 0.937 | 0.932 | 1.351 | |
| X.1 | 0.978 | 0.888 | 0.937 | 0.786 | 0.801 | 0.818 | 0.882 | 0.907 | 0.982 | 0.958 | 0.954 | 0.974 | 1.403 |
Hypotheses.
| Direct Effect | Indirect Effect | Total Effect | Critical Ratio | Probability | Decision |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H1: LSs → IEP = 0.79 | H4: LSs → HIHRMPs → IEP = 0.208 | 0.996 | H1: 3.112 | 0.02 | H1 is accepted, but H4 is rejected. |
| H2: HIHRMPs → IEP = 0.21 | 0.21 | H2: 0.853 | 0.394 | H2 is rejected. | |
| H3: LSs → HIHRMPs = 0.97 | 0.97 | H3: 16.006 | *** | H3 is accepted |
*** means that the probability < 0.001.
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Abstract
This research investigates the positive relationship between leadership styles, high-involvement human resource management practices, and individual employee performance. In this study, we adopt servant, shared, and empowering leadership to explain leadership styles in the digital era. We propose four hypotheses and design a research framework to be analyzed. We develop a self-report questionnaire and distribute it online to three hundred targeted respondents, and collect two hundred and seventy-six complete responses from November 2021 to January 2022. This research applies a quantitative method, using structural equation modeling run by SPSS and AMOS. The results reveal well-distributed data, and all the indicators of the three variables are valid and reliable. The use of CFA confirms the indicators’ validity and reliability. The GoF analysis ensures that the research model is feasible for SMEs. The hypothesis analysis shows the acceptance of H1 and H3, but the rejection of H2 and H4. Leadership styles positively affect individual employee performance and high-involvement human resource management practices in SMEs operating in Lubuklinggau. High-involvement human resource management is not a mediator of the relationship between leadership styles and individual employee performance.
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Details
1 Doctoral School of Economics and Regional Sciences, Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences, H-2100 Gödöllő, Hungary;
2 Faculty of Economics, Sriwijaya University, Indralaya 30662, Indonesia;
3 Doctoral School of Economics and Regional Sciences, Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences, H-2100 Gödöllő, Hungary;
4 Doctoral School of Economics and Regional Sciences, Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences, H-2100 Gödöllő, Hungary;




