Can Workplace Climate Spark Innovation? Evidence from a Transitional Economy
Published in Behavioural Sciences & Psychology
In a world where rapid change and disruption are the norm, creativity has become an essential capability, not only for individual employees but also for organizations striving to innovate, compete, and survive (Janssen, 2000). Yet, creativity does not occur in a vacuum. It is deeply influenced by how people perceive their work environment, what organizational psychologists call the psychological climate (Schneider et al., 2017).
My co-authored study explores this relationship within service firms in a transitional economy. Specifically, we investigate how elements of psychological climate, including freedom, support for ideas, time, playfulness, debates, and workplace diversity, shape employee creativity and, ultimately, innovation.
This topic matters because transitional economies often operate under different cultural, economic, and structural conditions compared with mature innovation hubs. Understanding what fosters creativity in these contexts can enhance both academic theory and practical management strategies.
What Is Psychological Climate and Why It Matters
Psychological climate refers to individuals’ perceptions of policies, practices, and procedures that shape daily work experiences. A positive climate signals trust, autonomy, and support for unconventional thinking, conditions that have repeatedly been linked with creative output (Baer & Frese, 2003).
In innovation research, scholars recognize that climate can either enable or constrain creative behavior (Amabile et al., 1996). Organizations that cultivate supportive psychological climates typically see greater idea generation, experimentation, and risk-taking, core ingredients for innovative performance (Grant & Berry, 2011).
Yet most empirical studies have focused on firms in Western or high-income contexts. Our research fills an important gap by examining these dynamics in a transitional economy, characterized by evolving institutions, resource constraints, and cultural norms that may affect how employees interpret workplace signals.
Research Goals and Questions
We examined whether psychological climate factors predict employee creativity. Our key research questions were:
-
Which elements of psychological climate are most strongly linked with creative thinking?
-
How do perceptions of workplace freedom and support influence innovation?
-
Do diverse and playful environments stimulate creative efforts in transitional service organizations?
Using a quantitative survey design, we collected data from 160 employees working in small and medium-sized service firms in Erbil, Iraq. Study measures included validated scales for psychological climate dimensions and individual creative thinking (Amabile et al., 1996). Statistical analyses, particularly regression models, were used to examine how climate factors predicted creativity.
Key Findings
1. Freedom and Resource Support Facilitate Creativity
Employees who perceived high levels of autonomy, freedom to act, and support for ideas reported significantly higher creative thinking. This aligns with Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan, 2000), which highlights autonomy as a core motivator for creativity.
2. Time and Playfulness Boost Divergent Thinking
We found that employees who experienced dedicated time to think and experiment, coupled with a playful and exploratory environment, displayed more idea generation than those in rigid, task-oriented settings. Playfulness reduces fear of failure and increases cognitive flexibility.
3. Constructive Debates Enhance Innovation
Workplaces that encouraged healthy debate and discussion were correlated with higher creativity. This supports previous work showing that conflict, when managed constructively, can expand perspectives (De Dreu, 2006).
4. Diversity Enriches Creative Output
Workplace diversity, whether demographic or cognitive, was positively associated with creative thinking. This complements social-psychological research demonstrating that diverse teams outperform homogeneous ones in idea generation and problem solving (Hoever et al., 2012).
Why These Results Matter
For Managers
-
Cultivate autonomy: Empower employees to make decisions about their work.
-
Allocate time for ideation: Encourage time not just for tasks but for thinking and experimentation.
-
Promote psychological safety: Leaders should foster open debate and tolerate differences in opinion.
-
Leverage diversity: Diverse perspectives fuel creative insights.
These actions don’t require large budgets but do require mindful leadership and supportive practices.
Challenges and Learning From the Field
Conducting field research in a transitional context posed several challenges:
-
Cultural Context: Employees were sometimes hesitant to express opinions that contradict organizational norms, impacting survey candor.
-
Organizational Constraints: Many service firms lacked formal systems for idea management, requiring careful adaptation of measurement tools.
-
Sampling Barriers: Limited digital record keeping made random sampling more time-consuming than anticipated.
However, these challenges strengthened our appreciation for context-specific dynamics of workplace climate and creativity.
Future Directions for Research
While our study provides new insights, several avenues merit further exploration:
-
Longitudinal research: How do climate perceptions and creativity evolve over time?
-
Cross-country comparisons: Do similar patterns hold in other transitional economies?
-
Digital transformation: With remote and hybrid work growing, how might psychological climate manifest virtually?
Creativity is not merely an individual trait; it is shaped by the environments in which individuals work. Our study underscores that psychological climate plays a crucial role in stimulating creative thinking and, by extension, innovation in service organizations within transitional economies.
By empowering employees, supporting debate, and fostering diversity and playfulness, organizations can unlock the creative potential that drives innovation.
References
Amabile, T. M., & Conti, R. (1999). Changes in the work environment for creativity during downsizing. Academy of Management journal, 42(6), 630-640.
Baer, M., & Frese, M. (2003). Innovation is not enough: Climates for initiative and psychological safety, process innovations, and firm performance. Journal of Organizational Behavior: The International Journal of Industrial, Occupational and Organizational Psychology and Behavior, 24(1), 45-68.
De Dreu, C. K. (2006). When too little or too much hurts: Evidence for a curvilinear relationship between task conflict and innovation in teams. Journal of Management, 32(1), 83-107.
Deci, E. L., & Ryan, R. M. (2000). The" what" and" why" of goal pursuits: Human needs and the self-determination of behavior. Psychological inquiry, 11(4), 227-268.
Grant, A. M., & Berry, J. W. (2011). The necessity of others is the mother of invention: Intrinsic and prosocial motivations, perspective taking, and creativity. Academy of management journal, 54(1), 73-96.
Hoever, I. J., Van Knippenberg, D., Van Ginkel, W. P., & Barkema, H. G. (2012). Fostering team creativity: perspective taking as key to unlocking diversity's potential. Journal of applied psychology, 97(5), 982.
Janssen, O. (2000). Job demands, perceptions of effort‐reward fairness and innovative work behaviour. Journal of Occupational and organizational psychology, 73(3), 287-302.
Salim, B., & Khorsheed, K. A. (2025). The role of psychological climate factors in stimulating creativity through workplace innovation in the service sector of a transitional economy. Discover Psychology, 5(1), 154.
Follow the Topic
-
Discover Psychology
This is an international, open access journal that publishes research in behavioral sciences and related fields, including health, environment, neuroscience, business, economics, ergonomics, linguistics, and education.
Your space to connect: The Psychedelics Hub
A new Communities’ space to connect, collaborate, and explore research on Psychotherapy, Clinical Psychology, and Neuroscience!
Continue reading announcementRelated Collections
With Collections, you can get published faster and increase your visibility.
Understanding the Association of New Media Communication with Psychosocial Well-Being
Contemporary world is characterized by the increasing popularity and seamless integration of various new media platforms into everyday life. Leveraging technically advanced yet largely invisible network infrastructures, these emerging media enable individuals, organizations, and institutions to engage in meaningful communications and activities beyond temporal and geographical limitations. The rapid advent of new media has substantially reorganized how individuals connect, collaborate, consume, and produce. These platforms represent one of the most revolutionary impacts of digital technologies on psychosocial well-being and mental health, both within and across various domains. Despite significant developments in this field in recent years, the landscape remains fragmented and faces theoretical and methodological challenges. Consequently, there are growing concerns about the potential effects of new media use, particularly on psychosocial well-being. Considering the profound impact of new media technologies on daily life and the broader world, this special issue aims to encourage original investigations into the relationship between new media and psychosocial well-being. This special issue seeks to bring together scholars from a wide variety of disciplines to explore these underlying connections. Papers addressing new approaches to the implications and influences of new media, as well as the determinants and outcomes, relevant theory, policy, and practice, are also welcome.
Research areas relevant to the journal include, but are not limited to:
• Mental Health and Wellbeing
• Flourishing Communities and Societies
• Psychological Interventions
• Social Media and Smartphone Use
• New Media Effects
• Virtual and Augmented Reality
• Artificial Intelligence
• New and Emerging Technologies
• Multimodal Interaction
• Empirical Studies of User Behaviour
• Longitudinal and Experimental designs
• Computer Mediated Communication
Keywords:
Mental Health and Wellbeing; Flourishing Communities and Societies; Social Media and Smartphone Use; New Media Effects; Computer Mediated Communication; New and Emerging Technologies; Artificial Intelligence
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: Jul 31, 2026
Psychological Capacities for Mental Health and Wellbeing in the Era of Climate Change and Covid-19 Aftermath
The COVID-19 pandemic has greatly altered the way we live, work and socialise and continues to impact global mental health and wellbeing. Post the COVID 19 pandemic, and in the context of increasing environmental disasters due to climate change, there is a growing importance to be prepared and effectively deal with future adversities and threats. In this respect, understanding aspects of positive psychological capacities that can access and develop individual and community strengths are gaining importance. There is a growing body of evidence from positive psychology on a broader set of positive attributes/ resources such as self-efficacy, resilience, hope, optimism, sense of coherence, autonomy, resourcefulness, identity, hope, religiosity/spirituality and life valuation as critical indicators of mental health and wellbeing.
Positive psychology has inspired many fields of research including education, health, workplace and sports, to better capture strengths and capacities that can be measured and developed to improve, health, wellbeing and productivity. However, a significant pitfall of this research has been in discipline silos, published in discipline specific journals with limited access to researchers from other fields, impairing cross-disciplinary learnings across fields. For example, empirical evidence from the field of positive organisation behaviour has suggested psychological capital (PsyCap) as an higher-order construct that includes hope, self-efficacy, resilience and optimism to be associated with workplace burnout, wellbeing and satisfaction.
This collection will provide a platform for researcher across the field of education, health and workplace to publish articles related to measuring and developing psychological capacities to improve mental health and wellbeing. This collection aims to promote exchange of ideas and knowledge between disciplines to better understand, measure and develop psychological capacities to successfully address mental health concerns and wellbeing in the era of climate change and the COVID-19 aftermath.
Keywords: Psychological capacities, Resilience, Positive Psychology, Mental health and Wellbeing.
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: Jun 30, 2026
Please sign in or register for FREE
If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in