1 janvier 2021
Refilwe Masale et al., « Exploring the determinants of an organisational talent culture for a Botswanan local government institution », Acta Commercii, ID : 10670/1.jgauu7
ORIENTATION: Talented employees are essential for the service performance of local government institutions. Conducive organisational talent cultures can enable talent to deliver value-based services that meet public expectations. RESEARCH PURPOSE: To explore the determinants of an organisational talent culture for a Botswanan local government institution. MOTIVATION FOR THE STUDY: Research on organisational talent culture determinants in Botswana local government institutions is lacking. RESEARCH DESIGN, APPROACH AND METHOD: This research adopted a quantitative, cross-sectional research design. A self-developed questionnaire was used to measure the organisational talent culture determinants of a Botswana government institution (N = 405). The data was analysed using SPSS Statistics software. Descriptive statistics, exploratory factor analyses, linear regression analyses and multivariate analysis of variances (MANOVAs) were applied to the data. MAIN FINDINGS: The factor analyses provided support for six organisational talent culture determinants: leadership talent mindset, success orientation and strategic intent, institutional values, dynamic operational capabilities, administrative governance and general people management practices. The results showed a weak application of all the organisational talent culture determinants. Leadership talent mindset was a significant predictor of organisational talent culture determinants. Significant differences exist between selected organisational culture dimensions based on the demographic characteristics of the participants PRACTICAL/MANAGERIAL IMPLICATIONS: The vital role of public sector leadership in enabling a conducive organisational talent culture is emphasised. CONTRIBUTION/VALUE-ADD: This research contributed to the limited empirical knowledge on organisational talent culture determinants in public sector institutions.