Abstract:
Employee commitment has been established as a determinant of knowledge
management both in public and private sector. Although the exact nature of this
symbiotic relationship between knowledge management and employee commitment
has hardly been determined, it has always been assumed based on scant data. Therefore,
the goal of this study was to investigate how organizational culture among tier one
commercial banks moderates the relationship between knowledge management and
employee commitment. The study's specific goals were to investigate how employee
commitment is affected by knowledge creation, acquisition, sharing, and storage. The
study was anchored on the theories of organizational epistemology, universalistic
theory, and organizational culture theory. The study used an explanatory research
design and post positivist philosophy as a guide. An empirical review was conducted
that summarized and synthesized results from various empirical studies that identified
patterns, validated theories and provided a grounded understanding of specific research
question. (Johnson & Christensen, 2023). 264 employees of Tier 1 banks in the North
Rift Region were selected as a sample size from a random digit numbers table using
stratified, proportional, and simple random selection procedures. The study targeted
774 employees of these institutions. A strutured questionnaire was used to gather study
data. Descriptive statistics such as means, standard deviation, frequencies and
percentages and inferential statistics such as ANOVA, correlation coefficient and
regression analysis were used to analyze quantitative data. According to the study's
findings, employee commitment is positively and significantly impacted by knowledge
management techniques (knowledge creation, knowledge acquisition, knowledge
sharing, and knowledge storage) (β1=.344, p<0.05, β2=.143, p<0.05, β3=.214, p<0.05,
and β4=.077, p< 0.05) respectively. The results also showed that employee commitment
was positively and significantly associated with organizational culture (β5 =.189
p<0.05). Furthermore, the results showed that, with the exception of knowledge
acquisition, which was not significant (β7=.006, p>0.05), organizational culture had a
positive and significant moderating effect on knowledge creation, knowledge sharing,
and knowledge storage on employee commitment (β6=.029, p<0.05), (β8 =.033,
p<0.05), and (β9=.014, p<0.05), respectively. Employee commitment is impacted by
knowledge management strategies, according to the study's findings. Additionally, it is
determined that employee commitment and knowledge management practices are
moderated by organizational culture. The study concludes that knowledge creation,
sharing, and storage significantly boost employee commitment in tier one banks in
Kenya, with organizational culture enhancing their effects. However, knowledge
acquisition when interacted with organizational culture did not significantly impact
employee commitment. The findings emphasize the importance of integrating
knowledge management with a strong organizational culture to improve employee
loyalty and performance. Theoretically, the study creates a new insight about the
moderating effect of organizational culture on knowledge management and employee
commitment. Subsequent studies should include additional knowledge management
variables as well as potential modifiers or intervening variables to better examine the
spectrum of influences these techniques have on employee commitment. Additionally,
future studies should be carried out on the same topic employing a triangulation
approach to provide more depth and detail to their conclusions.