Employee Autonomy: More Freedom More Innovation? An empirical study on the effects of employee autonomy on start-up innovation performance in Europe.
Summary
Since 2022, 5 million new start-ups have been created, making a 42% increase from pre
pandemic levels. Innovation is the lifeblood of start-ups, and understanding the mechanisms that
drive it has become crucial in today’s competitive business landscape. Start-ups, characterized
by their risk-taking nature and limited resources, rely on their employees as unique sources of
knowledge to gain a competitive edge. This research investigates the effect of employee
autonomy on start-up innovation performance in three different types of innovation: product,
process and marketing innovation. Using data from the European Company Survey of 2019, this
study employs an Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regression to examine the relationships
between employee autonomy and start-up innovation in product, process and marketing. The
results of this study show that employee autonomy increases start-up process innovation. No
significant effects are found regarding the effects of employee autonomy on product and
marketing innovation. Moreover, only when employees responsible for innovation have access
to a personal computer they will innovate. The theorised positive effect of other factors such as
employee ideas or employee motivation remains unclear. The findings of this study offer
important contributions to enhancing managerial practices and developing human resources
strategies in start-ups in Europe.