‘YOUR DRIVER IS DIDI AND MINUTES AWAY FROM YOUR PICK-UP POINT’: UNDERSTANDING EMPLOYEE MOTIVATION IN THE GIG ECONOMY OF CHINA

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In recognition of the importance and expansion of the gig economy, largely in
developed and BRICs economies, along with the growing literature surrounding it, this research contributes towards an empirical and conceptual understanding of how employee motivation and retention are managed by the mobile app based, multiple payment platform enabled, car-pooling Chinese giant DiDi. Both the exponential usage and evidently a diversified range of services offered by DiDi has not only transformed the Chinese perception of using cabs, over their personal vehicle, in the 1.4 billion demographics but also invites emerging research in learning the tools for employee retention of a company that has a high regional scale of operations across all provinces in China. While the company employs over a million people at various contractual levels, the objective of this paper is to evaluate how levels of employee motivation, in a gig economy setting, largely affects employee effort and performance of DiDi drivers working long hours in major Chinese cities. The objective of this research is to qualitatively investigate the nature and effectiveness of Didi as a customer customiser using a thematic analysis and a conceptual framework, while also adding contextual knowledge on how a relatively new transport company retain employees in a leading BRICS economy, that is embedded with many faces of the gig economy.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-16
Number of pages16
JournalInternational Journal of Developing and Emerging Economies
Volume8
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2020

Keywords

  • gig economy
  • employee motivation
  • China
  • employee performance
  • Expectancy Theory
  • Emerging Economy
  • mobile app-based enterprises

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