TITLE:
Inclusive Leadership and Employee Innovation Behavior: A Case Study of Microsoft
AUTHORS:
Najlaa Taleb, Ji Yang
KEYWORDS:
Inclusive Leadership, Employee Innovation Behavior, Psychological Safety, Knowledge Sharing, Microsoft, Organizational Innovation
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Access Library Journal,
Vol.13 No.6,
June
24,
2026
ABSTRACT: Inclusive leadership is increasingly viewed as a leadership approach which can support employee innovation in knowledge-intensive organizations. This paper is an examination of the relationship between inclusive leadership and employee innovation behavior. This is done through a qualitative single-case study of Microsoft, with particular attention on the cultural shift associated with Satya Nadella’s leadership. Drawing on Social Exchange Theory, Leader-Member Exchange theory as well as Psychological Safety theory, the paper develops qualitative propositions explaining how psychological safety, knowledge sharing, and employee empowerment may connect inclusive leadership to innovation behavior. The study made use of secondary case evidence from Microsoft corporate reports, leadership communications, documented cultural initiatives, case materials as well as publicly reported innovation outcomes. Therefore, findings do not claim statistical causality as they show that Microsoft’s leadership narrative, growth-mindset culture, collaboration practices, and inclusion-oriented policies provide case-based support for the proposed relationship. This analysis also recognizes that Microsoft’s innovation performance is shaped by other major factors which includes R&D investment, acquisitions, platform strategy, AI partnerships together with market position. The paper contributes by clarifying how inclusive leadership can operate as an organizational mechanism that encourages employee voice, experimentation, cross-functional learning, and ownership of ideas in a large technology company. Future research should extend the model through multi-case, longitudinal, or mixed-method designs.