Becoming a leader with clipped wings: The role of early-career unemployment scarring on future leadership role occupancy
In: The leadership quarterly: an international journal of political, social and behavioral science, Band 35, Heft 4, S. 101786
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In: The leadership quarterly: an international journal of political, social and behavioral science, Band 35, Heft 4, S. 101786
In: The leadership quarterly: an international journal of political, social and behavioral science, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 299-315
In: The leadership quarterly: an international journal of political, social and behavioral science, Band 16, Heft 4, S. 569-589
In: Group processes & intergroup relations: GPIR, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 247-262
ISSN: 1461-7188
This investigation explores the effects of organizational identification on employees' Implicit Leadership Theories (ILTs) and the perception of leader behaviors. The study involved a cross-sectional survey of 439 employees from seven companies based in South Wales. Respondents completed two questionnaires that measured their organizational identification, ILTs, recognition of ILTs in their manager, manager's leadership behaviors (transactional and transformational), and psychological reactions (job satisfaction, well-being, and turnover intentions). The level of organizational identification did not affect the prototype of an ideal work-based leader. However, high organizational identification was associated with more positive ratings on the actual manager, the extent to which their manager displayed transactional and transformational behaviors, and with more positive psychological reactions to work. Employees high in organizational identification based their judgments of their leader's transactional and transformational behaviors on the extent to which they recognized their leader as possessing leadership traits. However, those low on organizational identification allowed their prototype of their ideal leader to bias their judgment of their actual leader's behavior. Finally, there was partial support for the augmenting hypothesis (that tranformational leadership would predict additional variance in psychological outcomes above that predicted by transactional leadership) for those high in organizational identification but not for those low in organizational identification.
In: Routledge studies in leadership research
In: Journal of occupational and organizational psychology
ISSN: 2044-8325
AbstractDrawing on construal level and conservation of resources theories, our paper focuses on the psychological distance employees experience from their manager in remote work contexts. We specifically examine the role of three leadership behaviours (initiating structure, consideration and vision communication) on employees' perceptions of psychological distance from their manager and the subsequent effects on employee task, emotion and avoidance coping and individual effectiveness outcomes. Using data from two independent studies (Study 1: a four‐wave time‐lagged online study of remotely working 338 participants; Study 2: a four‐wave time‐lagged study of 202 hybrid working professionals), we found that consideration and vision communication reduced employees' perceptions of psychological distance from their manager, while psychological distance decreased task coping. Support for a serial mediation model was also found, with consideration and vision communication indirectly influencing task performance and consideration indirectly influencing organizational citizenship behaviours and withdrawal behaviours via psychological distance and then via task coping. Our research results provide new insights into the role of leadership in remote work contexts and highlight the implications of psychological distance from the leader for employees' coping responses and individual effectiveness.
In: The leadership quarterly: an international journal of political, social and behavioral science, Band 28, Heft 3, S. 418-437
In: Group & organization management: an international journal, Band 45, Heft 1, S. 43-74
ISSN: 1552-3993
Using social learning theory, the job demands-resources model and idiosyncrasy credit theory, the present study casts additional light on the explanatory mechanisms underlying the effects of service leadership on service performance. We examine employee work engagement as an important mediator of this relationship and explore the moderating role of leader task-based professional and managerial skills on the indirect relationship between service leadership and service performance via work engagement. Drawing upon 903 leader–follower dyads nested in 187 teams, with data collected from two sources, we find that after controlling for transformational leadership, follower work engagement mediates the relationship between service leadership and follower service performance. Furthermore, the results support the moderating role of leader task-based professional skills, but not of managerial skills. Specifically, the indirect effect of service leadership on service performance via work engagement is stronger when leaders display high levels of task-based professional skills. Theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed.
SSRN
In: The leadership quarterly: an international journal of political, social and behavioral science, Band 32, Heft 5, S. 101375
In: Human relations: towards the integration of the social sciences, Band 74, Heft 10, S. 1716-1745
ISSN: 1573-9716, 1741-282X
People may identify with multiple entities at work, but how are different foci of identification related and how do they influence extra-role work behaviors? Drawing from social identity theory, our article examines: (a) the potential bidirectional relationship between leader and organizational identification; (b) the mediating role of organizational identification on the relationship between leader identification and organizational citizenship behavior (organization-targeted, OCBO); and (c) the moderating role of collective identity orientation on the indirect relationship between leader identification and OCBO via organizational identification. Cross-lagged analyses of two-time data in two independent studies provided support for identification generalization from leader identification to organizational identification and confirmed the hypothesized mediating role of organizational identification. Our results also confirmed the moderating role of collective identity orientation and showed that the relationship between leader identification and organizational identification was stronger for employees with low collective identity orientation. Support was also provided for moderated mediation. Overall, our findings showcase the importance of examining multiple identifications foci when studying social identification at work, and provide support for spillover effects of lower-order to higher-order identifications.
In: The leadership quarterly: an international journal of political, social and behavioral science, Band 28, Heft 1, S. 104-129
In: The leadership quarterly: an international journal of political, social and behavioral science, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 411-412
In: Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 49-74
SSRN
In: The leadership quarterly: an international journal of political, social and behavioral science, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 101376