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Influence behaviors and employees' reactions: an empirical test among six societies based on a transactional-relational contract model

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Data
2013-07
Autor
Chong, Melody P. M.
Muethel, Miriam
Richards, Malika
Ping, Ping
Peng, Tai-Kuang
Shang, Yu Fan
Caldas, Miguel Pinto
Metadados
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Resumo
Organizational and task commitment are central drivers of firm performance as they affect employees' willingness to exert effort for the organization. This paper argues that supervisors who consistently use socio-emotional and supportive influence strategies are likely to enhance subordinates' immediate commitment to the tasks as well as their psychological attachment to the organization. Drawing on the transactional-relational contracts framework, we develop and empirically examine the effects of supervisors' influence behaviors on two types of commitment. Data collected from 1150 respondents from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Germany, United States and Brazil provided support for the positive relationship between the persuasive influence strategy and both immediate task and organizational commitment. Exploratory analyses of the cultural differences in our sample reveal differences in assertive and relationship-based individual tactics. We thus identified potentially universally endorsed as well as culturally contingent influence tactics in predicting the two types of commitment. (c) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10438/23331
Coleções
  • Documentos Indexados pela Web of Science [875]
Áreas do conhecimento
Economia
Assunto
Comprometimento organizacional
Palavra-chave
A transactional-relational contracts model
Influence strategies
Influence tactics
Immediate task commitment
Organizational commitment
National culture

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