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result(s) for
"Person-Organization Fit"
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Employer–Employee Congruence in Environmental Values: An Exploration of Effects on Job Satisfaction and Creativity
by
Tam, Leona
,
Spanjol, Jelena
,
Tam, Vivian
in
Business and Management
,
Business Ethics
,
Congruence
2015
This study examines how the match (vs. mismatch) between personal and firm-level values regarding environmental responsibility affects employee job satisfaction and creativity and contributes to three literature streams [i.e., social corporate responsibility, creativity, and person–environment (P–E) fit]. Building on the P–E fit literature, we propose and test environmental orientation fit versus nonfit effects on creativity, identifying job satisfaction as a mediating mechanism and regulatory pressure as a moderator. An empirical investigation indicates that the various environmental orientation fit conditions affect job satisfaction and creativity differently. More specifically, environmental orientation fit produces greater job satisfaction and creativity when the employee and organization both demonstrate high concern for the environment (i.e., a high–high environmental orientation fit condition) than when both display congruent low concern for the environmental (i.e., a low–low environmental orientation fit condition). Furthermore, for employees working in organizations that fit their personal environmental orientation, strong regulatory pressure to comply with environmental standards diminishes the positive fit effect on job satisfaction and creativity, while regulatory pressure does not affect the job satisfaction and creativity of employees whose personal environmental orientation is incongruent with that of the organization.
Journal Article
Person-organization and person-supervisor fits: Employee commitments in a Chinese context
by
Chuang, Aichia
,
van Vianen, Annelies E.M.
,
Shen, Chi-Tai
in
Applied psychology
,
Arbeitskräfte
,
Betriebsklima
2011
The present study simultaneously examined people's perceptions of person-organization (PO) and personsupervisor (PS) fit and related these perceptions to employees' commitments. Three-hundred-and-sixty employee-supervisor dyads from Taiwanese organizations reported about their PO fit and PS fit perceptions. In addition, supervisors reported about their perceptions of fit and guanxi with each of their employees. Results indicated that PO and PS fit perceptions both had an independent and additive relationship with organizational commitment. The link between employee PS fit perceptions and organizational commitment was mediated by commitment to the supervisor. Both employee and supervisor fit perceptions contributed to commitment to the supervisor through their influence on the quality of the leader-member exchange (LMX). Guanxi could not explain additional variance in LMX and supervisor commitment. Implications for theory and practices regarding person-environment fit, commitment, and LMX are discussed. The study findings offered suggestions for a new Theory of Multiple Fits.
Journal Article
Corporate Social Responsibility as an Organizational Attractiveness for Prospective Public Relations Practitioners
2011
This study viewed students majoring in public relations as prospective public relations practitioners and explored their perceptions about corporate social responsibility (CSR) as their job attraction condition. The results showed that the students perceived CSR to be an important ethical fit condition of a company. One of the significant findings is that CSR can be an effective reputation management strategy for prospective employees, particularly when a company's business is suffering. In examining the effect of CSR efforts on attitudinal and behavioral outcomes, person-organization (P-O) fit appeared to serve as a mediator between CSR performances and organizational attractiveness.
Journal Article
The effect of ethical leadership on innovative work behaviors: A mediating-moderating model of psychological empowerment, job crafting, proactive personality, and person-organization fit
by
Madadha, Saif-aldeen Marwan
,
Ghadi, Mohammed Yasin
,
Abuzaid, Ahmad Nasser
in
Accountability
,
Behavior
,
Corporate culture
2024
The study assesses a model designed to investigate the mediating impact of psychological empowerment, job crafting, and proactive personality, and to examine the moderating influence of person-organization fit on the relationship between ethical leadership and employee innovative behavior. A sample of 782 full-time employees from various industries in Jordan were surveyed to gather data on ethical leadership, innovative work behaviors, psychological empowerment, job crafting, proactive personality, and person-organization fit. The study employed an empirical research design, with data collected through surveys. The results reveal a positive correlation between ethical leadership and innovative work behavior, with psychological empowerment, job crafting, and proactive personality as the mediators in this relationship. The link between ethical leadership and innovation work behaviors is also moderated by person-organization fit. The study's model suggests that ethical leadership practices enhance innovation. Prioritizing ethical principles, transparency, fairness, trust, and accountability cultivates a culture valuing ethics and encouraging innovation. The results provide insights to boost empowerment and proactive behaviors and highlight the importance of a person-organization fit that aligns values for an innovation-friendly workplace. Fit considerations should also be incorporated in recruitment and retention processes. The study makes significant theoretical contributions by synthesizing insights from ethical leadership theory and developing a comprehensive framework to understand how ethical leadership influences innovative work behavior. The research also extends prior work by examining the moderating role of person-organization fit by emphasizing the importance of aligning individual and organizational values in fostering innovation.
Journal Article
Person–Organization Fit and Incentives: A Causal Test
by
Stephan, Ute
,
Miettinen, Topi
,
Huysentruyt, Marieke
in
Bias
,
Business Administration
,
Causality
2017
We investigate the effects of organizational culture and personal values on performance under individual and team contest incentives. We develop a model of regard for others and in-group favoritism that predicts interaction effects between organizational values and personal values in contest games. These predictions are tested in a computerized lab experiment with exogenous control of both organizational values and incentives. In line with our theoretical model, we find that prosocial (proself)-orientated subjects exert more (less) effort in team contests in the primed prosocial organizational values condition, relative to the neutrally primed baseline condition. Further, when the prosocial organizational values are combined with individual contest incentives, prosocial subjects no longer outperform their proself counterparts. These findings provide, to our knowledge, a first, affirmative, causal test of person–organization fit theory. They also suggest the importance of a “triple-fit” between personal preferences, organizational values, and incentive mechanisms for prosocially orientated individuals.
This paper was accepted by John List, behavioral economics
.
Journal Article
Person-Organization Fit on Prosocial Identity: Implications on Employee Outcomes
by
Kim, Tae-Yeol
,
Chang, Young Kyun
,
Cha, Jongseok
in
Behavior
,
Business and Management
,
Business Ethics
2014
This study examined the relationship between person-organization (PO) fit on prosocial identity (prosocial PO fit) and various employee outcomes. The results of polynomial regression analysis based on a sample of 589 hospital employees, which included medical doctors, nurses, and staff, indicate joint effects of personal and organizational prosocial identity on the development of a sense of organizational identification and on the engagement in prosocial behaviors toward colleagues, organizations, and patients. Specifically, prosocial PO fit had a curvilinear relationship with organizational identification, such that organizational identification increased as organizational prosocial characteristics increased toward personal prosocial identity and then decreased when the organizational prosocial characteristics exceeded the personal prosocial identity. In addition, organizational identification and prosocial behaviors increased as both personal and organizational prosocial identity increased from low to high.
Journal Article
Another Look at the Impact of Personal and Organizational Values Congruency
2010
This study re-examined the impact of personal and organizational values congruency on positive work outcomes and investigated the extent to which this relationship is affected by demographic variables. Data collection paralleled an earlier study (Posner and Schmidt, Journal of Business Ethics 12,1993, 341) and validated those findings, lending additional credibility to the continuing importance of this phenomenon. Both personal values congruence and organizational values clarity were significantly related to commitment, satisfaction, motivation, anxiety, work stress, and ethics using a cross-sectional sample of 711 managen from across the United States. Gender, educational level, and functional area did not impact these relationships, although years of experience (expressed by age, managerial experience, and hierarchical level) did make a difference.
Journal Article
Does the relationship between person–organization fit and work attitudes differ for blue-collar and white-collar employees?
2017
Purpose
Most employee attitudes and behaviors are determined by both personal and situational characteristics. Studies on person–organization fit (POF), which is defined as the congruence between individual and organizational values, also support this assumption. Employees who perceive high POF have high positive work attitudes and low intention to leave. However, this study assumes that the relationship between perceived POF and work attitudes may be different with respect to employees’ status and aims to investigate how perceived POF may differ in consequences among blue-collar and white-collar employees.
Design/methodology/approach
Multiple group analysis of structural equation modeling (SEM) was conducted to test the moderation effect of employee status on the relationship between perceived POF and work attitudes.
Findings
Results indicated that the relationship between perceived POF and organizational commitment, job satisfaction, organizational identification and intention to leave differ with respect to individual’s status (blue-collar–white collar). As the status of the individuals increases, the relationship between POF and work attitudes (organizational commitment, job satisfaction and organization identification) becomes weaker.
Originality/value
Rather than just focusing results of POF, this study focuses on moderating variables that differentiate the relationship between POF and outcomes by considering individual differences caused by different motivation and abilities.
Journal Article
Unethical Demand and Employee Turnover
2015
This paper argues that consumer demand for unethical behavior such as fraud can impact employee turnover through market and psychological forces. Wide-spread conditions of unethical demand can improve career prospects for employees of unethical firms through higher income and stability associated with firm financial health. Similarly, unethical employees enjoy increased tenure from the financial and psychological rewards of prosocial behavior toward customers demanding corrupt or unethical behavior. We specifically examine the well-documented unethical demand for fraud in the vehicle emissions testing industry, and its impact on employee tenure. We use data from tests conducted by several thousand licensed inspectors to demonstrate that fraudulent employees and employees of fraudulent firms enjoy longer tenure. These results suggest further work to separate the multiple psychological and economic mechanisms likely driving our findings.
Journal Article
Person-organization fit and turnover intention: Professional identity as a moderator
by
Liu, Liu
,
Wen, Yueran
,
Zhu, Fei
in
Attitudes
,
Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
,
Career development planning
2016
The significance of the role of person-organization (PO) fit in forming employees' work attitudes, such as turnover intention, has been established. We examined whether or not Chinese employees' professional identity can be both an additional predictor of, and moderate the effect
of PO fit on, turnover intention. The results of a survey that we conducted among 256 Chinese civil servants showed that employees' professional identity and perceived PO fit each made a unique contribution to predicting their turnover intention. Moreover, the established relationship between
PO fit and turnover intention was significantly stronger among people with lower professional identity than among those with higher professional identity. Theoretical and practical implications for organizational management are discussed.
Journal Article