Abstract
PurposeThis study seeks to examine the links between employee agreeableness, group performance, and peers' perceptions of threat of retaliation, through relationship conflict.Design/methodology/approachIn a laboratory setting, 42 groups of undergraduate students (N = 182) from a Pakistani university were assigned to group projects to be completed within four months. Data collected from three different questionnaires at four different times and actual scores awarded by the course instructor to each group were used for the analyses. Based on rWG(J) and ICC(1), level 1 (182 students') data were aggregated to level 2 (groups), and then analysed using regression analysis followed by Preacher and Hayes' bootstrapping procedure.FindingsResults suggest that high agreeableness predicts group performance positively and peers' perceptions of threat of retaliation negatively. Moreover, relationship conflict among group members significantly mediates the agreeableness-group performance relationship. The above relationships may be sensitive to national culture.Research limitations/implicationsIn this study, groups were formed for a few months, whereas in real organizational life, workgroups are formed for different durations. Therefore, the range of situations to which these findings generalize remains an open question.Practical implicationsAgreeableness of group members can be constructive for performance of the group. Managers may utilize this insight while forming groups, and rating performance.Originality/valueThere is dearth of research illuminating how employee's personality traits affect group performance and appraisal ratings. The study tests the effects of employee agreeableness on: (1) group performance, as rated by supervisors; (2) the threat of retaliation, as perceived by peer raters; and (3) the mediating effect of relationship conflict.
Subject
Strategy and Management,General Business, Management and Accounting
Reference83 articles.
1. Built for unity: assessing the impact of team composition on team cohesion trajectories;Journal of Business and Psychology,2019
2. Anderson, N., Ones, D.S., Sinangil, H.K. and Viswesvaran, C. (Eds) (2001), Handbook of industrial, Work and Organizational Psychology: Personnel Psychology, Sage, London. Vol. 1.
3. Work status differences related to personality traits and psychological health among professional women;Pakistan Journal of Psychological Research,2015
4. Personality effects on social relationships;Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,1998
5. The HEXACO–60: a short measure of the major dimensions of personality;Journal of Personality Assessment,2009
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献