CEO ethical leadership as a unique source of substantive and rhetorical ethical signals for attracting job seekers: The moderating role of job seekers' moral identity

Author:

Ogunfowora Babatunde1ORCID,Andiappan Meena2,Stackhouse Madelynn3,Varty Christianne4

Affiliation:

1. Haskayne School of Business University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

2. DeGroote School of Business McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

3. Bryan School of Business and Economics University of North Carolina at Greensboro Greensboro North Carolina USA

4. Schulich School of Business York University Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

SummaryResearch suggests that CSR is increasingly becoming an ambiguous signal of ethical information for external stakeholders. This is because a variety of firms—including those that are morally responsible and those that have been implicated in corporate scandals—routinely adopt CSR policies and invest in CSR initiatives. Not surprisingly, this trend has contributed to rising public skepticism of CSR. In the current research, we examine the unique role of CEO ethical leadership (i.e., relative to CSR) as an alternate source of substantive and rhetorical ethical signals for an important stakeholder group: job seekers. Integrating signaling theory, and the elaboration likelihood model, we argue that CEO ethical leadership substantively signals how fairly an organization treats its employees and its commitment to social and environmental responsibility. We further propose that ethical CEOs serve as a source of rhetorical signal that triggers moral elevation in job seekers. Using a policy capturing methodology in Study 1, we find that real job seekers place significantly greater weight on CEO ethical leadership in making job pursuit decisions compared to CSR. CEO ethical leadership also uniquely predicts job pursuit intentions relative to traditional factors such as salary, person‐job fit, and person‐organization fit. In a second, quasi‐experimental field study (Study 2), we find support for the three hypothesized signaling mechanisms through which CEO ethical leadership influences job seekers. In a third, quasi‐experimental field study (Study 3), we find that job seekers with strong (versus weak) moral identities are more likely to weigh the nuanced ethical information signaled by CEO ethical leadership compared to CSR. We discuss the implications of proactively advertising CEO ethical leadership during the recruitment process.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,General Psychology,Sociology and Political Science,Applied Psychology

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