This research article examines how coworkers react to employees who receive idiosyncratic deals (i-deals), which are customized work arrangements negotiated between employees and employers. The study tested hypotheses using a sample of 253 employee-coworker pairs. The key findings are:
1. Coworkers are more likely to accept flexibility i-deals than development i-deals received by focal employees.
2. Coworkers view development i-deals as more threatening to their status than flexibility i-deals, and status threat mediates the relationship between development i-deals and coworker acceptance.
3. Flexibility i-deals increase coworkers' perception of obtaining future i
This document provides an introduction and background to a study on the relationship between flexible work arrangements, specifically telecommuting, and employee job involvement. It discusses previous research that identified individual and organizational determinants of job involvement. While some studies have looked at how factors like gender and tenure influence job involvement, little research has examined the impact of work arrangements. The objective of this study is to determine whether telecommuting affects employee job involvement levels and whether tenure, age or gender influence job involvement. It aims to address gaps in understanding how work arrangements may impact an important work attitude.
Workforce engagement: What it is, what drives it, and why it matters for orga...Andrea Kropp
This research article examines workforce engagement at the organizational level across 102 publicly traded companies. The researchers define workforce engagement as the aggregate work engagement experiences of individual employees in an organization. They hypothesize and find that workforce engagement significantly predicts organizational financial and customer metrics 1-2 years later, after controlling for industry. Additionally, they find that organizational practices, supervisory support, and work attributes are significant drivers of workforce engagement, and that workforce engagement mediates the relationship between these drivers and organizational performance. The study contributes to research on employee engagement by examining outcomes at the organizational level across diverse industries, using a predictive design, and investigating antecedents of and mediators in the workforce engagement-performance relationship.
Formation of organizational citizenship behaviors in students employed in uni...AlFajrQuraan
This document summarizes a study that examined how manager and coworker behaviors influence the development of organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs) in student employees of university dining services. The study found that managers and coworkers demonstrating OCBs towards individuals was positively related to students also exhibiting individual-oriented OCBs. It also found that certain transformational leadership behaviors by managers indirectly led to students demonstrating organization-oriented OCBs. Additionally, there was a weak but significant negative relationship between students' OCBs and their intent to leave their job.
This document summarizes an exploratory study that examines the relationship between individual employee characteristics (work engagement, intrinsic motivation, age) and their choice of job crafting practices. The study analyzes data from a previous job crafting intervention study. It hypothesizes that highly engaged employees will choose to enlarge pleasurable tasks. Additionally, it hypothesizes that intrinsic motivation and age may also influence the choice of job crafting practices, though the direction is unknown. The study aims to provide insight into why employees choose certain job crafting practices and identify patterns in individual characteristics.
Advanced research methods research paperAlFajrQuraan
This document discusses a study examining the impact of negative workplace gossip by employees about their supervisor on the supervisor's perception of a psychological contract breach. It proposes that negative gossip threatens the supervisor's self-esteem, leading to perceived breach of the implicit obligations between employee and supervisor. The study will test whether self-affirmation by supervisors can reduce this effect by buffering threats to self-esteem. It outlines hypotheses, a research model, and methodology including field and experimental studies to collect data from supervisors and employees to test the relationships between negative gossip, self-esteem, perceived breach, and the moderating role of self-affirmation.
This document summarizes a critical review of the relationship between job satisfaction and organizational citizenship behavior (OCB). It finds that most research has shown a positive relationship between job satisfaction and OCB. Job satisfaction is influenced by both intrinsic and extrinsic factors. When employees are satisfied, they are more likely to display OCB through voluntary helpful behaviors towards colleagues and the organization. While a few studies found no relationship, the majority of evidence suggests higher job satisfaction translates to higher levels of OCB.
This document discusses a journal article about the relationship between leadership theories and work engagement. It provides an overview of different leadership perspectives and examines how specific leadership styles can impact work engagement. The document suggests that managers play an important role in providing work-related resources like autonomy, social support, and feedback, which can help increase employee engagement. It proposes a conceptual framework for further research on how leadership styles influence work engagement and employee performance.
The meaning and measurement of employee engagement A review of the literature...Omar Ababneh
This document provides a review of the literature on defining and measuring employee engagement. It discusses several debates in the literature, including whether burnout is the antithesis of engagement, if engagement is a state or trait, and how engagement differs from similar constructs like job satisfaction and organizational commitment. The review examines how engagement has been defined by various researchers and identifies inconsistencies in these definitions. It also analyzes the different approaches that have been used to measure engagement and the limitations of these approaches. The goal of the document is to bring clarity to the conceptualization and measurement of employee engagement.
This document provides an introduction and background to a study on the relationship between flexible work arrangements, specifically telecommuting, and employee job involvement. It discusses previous research that identified individual and organizational determinants of job involvement. While some studies have looked at how factors like gender and tenure influence job involvement, little research has examined the impact of work arrangements. The objective of this study is to determine whether telecommuting affects employee job involvement levels and whether tenure, age or gender influence job involvement. It aims to address gaps in understanding how work arrangements may impact an important work attitude.
Workforce engagement: What it is, what drives it, and why it matters for orga...Andrea Kropp
This research article examines workforce engagement at the organizational level across 102 publicly traded companies. The researchers define workforce engagement as the aggregate work engagement experiences of individual employees in an organization. They hypothesize and find that workforce engagement significantly predicts organizational financial and customer metrics 1-2 years later, after controlling for industry. Additionally, they find that organizational practices, supervisory support, and work attributes are significant drivers of workforce engagement, and that workforce engagement mediates the relationship between these drivers and organizational performance. The study contributes to research on employee engagement by examining outcomes at the organizational level across diverse industries, using a predictive design, and investigating antecedents of and mediators in the workforce engagement-performance relationship.
Formation of organizational citizenship behaviors in students employed in uni...AlFajrQuraan
This document summarizes a study that examined how manager and coworker behaviors influence the development of organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs) in student employees of university dining services. The study found that managers and coworkers demonstrating OCBs towards individuals was positively related to students also exhibiting individual-oriented OCBs. It also found that certain transformational leadership behaviors by managers indirectly led to students demonstrating organization-oriented OCBs. Additionally, there was a weak but significant negative relationship between students' OCBs and their intent to leave their job.
This document summarizes an exploratory study that examines the relationship between individual employee characteristics (work engagement, intrinsic motivation, age) and their choice of job crafting practices. The study analyzes data from a previous job crafting intervention study. It hypothesizes that highly engaged employees will choose to enlarge pleasurable tasks. Additionally, it hypothesizes that intrinsic motivation and age may also influence the choice of job crafting practices, though the direction is unknown. The study aims to provide insight into why employees choose certain job crafting practices and identify patterns in individual characteristics.
Advanced research methods research paperAlFajrQuraan
This document discusses a study examining the impact of negative workplace gossip by employees about their supervisor on the supervisor's perception of a psychological contract breach. It proposes that negative gossip threatens the supervisor's self-esteem, leading to perceived breach of the implicit obligations between employee and supervisor. The study will test whether self-affirmation by supervisors can reduce this effect by buffering threats to self-esteem. It outlines hypotheses, a research model, and methodology including field and experimental studies to collect data from supervisors and employees to test the relationships between negative gossip, self-esteem, perceived breach, and the moderating role of self-affirmation.
This document summarizes a critical review of the relationship between job satisfaction and organizational citizenship behavior (OCB). It finds that most research has shown a positive relationship between job satisfaction and OCB. Job satisfaction is influenced by both intrinsic and extrinsic factors. When employees are satisfied, they are more likely to display OCB through voluntary helpful behaviors towards colleagues and the organization. While a few studies found no relationship, the majority of evidence suggests higher job satisfaction translates to higher levels of OCB.
This document discusses a journal article about the relationship between leadership theories and work engagement. It provides an overview of different leadership perspectives and examines how specific leadership styles can impact work engagement. The document suggests that managers play an important role in providing work-related resources like autonomy, social support, and feedback, which can help increase employee engagement. It proposes a conceptual framework for further research on how leadership styles influence work engagement and employee performance.
The meaning and measurement of employee engagement A review of the literature...Omar Ababneh
This document provides a review of the literature on defining and measuring employee engagement. It discusses several debates in the literature, including whether burnout is the antithesis of engagement, if engagement is a state or trait, and how engagement differs from similar constructs like job satisfaction and organizational commitment. The review examines how engagement has been defined by various researchers and identifies inconsistencies in these definitions. It also analyzes the different approaches that have been used to measure engagement and the limitations of these approaches. The goal of the document is to bring clarity to the conceptualization and measurement of employee engagement.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online
This document summarizes a research paper that explores the link between organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behavior among expatriates in Taiwan. It begins with an abstract that describes the study's objectives, methods, and key findings. The full paper then provides definitions and literature reviews of organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behavior. It discusses previous research that has found relationships between aspects of organizational commitment, like affective commitment, and dimensions of organizational citizenship behavior, like courtesy. The study aims to better understand the attitudes and behaviors of expatriates in Taiwan by exploring correlations between sub-dimensions of the two constructs.
The changing nature of the workplace has created different employees' expectations and demands. As a result, the working environment is no longer associated with employees that are rigid and treating jobs as static sets of tasks. Instead, employees are being proactive in developing and adjusting their work roles and functions. The act or behaviour of these employees in adapting their work roles to match their needs and preferences is called job crafting. Goal orientation is considered as an important dimension in influencing their behaviours. However, there has been little research on how the mindset, especially public sector employee's goal orientation, adapt to the changing and challenging world of work. Using Partial Least Square approach with 150 samples, the study showed that public employees with learning goal orientation do embraced job crafting activities and the surprising finding that those with performance prove do not embraced such activities.
This document provides an introduction and literature review for a comparative study of employer provided training and organizational performance in the UK and Bangladesh. It discusses relevant theories like human capital theory and Hofstede's cultural dimensions model. For the UK context, it summarizes studies finding mixed results on the relationship between human resource management practices like training and organizational performance. Cultural dimensions show some differences between the UK and Bangladesh that could impact work attitudes and performance.
Effect of Relational Governance on Job Satisfaction: Empirical Evidence of Su...AJHSSR Journal
This paper attempted to identify the effect of Relational Governance on Job Satisfaction of the
supportive staff of the Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka. This paper was based on primary data collected
from 40 supportive staff who are working in the Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka. Data were analyzed
using Partial Least Squares-Structural Equation Modeling. The study tested three hypothesis between three
dimensions of relational governance (i.e. Flexibility, Inter-personal Trust and Cooperation) and job satisfaction.
The results revealed that these three dimensions of relational governance have a significant positive impact on
job satisfaction of the supportive staff of the Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka.
This document summarizes a study on employee engagement in the IT industry. It discusses definitions of employee engagement from various scholars and practitioners. It describes how the study was conducted through interviews with HR personnel and employees at an IT company to understand their employee engagement practices. Key findings include how the company divides HR activities among different teams, uses an internal web portal to facilitate employee goals and recognition, and holds regular refresh meetings to encourage employees. The relationship between employee engagement, job satisfaction, and individual/organizational performance is also discussed. In conclusion, the study provided insight into the company's emphasis on engagement from onboarding through exit interviews to increase productivity.
The document summarizes a study examining the relationship between job performance factors and career satisfaction of teachers in Malaysia. Specifically, it investigates the moderating roles of distributive justice, procedural justice, and interactional justice in the relationship between task performance, organizational citizenship behavior, and career satisfaction. The study found that task performance was positively related to career satisfaction. It also found that all dimensions of organizational justice predicted career satisfaction. Additionally, there was a significant interaction between teachers' ratings of organizational citizenship behavior and distributive justice in relation to career satisfaction.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) inventionjournals
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online
Analysis of the Equity and job Satisfaction at the Workplace- Implementation ...AI Publications
The aim of this research was to examine the relationships between employee perception of equity and job satisfaction in the Erbil private banks. Data were gathered using a face-to-face survey of 119employees at five private banks inErbil. The findings showed that there is a significant and positive relationship between affirmation action with job satisfaction, there is a significant and positive relationship between affirmation action with job satisfaction and there is no a significant and positive relationship between embracing diversity with job satisfaction in private banks in Erbil.
Banking and Government Sectors in North Nigeria: A Comparative Study on Work ...inventionjournals
Introduction and Purpose: The research at hand explores employee motivation in Nigerian context with banking and government sectors as the backdrop. Contemporary organizations have put much emphasis to understand the dynamics of job performance, the impact of intrinsic rewards and training on employees and the intertwined relationship they have with motivation, which the present study tries to explain. This is specially so because a happy and motivated worker is an efficient performer. Methodology: Set in North Eastern part of Nigeria a sample size of 146 employees which included 88 from government organizations and 58 from private banking sector were taken up for the study through nonprobability convenience sampling method. The data collection instrument gathered the demographic profile of the respondents while information for other above mentioned variables was drawn together through different Likert type scales employed in earlier researches. Cronbach’s Alpha values were put to confirm the validity of the instrument, moreover Pearson Correlations, Pearson Chi Square Test, One Way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA), Levene Statistics, Games-Howell Test, Simple Means, Standard Deviation and Percentages were additional data analysis tools. Findings: The comparative analysis of bank and government employees vis-à-vis variables tested gave out findings which were similar as well as different for these two sectors. Government employees were found to be more motivated, having positive views on intrinsic rewards and training that they received, which was in sharp contrast to banking professionals. Despite being less motivated bankers nonetheless were better performing job wise than their government sector counterparts. Age and income also had affect on the above mentioned independent variables for the employees surveyed. Originality, Limitation and Implication: The novelty aspect of the study is sustained right from the initial research on the topic, continuing with theory level/conceptual framework, literature review to findings. Despite the research having resource crunch is unique in the manner that no such work in has been carried out in North Eastern part of Nigeria, the area which is vastly uncharted. The study is likely to fuel academic and scholarly pursuits in future studies which are similar in nature, it can be a guiding light to human resource practitioners in the corporate world as well as researchers in the field of management. Keywords: Work Motivation, Job Performance, Intrinsic Rewards, Training, Nigeria, Government and Banking Sectors
Corporate social responsibility (csr) and issue to corporate financial perfor...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a study on the relationship between corporate social responsibility (CSR) and corporate financial performance (CFP) of banking companies in Bangladesh. It provides background on CSR and reviews previous literature on the relationship between CSR and CFP. The study uses questionnaires to assess perceptions of CSR among banking executives and social groups. It analyzes CSR practices reported in annual reports of selected Bangladeshi banks. Statistical tests are used to analyze the relationship between CSR and CFP. The study aims to provide insight into CSR practices in Bangladesh and their potential impact on financial performance.
Corporate social-and-financial-performance-an-extended-stakeholder-theory-and...Jan Ahmed
This document summarizes a research article that empirically analyzes the relationship between corporate social performance (CSP) and corporate financial performance (CFP). The study extends stakeholder theory by considering stakeholder heterogeneity and incorporating insights from prospect theory. It analyzes a panel dataset of S&P 500 companies from 1997-2002 that includes disaggregated measures of CSP. The study finds that a reputation for CSP is more strongly related to CFP for secondary stakeholders than primary stakeholders. It also finds that the negative impact of bad CSP on CFP is larger than the positive impact of good CSP, due to prospect theory's concept of losses looming larger than gains. The study contributes to research by taking a more nuanced view of how different
Job 2001 stamper van dyne ocb part timeFahim Ahmed
This survey-based field study examined differences in organizational citizenship behavior between full-time and part-time service employees. Questionnaire data from 257 employees and their supervisors showed that part-time employees exhibited less helping behavior than full-time, but there was no difference in voice behavior. The study also found that an individual's preferred work status and organizational culture moderated the relationships between actual work status and citizenship. For helping behavior, preferred status mattered more to part-time workers. For voice, preferred status was equally important to both groups, with high voice when actual status matched preferred. Contrary to expectations, work status made a bigger difference in both helping and voice in less bureaucratic organizations.
This document is a literature review and methodology section for a study assessing how psychological contracts impact affective commitment in Kenyan cricketers. It begins with a literature review covering definitions of psychological contracts, their importance in organizations and sports, and applications in Kenya. It then describes the quantitative methodology used, including questionnaires to measure psychological contracts and commitment, sampling national cricket players, and analyzing data through regression. The results section provides descriptive statistics of questionnaire responses but notes low reliability scores that may impact accuracy.
This document summarizes a research study that examined the relationships between individual characteristics, group strength, emotional exhaustion, organizational citizenship behavior, job satisfaction, and service sabotage among restaurant employees in Bekasi City, West Java, Indonesia. The study used a quantitative research design and surveyed 107 restaurant employees. Statistical analysis using GSCA software found that acts of sabotage were not related to individual characteristics or group strength. However, service sabotage was related to employee job dissatisfaction and levels of organizational citizenship behavior. Specifically, employees with higher job satisfaction and who exhibited more organizational citizenship behaviors were less likely to engage in service sabotage. Emotional exhaustion was also found to influence job satisfaction and sabotage, such that employees with more stable emotions had
This document summarizes a research study that analyzed the impact of organizational justice on employee turnover at TOTAL E&P Yemen (TEPY), the largest oil and gas company in Yemen. The study examined how employees' perceptions of distributive justice, procedural justice, and interactional justice affected their job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and turnover intentions. A questionnaire was distributed to 183 TEPY employees in Yemen. The findings indicated that higher perceptions of organizational justice led to increased employee satisfaction and commitment, and reduced turnover intentions. Specifically, procedural justice had the strongest influence on commitment and turnover intentions, while distributive justice most influenced job satisfaction. The conclusions recommend that TEPY managers promote fairness to benefit both employees and the organization.
Research Methods Assignment - The Relationship among board of director charac...Amany Hamza
This report attempts to critically analyse the research paper:
Dunn, P., & Sainty, B. (2009) The relationship among board of director characteristics, corporate social performance and corporate financial performance, International Journal of Managerial, Finance, Vol. 5 No. 4, 2009 pp. 407-423
This document summarizes a thesis that examines how corporate social responsibility (CSR) can strengthen an organization's ability to retain employees. The thesis begins by confirming through literature review that while CSR seems to influence employee attachment to organizations, the impacts of CSR on internal stakeholders like employees have been neglected. It then presents a theoretical model linking employer branding and CSR, with identification as the outcome that can strengthen retention. An empirical case study of a carpet company demonstrates how employees identify with the organization in part due to congruence between personal and corporate values and involvement in CSR activities. The thesis concludes that using CSR for employer branding has the potential to strengthen retention, depending on employees making sense of CSR as valuable.
This document summarizes a literature review on the relationships between entrepreneurial orientation, networking, external environment, and firm performance. It finds that while entrepreneurial orientation is generally thought to improve firm performance, some empirical studies have found insignificant or negative relationships. The literature review aims to provide a conceptual framework for better understanding these complex relationships and addressing gaps in existing research. Specifically, it examines how networking and external environment may moderate the relationship between entrepreneurial orientation and performance.
This document summarizes a research paper that studied the relationships between role stressors, emotional satisfaction of employees, and employee-perceived service quality. The study found that emotional satisfaction is positively related to employee-perceived service quality. It also found that role stressors like role overload, role conflict, and work-family conflict were negatively related to emotional satisfaction. The findings suggest that role stressors indirectly influence service quality by affecting the emotional satisfaction of employees.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online
A Study of the Relationship between Work Engagement and Job Satisfaction in P...IJAEMSJORNAL
The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between work engagement and job satisfaction. The research aimed to examine each of ( equal opportunities, personal influence, nature of career, development opportunity, employee recognition, work challenge, supervisor behaviour, ethics and integrity, and job empowerment) and its relationship with job satisfaction in private companies in Erbil. The researcher used quantitative research method in order to measure the relationship between work engagement and job satisfaction, however only 108 respondents were participated in the current study. The researcher used multiple regression analysis to measure the relationship among variables. The researcher found that workplace challenge had the highest value among other work engagement elements = .671 and P-value = .000 which indicates that many private companies’ employees are engaged to their job because of time management, Overwhelming workloads and communication. This research highlighted the significance of workplace challenge that inspires the individuals to be more engaged to their organization. Employee engagement is a positive attitude towards the workplace and is the degree that an individual is bind to the organization. Only small number of employees had participated in this research from private companies in Kurdistan, which limits the outcome of the study.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online
This document summarizes a research paper that explores the link between organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behavior among expatriates in Taiwan. It begins with an abstract that describes the study's objectives, methods, and key findings. The full paper then provides definitions and literature reviews of organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behavior. It discusses previous research that has found relationships between aspects of organizational commitment, like affective commitment, and dimensions of organizational citizenship behavior, like courtesy. The study aims to better understand the attitudes and behaviors of expatriates in Taiwan by exploring correlations between sub-dimensions of the two constructs.
The changing nature of the workplace has created different employees' expectations and demands. As a result, the working environment is no longer associated with employees that are rigid and treating jobs as static sets of tasks. Instead, employees are being proactive in developing and adjusting their work roles and functions. The act or behaviour of these employees in adapting their work roles to match their needs and preferences is called job crafting. Goal orientation is considered as an important dimension in influencing their behaviours. However, there has been little research on how the mindset, especially public sector employee's goal orientation, adapt to the changing and challenging world of work. Using Partial Least Square approach with 150 samples, the study showed that public employees with learning goal orientation do embraced job crafting activities and the surprising finding that those with performance prove do not embraced such activities.
This document provides an introduction and literature review for a comparative study of employer provided training and organizational performance in the UK and Bangladesh. It discusses relevant theories like human capital theory and Hofstede's cultural dimensions model. For the UK context, it summarizes studies finding mixed results on the relationship between human resource management practices like training and organizational performance. Cultural dimensions show some differences between the UK and Bangladesh that could impact work attitudes and performance.
Effect of Relational Governance on Job Satisfaction: Empirical Evidence of Su...AJHSSR Journal
This paper attempted to identify the effect of Relational Governance on Job Satisfaction of the
supportive staff of the Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka. This paper was based on primary data collected
from 40 supportive staff who are working in the Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka. Data were analyzed
using Partial Least Squares-Structural Equation Modeling. The study tested three hypothesis between three
dimensions of relational governance (i.e. Flexibility, Inter-personal Trust and Cooperation) and job satisfaction.
The results revealed that these three dimensions of relational governance have a significant positive impact on
job satisfaction of the supportive staff of the Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka.
This document summarizes a study on employee engagement in the IT industry. It discusses definitions of employee engagement from various scholars and practitioners. It describes how the study was conducted through interviews with HR personnel and employees at an IT company to understand their employee engagement practices. Key findings include how the company divides HR activities among different teams, uses an internal web portal to facilitate employee goals and recognition, and holds regular refresh meetings to encourage employees. The relationship between employee engagement, job satisfaction, and individual/organizational performance is also discussed. In conclusion, the study provided insight into the company's emphasis on engagement from onboarding through exit interviews to increase productivity.
The document summarizes a study examining the relationship between job performance factors and career satisfaction of teachers in Malaysia. Specifically, it investigates the moderating roles of distributive justice, procedural justice, and interactional justice in the relationship between task performance, organizational citizenship behavior, and career satisfaction. The study found that task performance was positively related to career satisfaction. It also found that all dimensions of organizational justice predicted career satisfaction. Additionally, there was a significant interaction between teachers' ratings of organizational citizenship behavior and distributive justice in relation to career satisfaction.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) inventionjournals
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online
Analysis of the Equity and job Satisfaction at the Workplace- Implementation ...AI Publications
The aim of this research was to examine the relationships between employee perception of equity and job satisfaction in the Erbil private banks. Data were gathered using a face-to-face survey of 119employees at five private banks inErbil. The findings showed that there is a significant and positive relationship between affirmation action with job satisfaction, there is a significant and positive relationship between affirmation action with job satisfaction and there is no a significant and positive relationship between embracing diversity with job satisfaction in private banks in Erbil.
Banking and Government Sectors in North Nigeria: A Comparative Study on Work ...inventionjournals
Introduction and Purpose: The research at hand explores employee motivation in Nigerian context with banking and government sectors as the backdrop. Contemporary organizations have put much emphasis to understand the dynamics of job performance, the impact of intrinsic rewards and training on employees and the intertwined relationship they have with motivation, which the present study tries to explain. This is specially so because a happy and motivated worker is an efficient performer. Methodology: Set in North Eastern part of Nigeria a sample size of 146 employees which included 88 from government organizations and 58 from private banking sector were taken up for the study through nonprobability convenience sampling method. The data collection instrument gathered the demographic profile of the respondents while information for other above mentioned variables was drawn together through different Likert type scales employed in earlier researches. Cronbach’s Alpha values were put to confirm the validity of the instrument, moreover Pearson Correlations, Pearson Chi Square Test, One Way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA), Levene Statistics, Games-Howell Test, Simple Means, Standard Deviation and Percentages were additional data analysis tools. Findings: The comparative analysis of bank and government employees vis-à-vis variables tested gave out findings which were similar as well as different for these two sectors. Government employees were found to be more motivated, having positive views on intrinsic rewards and training that they received, which was in sharp contrast to banking professionals. Despite being less motivated bankers nonetheless were better performing job wise than their government sector counterparts. Age and income also had affect on the above mentioned independent variables for the employees surveyed. Originality, Limitation and Implication: The novelty aspect of the study is sustained right from the initial research on the topic, continuing with theory level/conceptual framework, literature review to findings. Despite the research having resource crunch is unique in the manner that no such work in has been carried out in North Eastern part of Nigeria, the area which is vastly uncharted. The study is likely to fuel academic and scholarly pursuits in future studies which are similar in nature, it can be a guiding light to human resource practitioners in the corporate world as well as researchers in the field of management. Keywords: Work Motivation, Job Performance, Intrinsic Rewards, Training, Nigeria, Government and Banking Sectors
Corporate social responsibility (csr) and issue to corporate financial perfor...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a study on the relationship between corporate social responsibility (CSR) and corporate financial performance (CFP) of banking companies in Bangladesh. It provides background on CSR and reviews previous literature on the relationship between CSR and CFP. The study uses questionnaires to assess perceptions of CSR among banking executives and social groups. It analyzes CSR practices reported in annual reports of selected Bangladeshi banks. Statistical tests are used to analyze the relationship between CSR and CFP. The study aims to provide insight into CSR practices in Bangladesh and their potential impact on financial performance.
Corporate social-and-financial-performance-an-extended-stakeholder-theory-and...Jan Ahmed
This document summarizes a research article that empirically analyzes the relationship between corporate social performance (CSP) and corporate financial performance (CFP). The study extends stakeholder theory by considering stakeholder heterogeneity and incorporating insights from prospect theory. It analyzes a panel dataset of S&P 500 companies from 1997-2002 that includes disaggregated measures of CSP. The study finds that a reputation for CSP is more strongly related to CFP for secondary stakeholders than primary stakeholders. It also finds that the negative impact of bad CSP on CFP is larger than the positive impact of good CSP, due to prospect theory's concept of losses looming larger than gains. The study contributes to research by taking a more nuanced view of how different
Job 2001 stamper van dyne ocb part timeFahim Ahmed
This survey-based field study examined differences in organizational citizenship behavior between full-time and part-time service employees. Questionnaire data from 257 employees and their supervisors showed that part-time employees exhibited less helping behavior than full-time, but there was no difference in voice behavior. The study also found that an individual's preferred work status and organizational culture moderated the relationships between actual work status and citizenship. For helping behavior, preferred status mattered more to part-time workers. For voice, preferred status was equally important to both groups, with high voice when actual status matched preferred. Contrary to expectations, work status made a bigger difference in both helping and voice in less bureaucratic organizations.
This document is a literature review and methodology section for a study assessing how psychological contracts impact affective commitment in Kenyan cricketers. It begins with a literature review covering definitions of psychological contracts, their importance in organizations and sports, and applications in Kenya. It then describes the quantitative methodology used, including questionnaires to measure psychological contracts and commitment, sampling national cricket players, and analyzing data through regression. The results section provides descriptive statistics of questionnaire responses but notes low reliability scores that may impact accuracy.
This document summarizes a research study that examined the relationships between individual characteristics, group strength, emotional exhaustion, organizational citizenship behavior, job satisfaction, and service sabotage among restaurant employees in Bekasi City, West Java, Indonesia. The study used a quantitative research design and surveyed 107 restaurant employees. Statistical analysis using GSCA software found that acts of sabotage were not related to individual characteristics or group strength. However, service sabotage was related to employee job dissatisfaction and levels of organizational citizenship behavior. Specifically, employees with higher job satisfaction and who exhibited more organizational citizenship behaviors were less likely to engage in service sabotage. Emotional exhaustion was also found to influence job satisfaction and sabotage, such that employees with more stable emotions had
This document summarizes a research study that analyzed the impact of organizational justice on employee turnover at TOTAL E&P Yemen (TEPY), the largest oil and gas company in Yemen. The study examined how employees' perceptions of distributive justice, procedural justice, and interactional justice affected their job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and turnover intentions. A questionnaire was distributed to 183 TEPY employees in Yemen. The findings indicated that higher perceptions of organizational justice led to increased employee satisfaction and commitment, and reduced turnover intentions. Specifically, procedural justice had the strongest influence on commitment and turnover intentions, while distributive justice most influenced job satisfaction. The conclusions recommend that TEPY managers promote fairness to benefit both employees and the organization.
Research Methods Assignment - The Relationship among board of director charac...Amany Hamza
This report attempts to critically analyse the research paper:
Dunn, P., & Sainty, B. (2009) The relationship among board of director characteristics, corporate social performance and corporate financial performance, International Journal of Managerial, Finance, Vol. 5 No. 4, 2009 pp. 407-423
This document summarizes a thesis that examines how corporate social responsibility (CSR) can strengthen an organization's ability to retain employees. The thesis begins by confirming through literature review that while CSR seems to influence employee attachment to organizations, the impacts of CSR on internal stakeholders like employees have been neglected. It then presents a theoretical model linking employer branding and CSR, with identification as the outcome that can strengthen retention. An empirical case study of a carpet company demonstrates how employees identify with the organization in part due to congruence between personal and corporate values and involvement in CSR activities. The thesis concludes that using CSR for employer branding has the potential to strengthen retention, depending on employees making sense of CSR as valuable.
This document summarizes a literature review on the relationships between entrepreneurial orientation, networking, external environment, and firm performance. It finds that while entrepreneurial orientation is generally thought to improve firm performance, some empirical studies have found insignificant or negative relationships. The literature review aims to provide a conceptual framework for better understanding these complex relationships and addressing gaps in existing research. Specifically, it examines how networking and external environment may moderate the relationship between entrepreneurial orientation and performance.
This document summarizes a research paper that studied the relationships between role stressors, emotional satisfaction of employees, and employee-perceived service quality. The study found that emotional satisfaction is positively related to employee-perceived service quality. It also found that role stressors like role overload, role conflict, and work-family conflict were negatively related to emotional satisfaction. The findings suggest that role stressors indirectly influence service quality by affecting the emotional satisfaction of employees.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online
A Study of the Relationship between Work Engagement and Job Satisfaction in P...IJAEMSJORNAL
The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between work engagement and job satisfaction. The research aimed to examine each of ( equal opportunities, personal influence, nature of career, development opportunity, employee recognition, work challenge, supervisor behaviour, ethics and integrity, and job empowerment) and its relationship with job satisfaction in private companies in Erbil. The researcher used quantitative research method in order to measure the relationship between work engagement and job satisfaction, however only 108 respondents were participated in the current study. The researcher used multiple regression analysis to measure the relationship among variables. The researcher found that workplace challenge had the highest value among other work engagement elements = .671 and P-value = .000 which indicates that many private companies’ employees are engaged to their job because of time management, Overwhelming workloads and communication. This research highlighted the significance of workplace challenge that inspires the individuals to be more engaged to their organization. Employee engagement is a positive attitude towards the workplace and is the degree that an individual is bind to the organization. Only small number of employees had participated in this research from private companies in Kurdistan, which limits the outcome of the study.
A Comparative Study Of Employee-Attitude Of Permanent And Temporary Employees...Sabrina Green
This document summarizes a study comparing the work attitudes of permanent and temporary employees in selected public sector undertakings in India. It provides background on issues around retaining employees and discusses previous literature on topics like job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and job involvement. The study aims to identify differences in work attitudes between permanent and temporary workers. Mann-Whitney and Wilcoxon-W tests were used to analyze survey data from these two groups. The findings section indicates some elements of job satisfaction like communication where significant differences were found between permanent and temporary employees.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online.
This paper proposes a conceptual model to examine how coworkers react emotionally and behaviorally when a focal employee is entitled to advantageous outcomes through human resource (HR) differentiation. The model draws on deontic justice theory and incorporates coworkers' outcome favorability, leader-member exchange social comparisons, and perceptions of team climate. The model suggests coworkers may feel anger or contentment depending on these contextual factors, leading to approach or avoidance behaviors towards the focal employee and organization. The paper aims to provide a more holistic understanding of how HR differentiation impacts coworkers beyond just the focal employee.
The link between job satisfaction and organizational commitmentYannis Markovits
This article examines the relationship between job satisfaction and organizational commitment for public and private sector employees. It reviews literature showing private sector employees generally report higher extrinsic job satisfaction than public sector employees due to differences in rewards. However, intrinsic satisfaction can be high for both. Studies also show mixed results for differences in organizational commitment between sectors. The article hypothesizes that job satisfaction will be more strongly related to organizational commitment for public sector versus private sector employees, especially for affective and normative commitment. It analyzes survey data from 617 Greek employees to test this.
THE MEDIATION EFFECT OF CONTINGENT WORKFORCE FROM THE VIEW POINT OF ORGANIZAT...IAEME Publication
‘Liberalization’ and ‘Globalization’ Presented change of business environment, and expanded rivalry among enterprises for endurance. Potential market limit and accessibility of labour force tricked many MNC's, addressing the best brands of the world, to set up their workplaces in India, giving an extreme rivalry to their partners. To contend in this client driven market economy, ventures require adaptability in overseeing labour to address incidental upsurge or stoppage sought after. However, the age-old and unbending Indian work laws, which were sanctioned 8 forty years back, limiting right-measuring of labour, are making obstacles in smooth working of businesses. These components are tending ventures to recruit an ever-increasing number of quantities of agreement works to have more noteworthy adaptability to change the quantity of labour force dependent on monetary productivity, better usage of assets, advancement of benefit and bringing cost viability, notwithstanding the of hazard of lower labourer loyalties and horrible compensation.
Context matters examining ‘soft’ and ‘hard’ approaches to emp.docxdickonsondorris
Context matters: examining ‘soft’ and ‘hard’ approaches to employee
engagement in two workplaces
Sarah Jenkins* and Rick Delbridge
Cardiff Business School, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK
This paper reports different managerial approaches to engaging employees in two
contrasting organizations. We categorize these approaches to employee engagement as
‘hard’ and ‘soft’, and examine how these reflect the different external contexts in which
management operate and, in particular, their influence on management’s ability to
promote a supportive internal context. The paper extends the existing literature on the
antecedents of engagement by illustrating the importance of combining practitioner
concerns about the role and practice of managers with the insights derived from the
psychological literature relating to job features. We build from these two approaches to
include important features of organizational context to examine the tensions and
constraints management encounter in promoting engagement. Our analysis draws on
the critical organizational and HRM literature to make a contribution to understanding
different applications of employee engagement within organizations. In so doing, we
outline a situated and critical reading of organizations to better appreciate that
management practices are complex, contested, emergent, locally enacted and context
specific, and thereby provide new insights into the inherent challenges of delivering
engaged employees.
Keywords: contextual contingencies; critical HRM; drivers of engagement; employee
engagement; ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ management approaches to engagement
Introduction
This paper presents a qualitative study of two contrasting organizational cases to examine
and explain different management approaches to engaging employees. Our research
demonstrates how contextual contingencies enable or impede management’s ability to
deliver employee engagement. To assess this, we borrow from the early HRM research
(Storey 1989) to distinguish between ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ management approaches to
employee engagement. VoiceTel embodied a ‘soft approach’ to employee engagement –
this centred on promoting positive workplace conditions and relationships between
management and employees, designing work and forging a work environment which was
conducive to promoting employee engagement; enhanced individual employee
productivity was not the primary focus or purpose. In stark contrast, EnergyServ adopted
‘hard’ engagement – this refers to the explicit objective of gaining competitive advantage
through increased employee productivity wherein employee engagement aims to directly
increase employee effort to improve organizational performance. Employee responses
were also very different – VoiceTel’s employees reported high levels of engagement, in
contrast, at EnergyServ, despite senior management’s commitment to, and prioritizing of,
employee engagement, high levels of employee disengagement were evident. Therefore,.
Read the articles and identify the problem purpose framework and.docxwrite4
1) The document discusses supervisor listening within the framework of leader-member exchange (LMX) theory. It argues that supervisor listening contributes to employee satisfaction, interactional justice, and job satisfaction by fostering strong LMX relationships.
2) The study assessed the validity of perceived supervisor listening and its links to work outcomes using a survey of 250 German employees. Results supported the validity of supervisor listening and its relationship to LMX and outcomes.
3) The document provides a conceptual framework for understanding listening in the supervisor-employee relationship based on Rogers' theory of empathic listening. It defines listening quality as the employee's perception of being attentively listened to, accepted, and appreciated by their supervisor.
Research Paper- The Effects of Corporate Social Responsibility on EmployeesAnnie-Pierre Fortier
This document summarizes a research report that investigated the relationship between employees' perceptions of their company's corporate social responsibility and their job satisfaction. The study examined this relationship across cultures, analyzing the moderating effects of power distance and individualism-collectivism. Survey data from 79 employees of an oil and gas firm in Australia found a positive relationship between perceived CSR and job satisfaction. Individualistic employees had a stronger relationship between perceived CSR and job satisfaction. The report identifies a gap in the literature around considering cross-cultural dimensions and proposes examining individualism-collectivism and power distance as moderators in future research.
Effect of learning goal orientationon work engagement througEvonCanales257
Effect of learning goal orientation
on work engagement through
job crafting
A moderated mediation approach
Makoto Matsuo
Graduate School of Economics and Business Administration, Hokkaido
University, Sapporo, Japan
Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the mechanism by which learning goal orientation (LGO)
promotes work engagement through job crafting (seeking challenges).
Design/methodology/approach – A moderated mediation model was tested using survey data from 266
public health nurses and hospital nurses in Japan.
Findings – The results indicated that job crafting partially mediated the relationship between LGO and work
engagement, and that the mediation effect was stronger when reflection was high (vs middle and low).
Research limitations/implications – Although common method bias and validity of measurement were
evaluated in this paper, the survey data were cross-sectional.
Practical implications – The results suggest that selecting people with a stronger sense of LGO may be a
useful strategy for promoting job crafting and work engagement in an organization. Additionally,
organizations should give employees opportunities to reflect on their jobs and to craft them into more
challenging ones in the workplace.
Originality/value – Although little is known about mechanisms by which LGO promotes work engagement,
this study found that job crafting and reflection play important roles in linking LGO and work engagement.
Keywords Quantitative, Reflection, Work engagement, Moderated mediation, Learning goal orientation,
Job crafting
Paper type Research paper
Introduction
Work engagement, or a positive, fulfilling, work-related state of mind (Schaufeli et al., 2002),
has emerged as a significant construct in the applied psychological and management
literature because it has been shown to promote both well-being and performance in
employees (Saks, 2006; Van De Voorde et al., 2016). The growing interest in work engagement
gives rise to the need for better understanding of its antecedents (Woods and Sofat, 2013).
Although numerous factors have been examined as antecedents (e.g. self-regulation
behaviors, personality traits, psychological meaningfulness, job autonomy), learning goal
orientation (LGO), known as a disposition that intrinsically motivates employees (Cerasoli
and Ford, 2014), may be one of the major determinants of work engagement (Adriaenssens
et al., 2015; Jones et al., 2017) because work engagement constitutes a form of intrinsic
motivation (Demerouti et al., 2015). Despite their importance, little is known, from previous
studies, about the factors that mediate the relationship between LGO and work engagement.
To address this gap, the present research examined the LGO–engagement relationship in
terms of “job crafting” (seeking challenges), conceptualized based on job demands-resources
(JD-R) theory (Demerouti et al., 2001), as well as “reflection,” which plays an important role
in the learning process (Kolb, 19 ...
This document discusses how ethical values are playing an increasingly influential role in shaping employee attitudes and behaviors regarding the psychological contract between employees and organizations. It proposes expanding the interpretive framework for psychological contracts to include an "ideology-infused" perspective, where employees may seek contributions from their employer that align with societal values or principles beyond just individual or mutual benefits. Breach of the psychological contract could then occur if an organization fails to deliver on contributions involving benefits to broader society or ethical standards, even if there is no direct impact on the employee. The document examines how personal ethical values and shared understandings of organizational ethics form important frameworks for how employees interpret organizations' obligations and behaviors.
The Effect of Work Relations on Commitment to Change-A study on small compani...ijtsrd
This document summarizes a research study that examined the effect of work relationships on employee commitment to organizational change. Specifically, it looked at the relationships between employees and their managers as well as coworkers. The study found that high quality relationships with managers were positively related to employees' affective and normative commitment to change. Additionally, high quality relationships with coworkers and perceiving coworkers as having a positive attitude towards the change were also positively related to commitment. The study concluded that relationships in the workplace, both with managers and coworkers, play an important role in gaining employee commitment to organizational change initiatives.
Akkermans & Tims (2016) - Crafting your Career: How Career Competencies Relat...Jos Akkermans
This study examines whether career competencies can enhance subjective career success in terms of perceived employability and work-home balance through job crafting behaviors. The results showed that job crafting mediated the positive relationship between career competencies and both internal and external perceived employability as well as work-home enrichment. However, career competencies were also positively related to work-home interference through job crafting. The findings suggest that career competencies and job crafting can help employees achieve better career success by improving their employability and work-home balance.
Akkermans & Tims (2017) - Crafting your Career: How Career Competencies Relat...Jos Akkermans
This study aimed to investigate whether career competencies could enhance an
employee's subjective career success in terms of perceived employability and
work–home balance via job crafting behaviors. Based on Job Demands-
Resources (JD-R) Theory, we examined a potential motivational process in
which career competencies, as a personal resource, would enhance career success
through expansive job crafting. The results showed that job crafting mediated
the positive relationship between career competencies and both internal
and external perceived employability. In addition, job crafting mediated the
positive relationship between career competencies and work–home enrichment.
We expected a negative association between job crafting and work–home interference,
yet our results indicated that career competencies are indirectly and
positively related to work–home interference via job crafting. With our findings,
we add to JD-R Theory by (1) showing that career competencies may be
considered a personal resource, (2) empirically examining the role of job crafting
in motivational processes, and (3) showing that enhanced subjective career
success can be an outcome of motivational processes. Organisations may use
these findings to implement developmental HR practices aimed at increasing
career competencies and job crafting.
To what extent does employees’ perception of organizational justice influence...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a research study that investigated the relationship between employees' perceptions of organizational justice (distributive justice, procedural justice, and interactional justice) and their organizational citizenship behavior (OCB). The study was conducted with 152 employees in Ghana and found that:
1) Employees' overall perceptions of organizational justice significantly influenced and accounted for 6.5% of the variance in their OCB.
2) Procedural justice and interactional justice both positively related to OCB at a significant level, accounting for 3.7% and 2.1% of variance respectively.
3) Distributive justice did not significantly relate to OCB and only accounted for 1.4% of the variance
An Employee Engagement Instrument And Framework Building On Existing ResearchMichele Thomas
This document summarizes research on developing an employee engagement instrument and framework. It begins by discussing the importance of employee engagement for competitive advantage and organizational performance. It then reviews different conceptualizations and measurements of engagement in existing literature. The researchers conducted an in-depth literature review to develop a new engagement framework consisting of seven dimensions measuring engagement at the individual, team, and organizational levels. The framework aims to provide conceptual clarity on engagement and a basis for organizations to leverage competitive advantage. The value of this research is that it integrates engagement measurement at both the individual and organizational levels.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Executive Directors Chat Leveraging AI for Diversity, Equity, and InclusionTechSoup
Let’s explore the intersection of technology and equity in the final session of our DEI series. Discover how AI tools, like ChatGPT, can be used to support and enhance your nonprofit's DEI initiatives. Participants will gain insights into practical AI applications and get tips for leveraging technology to advance their DEI goals.
June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
2. Although numerous previous studies have shown that i-deals can benefit the i-deals’ recipients
(for a review, see Liao, Wayne, & Rousseau, 2016), what is still less clear is how the recipients’
coworkers respond to the i-deals. Because i-deals operate in an organizational context, they
may have broader implications beyond the recipients, and coworker’s role has long been recog-
nized by i-deal researchers (Greenberg et al., 2004). As an interested third party, coworkers are an
important part of the triangle (i.e., employers, focal employees, and coworkers), which deter-
mines the ultimate effectiveness of i-deals (Greenberg et al., 2004; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg,
2006). However, thus far, empirical research on third-party implications of i-deals remains in
its infancy, with only a few studies shedding light on this issue.
Lai and colleagues found that coworkers were willing to accept others’ i-deals if the i-dealers
were their close personal friends (Lai, Rousseau, & Chang, 2009). Studies found that coworkers
who witnessed others’ i-deals and yet received lower levels of i-deals than others were likely to feel
envy or emotional exhaustion (Kong, Ho, & Garg, 2020; Ng, 2017). More recently, the results of a
study showed that i-deals concerning a financial bonus would be considered more distributively
unfair by coworkers than other i-deals concerning work-hour flexibility and workload reduction,
and thus triggered coworkers’ complaining (Marescaux, De Winne, & Sels, 2019). Taken together,
these studies indicate that coworkers do engage in the comparison of i-deals with the recipients,
and such comparison can cause coworkers’ psychological and behavioral reactions.
Nevertheless, two important gaps remain to be filled. First, although some investigations we
mentioned above have alluded to the existence of social comparison in the context of i-deals
among coworkers, empirical study exploring coworkers’ reactions toward focal employees’
i-deals from this perspective is still scarce (Guerrero & Challiol-Jeanblanc, 2016). Second, cow-
orkers’ acceptance is one neutral and representative reaction that should be strived for
(Marescaux, De Winne, & Sels, 2019), because i-deals’ ultimate effectiveness can partly depend
on coworkers’ acceptance (Lai, Rousseau, & Chang, 2009). However, we know little about
whether and how the contents of i-deals affect coworkers’ acceptance behavior, even though rele-
vant study has indicated that the contents of various types of i-deals can lead to different impacts
on coworkers’ perceptions and behaviors (Marescaux, De Winne, & Sels, 2019). Thus, to further
advance our understanding of which type of focal employees’ i-deals is more acceptable for cow-
orkers, a deeper investigation is warranted.
Our study tries to fill these gaps by using social comparison theory to explore how focal
employees’ different types of i-deals influence coworkers’ perceptions and subsequent acceptance
behavior. One common assumption in social comparison theory is upward comparison, or com-
parison with others who are better off, such as coworkers’ comparison with i-deals recipients
(Buunk & Mussweiler, 2001; Collins, 1996). Researchers have indicated that the effects of upward
comparisons depend on whether employees contrast or assimilate themselves with the compari-
son targets (Mussweiler, Ruter, & Epstude, 2004). When individuals contrast themselves, upward
comparison may threaten their self-identity and self- image (Collins, 1996; Van der Zee, Buunk,
Sanderman, Botke, & van den Bergh, 2000). Supporting this argument, existing studies have
shown that upward comparison may trigger coworkers’ adverse reactions, even social undermin-
ing behaviors, by inducing status threat (Marr & Thau, 2014; Reh, Tröster, & Van Quaquebeke,
2018). When individuals assimilate themselves, upward comparison may entail individuals’
assumption that they can attain a similarly attractive situation (Lockwood, Jordan, & Kunda,
2002; Lockwood & Kunda, 1997). Consistent with this theorizing, upward comparison may
also show coworkers the possibility of obtaining comparable future i-deals like focal employees
received. Based on these rationales, we develop and test a model in which coworkers’ felt status
threat and coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals serve as mediators linking focal
employees’ development i-deals (i.e., individualized opportunities to develop working skills or
career advancement) and flexibility i-deals (i.e., personal discretion over working hours or loca-
tions) to coworkers’ acceptance.
2 Xiaoyan Zhang et al.
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3. Furthermore, given that the triangle consisting of focal employees, their coworkers, and their
leaders determines the final effectiveness of i-deals in the organizations, and the i-deals are for-
mally authorized by the leaders (Greenberg et al., 2004; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006), we
propose that the differentiation between coworkers’ leader–member exchange (coworkers’
LMX) and focal employees’ leader–member exchange (focal employees’ LMX) may constrain
coworkers’ perceptions and behaviors. Thus, we included coworkers’ LMX relative to the
LMXs of i-deals recipients (coworkers’ RLMX) in our theoretical model as a moderator that
may alter the extent of coworkers’ reactions to the focal employees’ i-deals.
Our study contributes to the literature in three specific ways. First, we contribute to i-deals
literature by enriching our understanding of the influences of focal employees’ i-deals on their
coworkers. The majority of previous i-deals research studies were conducted to clarify the impacts
of i-deals on focal employees’ work attitudes and behaviors (e.g., Guerrero & Challiol-Jeanblanc,
2016; Liu et al., 2013; Ng & Feldman, 2010, 2015; Rosen et al., 2013; Vidyarthi, Singh, Erdogan,
Chaudhry, Posthuma, & Anand, 2016). However, the empirical investigation on the effects of
focal employees’ i-deals on their coworkers is still in its infancy (Marescaux, De Winne, &
Sels, 2019). Given that i-deals are made in a larger social context, instead of a vacuum context
(Kong, Ho, & Garg, 2020), there is a pressing need to explore how and why coworkers respond
to others’ i-deals. Thus, we advance i-deals literature by investigating the interpersonal implica-
tions of i-deals for the coworkers’ perceptions and behaviors.
Second, this study extends i-deals literature by exploring whether and why different types of
i-deals differently affect coworkers’ acceptance of others’ i-deals. Existing studies have indicated
that different i-deals have different impacts on the recipients (Hornung, Rousseau, & Glaser,
2008; 2009; Hornung, Rousseau, Weigl, Müller, & Glaser, 2014). And recently, a study by
Marescaux, De Winne, and Sels (2019) showed that the contents of i-deals can also have different
influences on the recipients’ coworkers. Given that the acceptance is an important manifestation
of coworkers’ behavioral reactions toward others’ i-deals and low levels of coworkers’ acceptance
may significantly reduce or even negate the i-deals’ effectiveness (Lai, Rousseau, & Chang, 2009),
it is necessary to further investigate the influences of the contents of i-deals on coworkers’ accept-
ance behavior. Thus, we extend i-deals literature by integrating previous research to refine the
understanding of which kind of focal employees’ i-deals is more likely to be accepted by
coworkers.
Third, our contribution pertains to our adding to the limited mediating mechanisms linking
focal employees’ i-deals to coworkers’ reactions from the social comparison perspective. Thus far,
i-deals literature is dominated by mediating mechanisms pertaining to social exchange theory
(Liu et al., 2013; Ng & Feldman, 2015), for explaining why focal employees reciprocate
(Anand, Vidyarthi, Liden, & Rousseau, 2010; Huo, Luo, & Tam, 2014). A handful of studies
investigating coworkers’ reactions to others’ i-deals have been conducted from equity theory
(Marescaux, De Winne, & Sels, 2019; Ng, 2017) or conservation of resources theory (Kong,
Ho, & Garg, 2020). However, due to the within-group heterogeneity nature, i-deals can be sub-
jected to social comparison process, which has strong implications for other group members.
Therefore, extending beyond prior studies, we adopt a comparison perspective to examine
whether upward comparison on i-deals can lead to coworkers’ perceptions of status threat and
obtaining comparable treatment, thus shape their acceptance behavior.
Theory and hypotheses
Idiosyncratic deals, social comparison, and coworkers’ reactions
I-deals are special work arrangements and employment conditions that are negotiated between
employees and their employers to satisfy both parties’ needs and interests (Rousseau, 2001,
2005; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006). The within-group heterogeneity nature of i-deals dif-
ferentiates the recipients from other employees, who do similar work or who are in a similar
Journal of Management & Organization 3
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4. position (Rousseau, 2001). With regard to timing, scope, and content, i-deals take many forms in
practice (Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006). For example, i-deals can be made during the recruit-
ment process (i.e., ex ante), or during the course of ongoing employment relationships (i.e., ex
post). I-deals also vary in scope, ranging from a minor change to highly customized, from one
element to an entire package. With respect to the content, several kinds of i-deals have been iden-
tified (Hornung, Rousseau, & Glaser, 2009; Rosen et al., 2013; Rousseau & Kim, 2006). Consistent
with previous research (Hornung, Rousseau, & Glaser, 2008; Rousseau, Hornung, & Kim, 2009),
we concentrate on development i-deals and flexibility i-deals due to their common occurrence in
the organizations (Rousseau, 2005).
Comparing the self with others, either consciously or unconsciously, is a pervasive social phe-
nomenon (Buunk & Gibbons, 2007; Festinger, 1954; Suls, Martin, & Wheeler, 2002; Wheeler &
Miyake, 1992). Festinger (1954) proposed that there exists an inherent drive in human organism
to compare one’s opinions and abilities to others in order to reduce uncertainty and make self-
evaluation when objective standards are not available. Wood (1996) explicitly defined social com-
parison as ‘the process of thinking about information about one or more other people in relation
to the self’ (pp. 520–521), which can influence individuals’ attitudes and behaviors (Goodman &
Haisley, 2007; Greenberg, Ashton-James, & Ashkanasy, 2007; Wood, 1989). Wood (1996) also
identified multiple processes of social comparison, including acquiring, thinking about, and
reacting to social information. From this respect, social comparison can satisfy individuals’
internal drive to self-evaluate, and orient their social behaviors to protect or improve the selves
(Buunk & Gibbons, 2007; Festinger, 1954).
Given the non-standard, individualized, and within-group heterogeneity natures of i-deals,
coworkers are likely to engage in an upward comparison process by comparing with the i-dealers
who received more special work terms than themselves (Kong, Ho, & Garg, 2020). Research stud-
ies on social comparison theory have indicated that the effects of comparison may be subjected to
whether individuals contrast or assimilate themselves with the comparison referents (Lam, Van
der Vegt, Walter, & Huang, 2011; Mussweiler, Ruter, & Epstude, 2004). Building on social com-
parison theory and i-deals research, we propose that comparison with focal employees’ develop-
ment i-deals may be more likely to trigger coworkers’ contrast and status threat, while comparing
with focal employees’ flexibility i-deals may be more likely to evoke coworkers’ assimilation and
expectations of getting i-deals. Additionally, we propose coworkers’ LMX relative to the i-dealers
as an important boundary condition in the comparison process. Thus, based on upward compari-
son theory, we below argue how and why various i-deals contents and coworkers’ RLMX influ-
ence coworkers’ perceptions of status threat and obtaining future i-deals in different ways, thus
subsequently shape their acceptance behavior. Figure 1 shows our conceptual model.
Idiosyncratic deals and coworkers’ acceptance
Coworkers’ acceptance refers to coworkers’ assent or approval to focal employees’ i-deals (Lai,
Rousseau, & Chang, 2009). It can ultimately affect the overall effectiveness of i-deals (Lai,
Rousseau, & Chang, 2009; Marescaux, De Winne, & Sels, 2019). The overall effectiveness of
i-deals for the organization not only lies in the recipients’ reactions, but also in other coworkers’
acceptance. As we mentioned, although i-deals can facilitate the recipients’ organizational com-
mitment or job performance (Liao, Wayne, & Rousseau, 2016), they may also trigger coworkers’
negative behaviors, such as deviant behaviors (Kong, Ho, & Garg, 2020), complaining
(Marescaux, De Winne, & Sels, 2019), or even turnover (Ng, 2017). In this study, drawing on
social comparison theory, we propose that focal employees’ development i-deals and flexibility
i-deals may have different impacts on coworkers’ acceptance.
According to social comparison theory, comparisons among employees are ubiquitous in the
organizations (Festinger, 1954; Greenberg, Ashton-James, & Ashkanasy, 2007). Scholars have
noted that individuals generally prefer to compare with others who are thought to be slightly
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5. better off (i.e., upward comparison), supporting Festinger’s (1954) notion of ‘upward drive’
(Buunk & Gibbons, 2007; Collins, 1996). In the context of i-deals, coworkers’ comparison of
their own versus focal employees’ i-deals may manifest as upward comparison, such that cowor-
kers perceive themselves as receiving less than the focal employees (Guerrero &
Challiol-Jeanblanc, 2016; Liao, Wayne, & Rousseau, 2016; Vidyarthi et al., 2016). Previous studies
found that upward comparison may spark peers’ perception of resource threat and subsequent
social undermining (Campbell, Liao, Chuang, Zhou, & Dong, 2017; Reh, Tröster, & Van
Quaquebeke, 2018).
We argue that coworkers are less willing to accept focal employees’ development i-deals than
flexibility i-deals. First, the resources involved in these two types of i-deals shape coworkers’ dif-
ferent reactions. Specifically, development i-deals include the customized opportunities to
develop working skills, enhance professional competencies, and meet personal career aspirations,
which are essential for higher performance, greater occupational success, and larger space for pro-
motion (Hornung, Rousseau, & Glaser, 2008, 2009; Hornung et al., 2014; Rousseau, Ho, &
Greenberg, 2006; Rousseau & Kim, 2006). In contrast, flexibility i-deals provide employees
with discretion to personalize working schedules and working locations to better fit personal
needs (Hornung, Rousseau, & Glaser, 2008, 2009; Hornung et al., 2014; Rousseau, Ho, &
Greenberg, 2006). Prior research studies have shown that flexibility i-deals cannot motive
employees to work late or work engagement, and even may lower supervisor’ evaluation of the
i-dealers’ performance (Hornung, Rousseau, & Glaser, 2008, 2009; Hornung et al., 2011; Liao,
Wayne, & Rousseau, 2016; Rousseau, Hornung, & Kim, 2009). The competition for important
resources may cause individuals’ tendency to compare, thus leading to a variety of strong defen-
sive responses (Festinger, 1954). Given that the resources included in development i-deals are
more valuable than that in flexibility i-deals (Liao, Wayne, & Rousseau, 2016), others’ develop-
ment i-deals are more likely to induce coworkers’ perceptions of relative deprivation (Buunk,
Zurriaga, Gonzalez-Roma, & Subirats, 2003) and low acceptance.
Second, individuals tend to compare the resource allocation when the resource is limited
(Parks, Conlon, Ang, & Bontempo, 1999). Thus, given that development i-deals are generally
viewed as a limited resource, while flexibility i-deals are not (Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg,
2006), coworkers are more sensitive to others’ development i-deals than flexibility i-deals, and
are more reluctant to accept the former. Providing support for this argument, relevant i-deals
study also showed that when employees perceive others have more development i-deals, they
would suffer a negative emotional experience and then present negative behavior (Kong, Ho,
& Garg, 2020). Based on the above analysis, we thus hypothesize that:
Hypothesis 1 Coworkers are more likely to accept focal employees’ flexibility i-deals than devel-
opment i-deals.
Fig. 1. Conceptual model.
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6. The mediating role of coworkers’ felt status threat
Social comparison theory indicated that upward comparisons have both their ‘ups and downs’
(Collins, 1996; Mussweiler, 2003; Wood, 1989). In other words, the effects of social comparison
may depend on whether the individuals contrast or assimilate themselves with a comparison tar-
get (Mussweiler, Ruter, & Epstude, 2004). The direction of social comparison may be subject to a
number of variables, and the one critical factor is whether the standard of the target is attainable
or unattainable (Buunk, Collins, Taylor, VanYperen, & Dakof, 1990; Lockwood & Kunda, 1997).
Mussweiler, Ruter, and Epstude (2004) indicated that whether individuals ‘see themselves as far-
ther away or closer to the standard’ could determine whether they chose assimilation or contrast.
Assimilation effects arise if the standard is close, and contrast effects arise if the standard is hard
or unable to reach (Lockwood & Kunda, 1997). In the context of i-deals, development i-deals are
often offered as a reward to the employees who have better performance or make special contri-
butions for the organizations (Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006), while flexibility i-deals are
often provided for the employees who need to cope with personal difficulties or family crises
(Hornung, Rousseau, & Glaser, 2009; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006). From this respect,
upward comparisons with others’ development i-deals are more likely to cause contrast effect
among coworkers than comparison with flexibility i-deals, as the standard of requesting develop-
ment i-deals is harder to reach than flexibility i-deals. Based on this rationale, we argue that com-
pared to flexibility i-deals, focal employees’ development i-deals are more likely to trigger
coworkers feeling of status threat.
First, social comparison theory indicates that the internal drive to compare with others allows
individual to assess their relative position within groups (Buunk & Mussweiler, 2001). Status
threat is a subjective cognition of one’s own status (Kellogg, 2012; Zhang, Zhong, & Ozer,
2020). And individuals are sensitive to the signals about the status of their colleagues
(Anderson, Hildreth, & Howland, 2015; Reh, Tröster, & Van Quaquebeke, 2018). As we men-
tioned above, flexibility i-deals are typically designed for addressing work–family or life issues
(Las Heras et al., 2017; Rousseau, 2005; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006), and are intended
to ‘retaining the services of a worker at a standard level of performance’ (Hornung, Rousseau,
& Glaser, 2008: 657). To some extent, flexibility i-deals are need-based, which do not signal
one’s relative standing and status in the organization, and thus they are less likely to be the
basis of contrast (Kong, Ho, & Garg, 2020). However, development i-deals convey many strong
signals about the i-dealers’ higher status, such as supervisor’s high value and trust, the recognition
of the i-dealers’ contribution, and the special status in supervisor’s eyes (Rousseau, 2005;
Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006; Vidyarthi et al., 2016). Therefore, development i-deals are par-
ticularly likely to be the basis of contrast, thus inducing coworkers’ feeling of status threat
(Brickman & Bulman, 1977; Collins, 1996; Wills, 1981).
Second, because of the natural tendency to evaluate one’s socially valued attributes, indivi-
duals may upwardly compare with others in the case of ability (Festinger, 1954). Development
i-deals convey the signals about the leader’s identification of the recipients’ competence, and
have been found to serve a competence-signaling function (Ho & Kong, 2015). Hence, com-
pared to flexibility i-deals, development i-deals are more likely to increase the odds of cowor-
kers’ perceiving status threat, especially because development i-deals concern higher working
competence and greater working success (Liu et al., 2013; Ng, 2017; Rousseau, 2005), poten-
tially putting coworkers in a disadvantaged position. Third, development i-deals are a rela-
tively scarce and limited resource, which makes the upward comparison with such i-deals
more salient than comparison with flexibility i-deals (Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006).
When the development i-deals are approved to the i-dealers, the availability of such i-deals
for coworkers is reduced, which may further provoke coworkers’ perceptions of status threat
(Anderson, Hildreth, & Howland, 2015; Lind & Tyler, 1988; Tyler & Blader, 2000). We thus
hypothesize that:
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7. Hypothesis 2a Coworkers view focal employees’ development i-deals as more threatening to
their status than flexibility i-deals.
According to social comparison theory, the self-evaluation about one’s relative standing resulted
from social comparison acts as a motivational force guiding their behaviors (Suls, Martin, &
Wheeler, 2002; Wood, 1989). Hence, we argue that coworkers’ perceptions of status threat caused
by the upward comparison between their own versus others’ development i-deals, may further
lead to coworkers’ unwillingness to accept these i-deals. Coworkers’ acceptance of focal employ-
ees’ i-deals means that coworkers assent to the privileges and the customized work arrangements
that focal employees received from the supervisors (Lai, Rousseau, & Chang, 2009). Coworkers’
acceptance can affect the final effectiveness of focal employees’ i-deals, and low acceptance may
reduce coworkers’ respect for the i-deal’s principals (i.e., the supervisors) or even erode the
cooperation between the subordinates and the supervisors (Lai, Rousseau, & Chang, 2009).
First, the desire for status is a fundamental human motive, and individuals tend to pursue high
status and seek to avoid losing their status (Anderson, Hildreth, & Howland, 2015). As the status
is important to one’s self-identification, individuals are sensitive to the information signaling the risk
of losing status (Koski, Xie, & Olson, 2015). And individuals may exhibit strong defensive responses
once they face the risk of losing status (Anderson, Hildreth, & Howland, 2015). Prior research stud-
ies have indicated that status threat may lead to negative consequences, such as envy and unfriendly
behaviors (Kemper, 1991; Marr & Thau, 2014; Reh, Tröster, & Van Quaquebeke, 2018). Therefore,
we speculate that as a result of comparison with others’ development i-deals, coworkers’ feeling of
status threat may cause their unacceptance of focal employees’ i-deals.
Second, social comparison theory indicates that when individuals contrast themselves, upward
comparison may threaten one’s self-image and then lead to one’s negative reactions toward the
comparison target (Buunk & Gibbons, 2007; Collins, 1996; Mussweiler & Strack, 2000). A con-
siderable body of empirical research has indicated that employees may respond negatively when
confronted with someone who are better off. For example, comparison with the targets who do
better in daily work may lead to individuals’ negative psychological states, and subsequent inter-
personal harming behavior (Lam et al., 2011), incivility (Koopman, Lin, Lennard, Matta, &
Johnson, 2020), or ostracism on the comparison targets (Ng, 2017). From this respect, unaccep-
tance of others’ development i-deals may be a social strategy that coworkers use to cope with the
threats to their status and the discomfort resulted from such i-deals. We thus hypothesize that:
Hypothesis 2b Coworkers’ felt status threat mediates the negative relationship between develop-
ment i-deals and coworkers’ acceptance.
The mediating role of coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals
Social comparison theory also indicates that when individuals assimilate themselves with the
comparison targets, upward comparison may increase their assumptions that they can attain
the similarly attractive situation (Collins, 1996; Lockwood, 2002; Lockwood, Jordan, & Kunda,
2002; Lockwood & Kunda, 1997; Van der Zee et al., 2000). As noted above, assimilation effect
seems more likely if the standard and the target are attainable or close to reach (Buunk et al.,
1990; Lockwood & Kunda, 1997; Mussweiler, Ruter, & Epstude, 2004). Thus, in the context of
i-deals, upward comparisons with others’ flexibility i-deals are more likely to cause assimilation
effects among coworkers than development i-deals, because flexibility i-deals seems easier to
obtain than development i-deals. Based on this rationale, we propose that compared to develop-
ment i-deals, focal employees’ flexibility i-deals are more likely to cause coworkers’ perception of
obtaining future i-deals.
Coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals refers to coworkers’ belief that they will have
opportunities for individualized work arrangements in the future that are comparable with that of
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8. the focal employees received (Lai, Rousseau, & Chang, 2009; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006).
Opportunities for obtaining similar customized treatment do not mean that coworkers believe
they deserve or need them at present (Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006). Rather, coworkers
believe that in the future, they can successfully negotiate i-deals with their supervisors that are
similar with the focal employees’ i-deals (Huo, Luo, & Tam, 2014; Rousseau, Ho, &
Greenberg, 2006). As we previously mentioned, flexibility i-deals are granted to employees
who need to cope with work–family or life issues, while development i-deals are generally
awarded to high performers (Rousseau, 2005; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006). Flexibility
i-deals seems more feasible and available for coworkers as negotiating development i-deals
require higher performance, professional skills, or outstanding contributions to the organizations.
From this respect, compared to development i-deals, comparison with focal employees’ flexibility
i-deals may be more likely to be the basis of upward assimilation, thus boosting coworkers’ con-
fidence in attaining the similar i-deals as the i-dealers gained. We thus hypothesize that:
Hypothesis 3a Focal employees’ flexibility i-deals increase coworkers’ perception of obtaining
future i-deals more than development i-deals.
Coworkers are in turn expected to behave in a way that is consistent with their perceptions acti-
vated by upward comparison with others’ flexibility i-deals. This is because coworkers’ self-
perception derived from social comparisons may further shape their behavior (Wood, 1989,
1996). By comparing their own treatment with that of focal employees, coworkers adjust their
behaviors according to the consequence of comparison to maximize the sense of consistency
with their self-perception (Spence, Ferris, Brown, & Heller, 2011). Specifically, we argue that cow-
orkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals may be positively related to their acceptance of focal
employees’ i-deals.
First, obtaining future i-deals means the equal opportunities for coworkers to negotiate and
request i-deals, which may lower coworkers’ perception of unfairness to some extent
(Greenberg et al., 2004). In other words, when coworkers believe they have comparable oppor-
tunities to obtain customized arrangements, they may perceive others’ i-deals as fair and accept-
able (Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006). Second, coworkers’ perception of obtaining future
i-deals implies that coworkers may get comparable i-deals from supervisors (Huo, Luo, &
Tam, 2014; Lai, Rousseau, & Chang, 2009; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006). With such expect-
ation, coworkers may support focal employees’ i-deals (Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006). And
the belief that they can benefit from these i-deals may improve coworkers’ acceptance (Bal &
Rousseau, 2015; Greenberg et al., 2004). Besides, previous empirical studies have provided
some evidence for supporting this hypothesis. For example, Lai, Rousseau, and Chang (2009)
indicated that coworkers’ beliefs regarding the likelihood of comparable future opportunity
have a positive effect on their acceptance of others’ i-deals. The study of Huo, Luo, and Tam
(2014) also shown that coworkers’ beliefs about obtaining future i-deals can increase coworkers’
citizenship behaviors for the recipients. Therefore, compared to development i-deals, upward
comparison with focal employees’ flexibility i-deals seems more likely to cause assimilation effects
among coworkers, which may increase coworkers’ beliefs in obtaining similar i-deals in the future
and promote coworkers’ acceptance of others’ i-deals. We thus hypothesize that:
Hypothesis 3b Coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals mediates the positive relation-
ship between flexibility i-deals and coworkers’ acceptance.
The moderating role of coworkers’ relative leader–member exchange
LMX is a dyadic approach to understanding the relationship between an immediate supervisor
and a subordinate (Bauer & Green, 1996; Graen & Scandura, 1987). These dyadic relationships
are built through a series of exchanges and interpersonal interactions (Bauer & Green, 1996;
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9. Graen & Cashman, 1975). As the limited time and resources that the parties invest in the
relationship-building process are different, the members’ exchange relationships with leader in
a group are distinct from each other (Green, Anderson, & Shivers, 1996; Liden & Graen, 1980;
Wayne, Shore, & Liden, 1997). In other words, leaders do not treat all subordinates in the
same way, but build different types of exchange relationship with each group member (Graen
& Cashman, 1975; Graen, Novak, & Sommerkamp, 1982). According to social comparison the-
ory, individuals may observe, learn, and compare their own LMX relationships with their team-
mates’ LMX relationships (Hu & Liden, 2013). Previous studies have shown that a focal
individual’s LMX relative to the LMXs of other coworkers (relative LMX, or RLMX) can influence
individual’s attitudes and behaviors (Henderson, Wayne, Shore, Bommer, & Tetrick, 2008; Hu &
Liden, 2013; Tse, Ashkanasy, & Dasborough, 2012; Vidyarthi, Liden, Anand, Erdogan, & Ghosh,
2010).
Given the triangle of relationships outlined by focal employees, leaders, and coworkers in the
i-deals context, we propose that coworkers’ LMX relative to the focal employees’ LMX may play
an important role in the relationships between focal employees’ i-deals and coworkers’ reactions.
Specifically, we argue that coworkers’ RLMX may weaken the relationship between focal employ-
ees’ development i-deals and coworkers’ felt status threat. First, employees with high RLMX have
greater possibility to get access to the resources and reward from their managers relative to those
with low RLMX (Vidyarthi et al., 2010). Therefore, when focal employees receive customized
work arrangements, high RLMX can reduce the influence of i-deals on coworkers’ status threat.
Second, with high RLMX, individual members tend to feel psychologically close to their leaders
(Hu & Liden, 2013). That is, coworkers with high RLMX may feel confident in their ability to
successfully negotiate special treatment from their supervisors. This perception may effectively
diminish coworkers’ status threat resulted from the comparison with focal employees’ i-deals.
Third, research has indicated that if a member’s RLMX is high, he or she may have a positive
self-concept, and high RLMX can increase individuals’ evaluation of their own self-efficacy
and self- identification (Tse, Ashkanasy, & Dasborough, 2012). Furthermore, coworkers with
high RLMX may keep close and frequent communications with their leaders (Dienesch &
Liden, 1986). This high-quality communication can effectively eliminate coworkers’ negative feel-
ings resulted from that they do not obtained the expected i-deals. Additionally, their leaders may
make strong promise to the coworkers that they will get the same chance as the focal employees’
in the near future if they are qualified, which is likely to lower coworkers’ status threat. Hence, for
the coworkers with high RLMX, the effect of focal employees’ development i-deals on status
threat is weaker than those with low RLMX. We thus hypothesize that:
Hypothesis 4a Coworkers’ RLMX may weaken the positive effect of development i-deals on cow-
orkers’ felt threat status.
In addition, we expect that coworkers’ RLMX can strengthen the relationship between focal
employees’ flexibility i-deals and coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals. First, subor-
dinates with high RLMX tend to actively negotiate their job roles or duties with their leaders
(Graen & Scandura, 1987). Coworkers with high RLMX may have more special privileges, oppor-
tunities, and intrinsic motivations to negotiate discretion over their work arrangements with the
leaders (Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006; Wang, Law, Hackett, Wang, & Chen, 2005).
Consequently, the positive influence of flexibility i-deals on the perception of obtaining future
i-deals may be stronger for coworkers with high RLMX than those with low RLMX.
Second, given that members with high RLMX tend to evaluate themselves more highly than
those with low RLMX (Tse, Ashkanasy, & Dasborough, 2012), this function of high RLMX
that can improve individual’s self-concept may further strengthen the relationship between the
focal employees’ flexibility i-deals and coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals. We
thus hypothesize that:
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10. Hypothesis 4b Coworkers’ RLMX may strengthen the positive effect of flexibility i-deals on
coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals.
Moderated mediation
Furthermore, we argue that coworkers’ RLMX can moderate the indirect effects of different type
of i-deals on coworkers’ acceptance of others’ i-deals via coworkers’ perceptions. As we have sta-
ted above, members with high RLMX may be more likely to access resources and have more
opportunities to negotiate i-deals with supervisors, and these characteristics of high RLMX
may alter coworkers’ reactions toward focal employees’ i-deals. Specifically, different levels of
coworkers’ RLMX is related to how they evaluate themselves, and the levels of self-perception
can weaken or strengthen the influences of focal employees’ i-deals on coworkers’ acceptance
behavior. Following on the preceding discussion regarding hypotheses 2, 3, 4, we contend that,
for coworkers with high RLMX, the indirect effect of development i-deals on coworkers’ accept-
ance via coworkers’ felt status will be weaker, and the indirect effect of flexibility i-deals on cow-
orkers’ acceptance via coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals will be stronger. In
contrast, for coworkers with low RLMX, the indirect effect of development i-deals on coworkers’
acceptance via coworkers’ felt status will be stronger, and the indirect effect of flexibility i-deals on
coworkers’ acceptance via coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals will be weaker.
We thus hypothesize that:
Hypothesis 5a The indirect effect of development i-deals on coworkers’ acceptance, via
coworker’ felt threat status, is moderated by coworkers’ RLMX, such that this effect is weaker
when coworkers’ RLMX is high, but stronger when coworkers’ RLMX is low.
Hypothesis 5b The indirect effect of flexibility i-deals on coworkers’ acceptance, via coworker’
perception of obtaining future i-deals, is moderated by coworkers’ RLMX, such that this effect
is stronger when coworkers’ LMX is high, but weaker when coworkers’ LMX is low.
Method
Sample and procedure
The participants in this study were from a large Internet company in China. Before we started our
research in this company, we interviewed 13 supervisors and 20 employees. The interviews
demonstrated that this company was appropriate to conduct our surveys because its employees
had discretion over their working hours and career development. We conducted a large-scale sur-
vey after obtaining permission from the CEO of the company. Two members with similar work
background and responsibilities in each working group were chosen by the human resource (HR)
department to create a focal employee–coworker pair, as they can observe the other’s customized
work arrangements easily. And we used a four-digit code to match each of them.
Participants were invited into a conference room, and sit separately. We distributed pens,
printed surveys, and gift incentives, and introduced the purpose and procedures of the survey.
All participants were assured that their responses would remain confidential, and only be used
for research purposes. After completing the questionnaires, the participants put them in sealed
envelopes and handed the envelopes to the researchers. Participants received an extra bonus in
exchange for completing all surveys.
To reduce potential common method bias, we collected three waves of data. The time lag
between each survey was 1 month. At time 1, focal employees reported their LMX.
Meanwhile, coworkers reported their observation of focal employees’ i-deals, completed the mea-
sures of their LMX and other control variables. At time 2, we asked coworkers to report the vari-
ables of felt status threat and perception of obtaining future i-deals. At time 3, coworkers reported
their willingness to accept others’ i-deals.
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11. In wave 1, we distributed 473 focal employee questionnaires, and received 288 completed ques-
tionnaires. At the same time, we distributed 473 coworker questionnaires, and received 412 com-
pleted forms. In wave 2, we distributed questionnaires to these 412 coworkers who had submitted
valid questionnaires in wave 1, and 325 returned completed questionnaires. In wave 3, coworker
questionnaires were distributed to these 325 participants, and received 255 valid questionnaires.
At the completion of the three waves’ data-collection procedure, we got 253 focal employee–
coworker pairs of valid data by matching the four-digit code (53.49% of the initial sample).
Overall, 49% of the participants were male, and the average age of participants was 31.71.
Their average organizational tenure was 7.13 years. In terms of education, 13.83% held less
than a bachelor’s degree. With regard to the position, 28.06% were in management positions.
Measures
Since all the measures were originally constructed in English, we used the back-translation
method to translate all the items. We recruited two PhD candidates to translate the items into
Chinese and then translated them back into English (Brislin, 1980). All items were measured
on a 7-point Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (completely disagree or not at all) to 7 (completely
agree or to a very great extent).
Idiosyncratic deals
We used the scales developed by Rousseau and Kim (2006) to measure development i-deals and
flexibility i-deals. Development i-deals were assessed using a four-item scale (α = .96). A sample
item is, ‘to what extent have your colleague A asked for and successfully negotiated for training
opportunities?’ Flexibility i-deals were assessed using a two-item scale (α = .94). A sample item is,
‘to what extent have your colleague A asked for and successfully negotiated for flexibility on start-
ing and ending the workday?’
Coworkers’ felt status threat
We adapted a four-item scale from Zhang, Zhong, and Ozer (2020) to assess the degree of cow-
orkers’ feelings of status threat within the group. A sample item is, ‘I have felt some colleagues
colluded to challenge my status in the team’ (α = .95).
Coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals
Coworkers reported their perception of the possibility of obtaining future i-deals using a two-item
scale from Lai, Rousseau, and Chang (2009). A sample item is, ‘I can have the same special indi-
vidual arrangements as my coworkers if I ask’ (α = .94).
Coworkers’ acceptance
Coworkers’ acceptance of others’ i-deals was assessed using the item from Lai, Rousseau, and
Chang (2009): ‘If your colleagues ask for special individual arrangements in the near future, to
what extent would you be willing to accept them having arrangements different from your own?’
RLMX
RLMX was obtained from coworkers’ LMX, which was measure by using Scandura and Graen’s
(1984) seven-item scale (α = .95). A sample item is, ‘How well do you feel that your immediate
supervisor understands your problems and needs?’ Differing from prior studies, we adapted the
operationalization of RLMX on the basis of the studies of Henderson et al. (2008) and Tse,
Ashkanasy, and Dasborough (2012), which calculate RLMX by subtracting the mean LMX within
the team from the LMX of focal employee. With a slightly different method, we subtracted the
score of a focal employee’s LMX from a coworker’s LMX score. This is because our study
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12. confined RLMX within a focal employee–coworker pair and we focused on the LMX difference at
the individual–individual level.
Control variables
Previous research has suggested that coworkers’ reactions to others’ i-deals can be influenced by
the personal relationship between the coworker and the i-dealer (Lai, Rousseau, & Chang, 2009).
Thus, we included coworkers’ team member exchange (coworkers’ TMX) as a control variable,
using a six-item scale from Sherony and Green (2002) to measure the exchange relationships
among coworkers who report to the same supervisor (α = .92). A sample item is, ‘How well do
you feel that your colleagues understand your problems and needs?’ Besides, given that focal
employees’ LMX has been found to be associated with leaders’ authorization of i-deals, thus
we also set focal employees’ LMX as a control variable. We measured focal employees’ LMX
(α = .95) using the scale developed by Scandura and Graen (1984). In addition, according to
present studies (Lai, Rousseau, & Chang, 2009; Liu et al., 2013), we controlled for employee
demographics, including age, gender, education, organizational tenure, and position.
Results
Confirmatory factor analysis
We analyzed the data using Mplus 7. Before testing our hypotheses, we conducted a confirmatory
factor analysis to evaluate the discriminant validity of the key variables in our model (focal
employees’ development i-deals, flexibility i-deals, coworkers’ LMX, focal employees’ LMX, cow-
orkers’ felt status threat, and coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals). As shown in
Table 1, the proposed six-factor model showed a good overall measurement fit with χ2
/df =
1.169, comparative fit index (CFI) = .993, Tucker–Lewis index (TLI) = .991, and
root-mean-square error of approximation (RMSEA) = .026. We also tested five alternative models
to assess discriminant validity. The fit indices in Table 1 show that the proposed six-factor model
fits the data better than any of the alternative models. The means, standard deviations, and cor-
relations of all key variables are given in Table 2.
Hypothesis testing
We used structural equation model to test all the hypotheses except for moderating effects.
Figure 2 shows the standardized path estimates for this model. Coworkers’ gender, age, educa-
tional level, tenure, position, TMX, and focal employees’ LMX were included in the model as con-
trol variables. Hypothesis 1 proposed that coworkers are more likely to accept focal employees’
flexibility i-deals than development i-deals. The results show that development i-deals have a
negative effect on coworkers’ acceptance (b = −.155, p < .001), meanwhile flexibility i-deals
have a positive effect on coworkers’ acceptance (b = .197, p < .01). Thus, hypothesis 1 was
supported.
Hypothesis 2a proposed that coworkers view focal employees’ development i-deals as more
threatening to their status than flexibility i-deals. The results indicate that focal employees’ devel-
opment i-deals have a positive effect on coworkers’ felt status threat (b = .282, p < .01), while flexi-
bility have no significant effect on coworkers’ felt status threat (b = .106, n.s.). Therefore,
hypothesis 2a was supported. Hypothesis 3a proposed that focal employees’ flexibility i-deals
increase coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals more than development i-deals. The
results indicate that flexibility i-deals have a positive effect on coworkers’ perception of obtaining
future i-deals (b = .446, p < .001), while development i-deals have no significant effect on cowor-
kers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals (b = −.051, n.s.). Hence, hypothesis 3a was supported.
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13. We conducted further bootstrapping analyses to test the mediating effects. Hypothesis 2b pre-
dicted the mediating role of coworkers’ felt status threat in the relationship between focal employ-
ees’ development i-deals and coworkers’ acceptance, and hypothesis 3b predicted the mediating
role of coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals in the relationship between flexibility
i-deals and coworkers’ acceptance. Table 3 lists the estimates of stage I effects (independent vari-
able [IV] → mediator [Me]), stage II effects (Me → dependent variable [DV]), and indirect effects
(IV → Me → DV). As hypothesized, coworkers’ felt status threat exerted significant mediation
effects on the relationship between development i-deals and coworkers’ acceptance (indirect
effect = −.035, 95% CI = [−.073, −.016]), and coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals
exerted significant mediation effects on the relationship between flexibility i-deals and coworkers’
acceptance (indirect effect = .106, 95% CI = [.041, .199]). Thus, hypotheses 2b and 3b were
supported.
In addition, we tested how coworkers’ RLMX moderates the effects of development i-deals on
coworkers’ felt status threat and flexibility i-deals on coworkers’ perception of obtaining future
i-deals by conducting bootstrapping analyses. Hypothesis 4a predicted that coworkers’ RLMX
may weaken the positive effect of development i-deals on coworkers’ felt status threat. The results
in Table 4 show that the interaction effect of coworkers’ RLMX and development i-deals on
coworkers’ felt status threat was significant with a coefficient of −.112 (SE = .042, p < .01).
The coefficient of the effect of development i-deals on coworkers’ felt status threat was .496
(SE = .126, p < .001) when RLMX was low, and .271 (SE = .104, p < .01) when RLMX was high
(see Figure 3). Thus, hypothesis 4a was supported.
Hypothesis 4b predicted that coworkers’ RLMX may strengthen the positive effect of flexibility
i-deals on coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals. The results in Table 4 show that
the interaction effect of coworkers’ RLMX and flexibility i-deals on coworkers’ perception of
obtaining future i-deals was significant ( p < .01), with a coefficient of .086 (SE = .033). The
effect of flexibility i-deals on coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals was .297
(SE = .114, p < .01) when RLMX was low, and .470 (SE = .112, p < .001) when RLMX was high
(see Figure 4). Thus, hypothesis 4b was supported.
Furthermore, we examined the moderating role of coworkers’ RLMX on the mediating effects
of coworker’ felt threat status and coworker’ perception of obtaining future i-deals by conducting
further bootstrapping analyses. Hypothesis 5a predicted that coworkers’ RLMX may weaken the
indirect effect of development i-deals on coworkers’ acceptance via coworker’ felt threat status,
and hypothesis 5b predicted that coworkers’ RLMX may strengthen the indirect effect of flexibil-
ity i-deals on coworkers’ acceptance via coworker’ perception of obtaining future i-deals.
As shown in Table 5, the mediating effect of coworker’ felt status threat was moderated by
Table 1. Confirmatory factor analysis
Model χ2
df χ2
/df CFI TLI RMSEA
Six-factor model 332.019 284 1.169 .993 .991 .026
Five-factor model 786.405 289 2.721 .923 .913 .082
Four-factor model 2,539.462 293 8.667 .651 .613 .174
Three-factor model 3,641.692 296 12.303 .481 .430 .211
Two-factor model 4,032.484 298 13.532 .420 .368 .223
One-factor model 5,053.893 299 16.903 .262 .198 .251
DI, development i-deals; FI, flexibility i-deals; TS, coworkers’ felt status threat; OF, coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals; CLMX,
coworkers’ LMX; FLMX, focal employees’ LMX.
Note: Six-factor model = DI, FI, TS, OF, FLMX, and CLMX; five-factor model = DI + FI, TS, OF, CLMX, and FLMX; four-factor model = DI + FI + CLMX,
TS, OF, and FLMX; three-factor model = DI + FI + CLMX + FLMX, TS, and OF; two-factor model = DI + FI + CLMX + FLMX, and TS + OF; one-factor
model = DI + FI + CLMX + FLMX + TS + OF.
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15. coworkers’ RLMX (difference = .021, 95% CI = [.003, .043]), in support hypothesis 5a. Similarly,
the mediating effect of coworker’ perception of obtaining future i-deals was also moderated by
coworkers’ RLMX (difference = .038, 95% CI = [.007, .089]), supporting hypothesis 5b.
Fig. 2. Hypothesized structural model. Solid lines represent paths that were significant and dashed lines represent paths
that were nonsignificant. Numbers are standardized estimates. ***p < .001, **p < .01, *p < .05.
Table 3. Bootstrapping results for mediation tests
Hypotheses
Stage I
effect
Stage II
effect Indirect effect
Hypothesis 2b: Development i-deals → coworkers’ felt
status threat → coworkers’ acceptance
.305*** −.114** −.035* [−.073, −.016]
Hypothesis 3b: Flexibility i-deals → coworkers’ perception
of obtaining future i-deals → coworkers’ acceptance
.422*** .251** .106** [.041, .199]
Note: N = 253. The square brackets show 95% confidence intervals.
***p < .001, **p < .01, *p < .05.
Table 4. Moderating effects of coworkers’ RLMX
Variables
Coworkers’ felt status
threat
Coworkers’ perception of
obtaining future i-deals
Coefficient SE Coefficient SE
Development i-deals .383*** .108
Flexibility i-deals .348*** .077
Coworkers’ RLMX −.271** .064 .029 .035
Development i-deals × Coworkers’ RLMX −.112** .042
Flexibility i-deals × Coworkers’ RLMX .086** .033
Note: N = 253.
***p < .001, **p < .01, *p < .05.
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16. Discussion
Based on social comparison theory, we advanced and examined a model that explained how focal
employees’ i-deals influence coworkers’ acceptance of these i-deals. We found that coworkers are
more likely to accept focal employees’ flexibility i-deals than development i-deals. More specific-
ally, coworkers viewed focal employees’ development i-deals as more threatening to their status
than flexibility i-deals. Coworkers’ felt status threat mediates the negative relationship between
Fig. 3. The interactive effect of development i-deals and coworkers’ RLMX on coworkers’ felt status threat.
Fig. 4. The interactive effect of flexibility i-deals and coworkers’ RLMX on coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals.
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17. development i-deals and coworkers’ acceptance. In addition, focal employees’ flexibility i-deals
can increase coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals more than development i-deals.
This perception mediates the positive relationship between flexibility i-deals and coworkers’
acceptance. Furthermore, we also examined the moderating role of coworkers’ RLMX. The results
show that coworkers’ RLMX weakens the indirect effect of focal employees’ development i-deals
on coworkers’ acceptance, through coworkers’ feeling of status threat, and strengthens the indirect
effect of focal employees’ flexibility i-deals on coworkers’ acceptance, through coworkers’ percep-
tion of obtaining future i-deals.
Theoretical implications
Our research makes three theoretical contributions to the literature. First, this study enriches
i-deals literature by examining the effects of i-deals from coworkers’ perspective. Previous studies
on i-deals mostly focus on how i-deals exercise an influence on the attitudinal and behavioral out-
comes from the recipients’ perspective. However, according to Rousseau and her colleagues
(Rousseau, 2005; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006), an i-deal’s final effectiveness is decided
by a triangle of relationships including focal employees, their supervisors, and their coworkers.
And Greenberg et al. (2004) indicated that focal employees’ i-deals can elicit coworkers’ responses
because of the within-group heterogeneity of i-deals. Therefore, in order to fully understand the
influences of i-deals, we need to consider coworkers’ psychological and behavioral reactions to
focal employees’ i-deals. In fact, some scholars (Las Heras et al., 2017; Ng & Lucianetti, 2016;
Vidyarthi et al., 2016) have called for relevant i-deals studies to take account of coworkers and
explore the efficacy of focal employees’ i-deals from coworkers’ perspective.
The second theoretical implication relates to our focus on how and why different types of
i-deals influence coworkers’ acceptance differently, refining our understanding of coworkers’
i-deals acceptance. Existing research has indicated that the effects of different i-deals on focal
employees are distinct (Hornung, Rousseau, & Glaser, 2008, 2009; Hornung et al., 2014; Rosen
et al., 2013). For example, flexible working hours can reduce the conflict between work and pri-
vate life, while training opportunities can promote working skills. Recently, the results of a study
by Marescaux, De Winne, and Sels (2019) also showed that focal employees’ different types of
i-deals have different effects on coworkers’ perceptions and behaviors. With those in mind, we
integrated past research and examined whether and how focal employees’ development i-deals
and flexibility i-deals impact coworkers’ self-perceptions and acceptance behaviors differently.
Thus, this study contributes to the literature by refining which type of focal employees’ i-deals
is more acceptable for coworkers.
Table 5. Indirect effect comparison between high- and low-RLMX employees
Indirect paths
Indirect effect for
low-coworkers’ RLMX
Indirect effect for
high-coworkers’ RLMX
Low-high group
comparison of
indirect effect
Development i-deals →
coworkers’ felt status
threat → coworkers’
acceptance
−.045** [−.095, −.019] −.024* [−.059, −.008] .021* [.003, .043]
Flexibility i-deals →
coworkers’ perception
of obtaining future
i-deals → coworkers’
acceptance
.057* [.014, .142] .095** [.042, .169] .038* [.007, .089]
Note: N = 253. The square brackets show 95% confidence intervals.
***p < .001, **p < .01, *p < .05.
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18. Finally, this study extends i-deals literature by testing a theoretical model based on social com-
parison theory. In previous research, i-deals have been studied using the reciprocity mechanism
based on social exchange theory (Anand et al., 2010; Rousseau, Ho, & Greenberg, 2006), the
motivator of pursuit of equity (Marescaux, De Winne, & Sels, 2019; Ng, 2017), or the role of
resources (Kong, Ho, & Garg, 2020). Many scholars have called for more research to drill
down into the mechanisms through which i-deals have an impact on outcomes from different
the theoretical perspectives (Bal & Rousseau, 2015; Liao, Wayne, & Rousseau, 2016).
According to social comparison theory, coworkers will naturally compare their own working con-
ditions with focal employees’ i-deals. Thus, we respond to the call of Guerrero and
Challiol-Jeanblanc (2016) by developing a theoretical framework that explains how social com-
parison shapes coworkers’ reactions to others’ i-deals.
Practical implications
This study has provided insights for both managers and employees. First, this study explores an
issue concerning i-deals that managers usually overlook: even though i-deals might benefit focal
employees, what are their coworkers’ hidden psychological consequences of observing their
i-deals. We gathered evidence that focal employees’ flexibility i-deals are more acceptable for cow-
orkers than development i-deals. Our finding can help managers understand the influence of
i-deals in depth by suggesting that focal employees do not exist in a vacuum, and the coworkers
will inevitably compare their own treatment with that of focal employees. Thus, managers need to
perform a balanced analysis of costs and benefits, then make a very deliberate decision when
granting i-deals.
Second, this study indicates that focal employees’ development i-deals might cause coworkers’
feeling of status threat and backlash, thus lead to coworkers’ unwillingness to accept others’
i-deals. It is crucial for supervisors to manage i-deals properly to make full use of its effectiveness
and avoid its potential side effects. Therefore, managers can build high-quality relationships with
subordinates by providing organizational support and developing mutual trust. Besides, it will be
useful to set up an official channel for communication, which is expected to create a context of
justice and fairness. Through this channel, managers negotiate i-deals with employees and dis-
close information about those i-deals. In addition, our finding also suggests that focal employees’
flexibility i-deals may cause coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals, which is positively
related to coworkers’ acceptance. Thus, it will be helpful that managers make credible assurances
of providing comparable opportunities for i-deals when coworkers need in order to minimize
their backlash.
Third, this study revealed coworkers’ potential psychological reactions when they observed
focal employees’ i-deals. Focal employees should realize that their customized work arrangement
might have an adverse effect on their coworkers. And given that they play a crucial role in com-
municating with coworkers, focal employees could make efforts to dispel coworkers’ perception
of unfairness or feeling of status threat resulted from the i-deals. For example, the recipients can
actively build and maintain a good relationship with their coworkers to improve coworkers’ will-
ingness to accept their i-deals. Besides, providing some support, showing helping behavior or
organizational citizenship behavior, and sharing useful information may be effective on increase
coworkers’ approval.
Limitations and future research
Our study may have several potential limitations. First, based on social comparison theory, we
proposed that upward comparison with focal employees’ development i-deals may cause cowor-
kers’ felt status threat and lower their willingness to accept others’ i-deals. However, upward com-
parison sometimes may also serve a self-enhancement function (Buunk & Gibbons, 2007; Collins,
1996). That is, upward comparison with focal employees’ i-deals may provide motivation for
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19. coworkers to improve themselves to pursue such development i-deals. However, whether the self-
enhancement motivation can facilitate coworkers’ acceptance of others’ i-deals is an interesting
issue needed to explore. Research has indicated that when coworkers believe they can benefit
from others’ i-deals, they may be willing to approve such i-deals (Bal & Rousseau, 2015;
Greenberg et al., 2004). Therefore, future research is encouraged to adopt the self-improvement
function of social comparison theory to explore the influence of focal employees’ i-deals on cow-
orkers’ self-enhancement motive and perception of benefit, and further on coworkers’ acceptance
behavior.
Second, we argued that coworkers’ LMX relative to the focal employees’ LMX may play a mod-
erating role in the relationships between focal employees’ i-deals and coworkers’ reactions.
Indeed, the results of our study also support our arguments. However, we neglected that even
though high RLMX are characterized by more opportunities to negotiate i-deals and higher
resources, whether coworkers with high RLMX may feel being betrayed by their leaders and
feel their leaders as unfair when they observe focal employees’ i-deals. And how this psychological
letdown affects the coworkers’ perceptions and behaviors toward their leaders need further study
and exploration.
Third, based on social comparison theory, our study introduced coworkers’ felt status threat
and perception of obtaining future i-deals as the theoretically driven mediators of the relation-
ships between focal employees’ i-deals and coworkers’ acceptance. There may exist other media-
tors that could affect coworkers’ behaviors or reactions toward focal employees and focal
employees’ i-deals based on different theoretical perspective. For example, from the view point
of equity theory, focal employees’ i-deals may lead to coworkers’ perception of unfairness, and
thus affect coworkers’ behaviors. In addition, based on the perspective of social learning, cowor-
kers’ admiration or envy elicited by others’ i-deals may facilitate their learning from i-deals reci-
pients. Future research should conduct more studies to explore coworkers’ reactions to others’
i-deals on the basis of different theory.
Conclusion
In this research, based on social comparison theory, we examined the influence of focal employ-
ees’ development i-deals and flexibility i-deals on coworkers’ acceptance. We found that cowor-
kers’ felt status threat can mediate the negative relationship between development i-deals and
coworkers’ acceptance. And coworkers’ perception of obtaining future i-deals can mediate the
positive relationship between flexibility i-deals and coworkers’ acceptance. Furthermore, cowor-
kers’ RLMX plays a moderating role. Overall, our study suggests that coworkers are more likely to
accept focal employees’ flexibility i-deals than development i-deals.
Acknowledgements. Our research is supported by the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2020YJS070),
Beijing Jiaotong University Science and Technology Funding (2018JBWZB003) and China Ministry of Education Young
Scholar Research Funding (20YJC630162).
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Cite this article: Zhang X, Wu W, Wu W, Zhang Y, Xia Y (2020). Are your gains threat or chance for me? A social com-
parison perspective on idiosyncratic deals and coworkers’ acceptance. Journal of Management & Organization 1–22. https://
doi.org/10.1017/jmo.2020.32
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