Publication | Closed Access
Does participative leadership enhance work performance by inducing empowerment or trust? The differential effects on managerial and non‐managerial subordinates
396
Citations
95
References
2009
Year
EducationHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorOrganizational SocializationDifferential EffectsManagementNon‐managerial SubordinatesFortune 500Organizational PsychologyWork AttitudeOrganizational SystemsTask PerformanceMotivationTrustBusiness LeadershipLeadershipParticipative LeadershipEmployee InvolvementService LeadershipPerformance StudiesOrganizational CommunicationBusinessEthical LeadershipLeadership Development
Abstract We examined whether participative leadership behavior is associated with improved work performance through a motivational process or an exchange‐based process. Based on data collected from 527 employees from a Fortune 500 company, we found that the link between superiors' participative leadership behaviors and subordinates' task performance and organizational citizenship behavior toward organizations (OCBO) was mediated by psychological empowerment (motivational mediator) for managerial subordinates. Yet, for non‐managerial subordinates such as supporting and front‐line employees, the impact of participative leadership on task performance and OCBO was mediated by trust‐in‐supervisor (exchange‐based mediator). Implications for theories and practices are discussed. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1