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Intrinsic motivation and organizational identification among on-demand workers.
100
Citations
52
References
2017
Year
Job SatisfactionWork AttitudeSocial IdentityOrganizational IdentityIntrinsic MotivationBehavioral Decision MakingOn-demand FirmJob DesignMotivationManagementBusinessSelf-determination TheoryOrganizational ResearchOrganizational CommitmentHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational PsychologyOrganizational BehaviorSocial Sciences
On-demand firms provide services for clients through a network of on-demand workers ready to complete specific tasks for a set contractual price. Given such on-demand work is defined by payment on short-term contracts with no obligation for continued employment, there is little reason to believe on-demand workers experience more than extrinsic motivation and a transactional relationship with the on-demand firm. However, using self-determination theory, we argue that to the degree that on-demand work fulfills innate psychological needs individual on-demand workers will develop intrinsic motivation, which further leads to organizational identification with the on-demand firm. Across 2 survey-based studies we find support for this path to organizational identification. This adds to the literature on motivation and identification by strengthening the link between individual needs and the individual-organizational relationship. Implications for theory and for the management of on-demand workers are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record
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