Publication | Closed Access
Disentangling passion and engagement: An examination of how and when passionate employees become engaged ones
82
Citations
63
References
2017
Year
Workplace PsychologySocial PsychologyJob PassionOrganizational BehaviorPsychologySocial SciencesPassionate EmployeesJob EngagementManagementOrganizational PsychologyWork AttitudeCivic EngagementBehavioral SciencesEngaged OnesMotivationOrganizational CommitmentCommitment ModelApplied Social PsychologyOrganizational CommunicationInterpersonal RelationshipsBusinessPassionate WorkersProfessional DevelopmentEmployee Engagement
While anecdotal industry evidence indicates that passionate workers are engaged workers, research has yet to understand how and when job passion and engagement are related. To answer the how question, we draw from person-environment fit theory to test, and find support for, the mediating roles of perceived demands–abilities (D–A) fit and person–organization (P–O) fit in the relationships between passion and job engagement, and between passion and organizational engagement, respectively. Also, because the obsessive form of passion is contingency-driven, we answer the when question by adopting a target-similarity approach to test the contingent role of multi-foci trust in the obsessive passion-to-engagement relationships. We found that when obsessively passionate workers trust their organization, they report greater levels of organizational engagement (because of increased P–O fit). In contrast, when these workers trust both their co-workers and supervisor simultaneously, they report greater levels of job engagement (because of increased D–A fit).
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