Publication | Closed Access
Winning at all costs: An exploration of bottom‐line mentality, Machiavellianism, and organisational citizenship behaviour
78
Citations
50
References
2019
Year
Social PsychologyOrganizational CultureHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyEmployee AttitudeManagementWork AttitudeOrganizational PsychologySocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesApplied Social PsychologyBottom‐line Mentality LiteratureBottom‐line MentalityOrganizational CommunicationBusinessOrganisational Citizenship BehaviourEmployee Bottom‐line MentalityPolitical Science
Abstract This study seeks to advance the bottom‐line mentality literature by exploring an antecedent and outcome of employee bottom‐line mentality. We build and test a moderated‐mediation model by arguing that the personality trait of Machiavellianism promotes an employee's adoption of a bottom‐line mentality. Moreover, drawing on trait activation theory, we argue that this relationship is fully activated when the employee perceives that the organisation endorses a bottom‐line mentality. To expand our theoretical model, we also suggest that employee bottom‐line mentality inhibits organisational citizenship behaviour directed towards co‐workers. Lastly, we investigate whether an employee's perception of an organisation's bottom‐line mentality conditionally moderates the indirect effect of Machiavellianism on organisational citizenship behaviour directed towards co‐workers through the mediated mechanism of employee bottom‐line mentality. Our theoretical model is tested across two distinct studies. Study 1, a field study conducted within a variety of organisations, provides evidence for our initial predictions (Hypotheses 1 and 2). Study 2, a multisource field study conducted in multiple industries, replicates and extends the findings from Study 1 by providing evidence for the entire moderated‐mediation model. We find support for our hypothesised model across both studies. Implications for theory and practice are discussed, and suggestions for future research are identified.
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