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JIJobPres Preprint
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- Contributions to Research and Theory
GENERAL DISCUSSION
The question of whether JI motivates employees to try to secure their jobs has perplexed researchers for decades. Our research addresses (a) the directionality of JI – workplace behavior relationships, (b) the specific strategies employees may pursue, (c) the conditions under which JI is associated with job preservation motivation, and (d) how these efforts feedback to shape JI. JOB INSECURITY AND JOB PRESERVATION 25 Contributions to Research and Theory Our findings are generally in line with the idea that individuals are motivated to direct energy and effort toward trying to counteract threats to their jobs, particularly when faced with proximal threats. Study 1 establishes a link between JI and socially-oriented resource investment strategies as indicated by self-presentation ingratiatory behavior and evasive knowledge hiding. Study 2’s findings suggest that people may use both social and task-oriented strategies when facing highly proximal threats. However, the findings of a negative direct effect of JI on job performance and a positive direct effect of JI on counterproductive work behavior may help explain why Study 1 found a null overall relationship between JI and subsequent performance and a positive relationship between JI and subsequent counterproductive work behavior. Although individuals may be motivated to perform well and refrain from counterproductive work behavior, doing so appears to be difficult under higher JI. These results provide interesting insights into JI as a threat of future loss—individuals are motivated to counteract this threat, and mobilize effort and energy to do so, but at the same time, the experience of JI makes certain expenditures (specifically, the task-oriented strategies of performance and refraining from misbehavior) potentially more difficult. In doing so, these findings advance and clarify JI research. Our longitudinal findings are consistent with past findings of null relationships between JI and performance (e.g., Selenko et al., 2017), but they suggest that such findings do not mean that job performance is not a relevant outcome of JI. Rather, the relationship is nuanced, reflecting both threat conditions that may encourage job preservation motivation and, at the same time, potential countervailing effects. In this sense, our Study 2 finding of a positive indirect effect of JI on performance under conditions of higher threat proximity echoes Probst et al.’s (2007) experimental findings—under more JOB INSECURITY AND JOB PRESERVATION 26 proximal threat conditions, JI is associated with greater motivation to preserve one’s job, which in turn is positively associated with performance and negatively associated with counterproductive work behavior. This pattern of findings is consistent with other research as well; for instance, research finds that pregnant women worried about job threat (a proximal threat) try to exceed performance expectations (Gatrell, 2011). Surprisingly, Study 1 did not reveal the anticipated reversed relationship between performance and JI, which we thought would help explain the negative relationship found in many cross-sectional studies (Sverke et al., 2019). Perhaps one’s past performance does little to assuage concerns about potential job loss. Alternatively, the negative direct effect of JI on performance that we observed in Study 2 and/or any negative reversed effects that exist may be stronger in the more immediate timeframes captured by cross-sectional research. Future research is needed to examine this further. Regarding counterproductive work behaviors, Study 1’s results indicate a negative spiral wherein people respond to JI with counterproductive work behavior that in turn makes them more worried about their jobs. These findings help explain recent meta-analytic findings by Sverke et al. (2019) of a positive JI-counterproductive work behavior relationship. The reversed relationship is also consistent with the turnover literature’s finding that misbehavior can put employees’ jobs at risk (e.g., Spurk et al., 2018). That said, as Study 2 showed, this relationship is muted when people perceive more proximal threats, suggesting at least some effort might be made to refrain from these behaviors depending on the circumstance. Our research also sheds light on socially-oriented job preservation strategies, which have been the focus of less JI research. We found positive relationships between JI and self- presentation ingratiatory behavior in both Studies 1 and 2, echoing findings from Huang et al. (2013). These findings provide strong support for socially-oriented promotive strategies as a JOB INSECURITY AND JOB PRESERVATION 27 behavioral response to JI. Surprisingly, self-presentation ingratiatory behavior was positively associated with subsequent JI. It may be that higher self-presentation behaviors inadvertently make individuals feel that there is a spotlight on their performance. The resulting pressure to maintain their advertised achievements and skills may then increase JI. Although this finding runs counter to Probst et al.’s (2020) conclusions, their measure of impression management could be viewed as more akin to supervisor-directed citizenship than self-presentation. Study 1 found that JI was positively associated with subsequent evasive knowledge hiding. In turn, knowledge hiding was negatively associated with subsequent JI, suggesting that this strategy is successful at reducing JI. This pattern of longitudinal relationships (positive directional, negative reversed) helps to explain equivocal findings in cross-sectional research, which capture both directed and reversed relationships simultaneously (e.g., Bartol, Liu, Zeng, & Wu, 2009; Serenko & Bontis, 2016). That said, we did not find the expected indirect effects in Study 2. This may be because Study 2 took place during the COVID-19 crisis where decisions about how organizations handle nearly every aspect of their business (e.g., operations, marketing, safety) were rapidly changing and many workers had transitioned to remote work where there was less opportunity to interact with others. This may have limited opportunities for knowledge hiding or, in some cases, made it such that hiding knowledge could actually threaten one’s job by making one look incompetent or unhelpful in an organizational crisis situation. Indeed, the mean for knowledge hiding was much lower in Study 2 than in Study 1. However, the open-ended findings in Table 7 echo the idea that people view having unique knowledge as a valuable strategy for attaining job security. We encourage research to explore context-driven changes in the job preservation strategies that individuals attempt. The notion of job preservation is often dismissed because it could be taken to imply that JOB INSECURITY AND JOB PRESERVATION 28 JI is beneficial for organizations. However, our findings do not suggest an overall benefit for organizations from JI. Although job preservation motivation may be indirectly positively associated with job performance under perceptions of more proximal threats, there is a negative countervailing effect, suggesting individuals may be working harder simply to maintain performance. Moreover, JI is linked with greater social job preservation behaviors (knowledge hiding, self-presentation ingratiatory behavior), neither of which can be thought of as beneficial for the organization. However, the general pattern of results observed in the research, especially the indirect effects through job preservation motivation under conditions of higher threat proximity observed in Study 2, point to strategic resource investment as a valuable lens through which to understand reactions to JI. Our 2x2 typology suggests that people may pursue different strategies for job preservation, thereby providing a way for the field to organize and investigate potential job preservation responses. In addition to advancing the JI literature, these findings also help clarify COR theory (Hobfoll, 1989), which provides limited explanation of (a) the resource investment strategies people pursue and (b) the conditions under which people pursue resource investment to counteract threats versus when they choose to conserve energy and effort. Counter to Hagger’s (2015) ideas about justification for resource investment, we did not find significant moderating effects of perceived threat controllability. This finding is in line with Hobfoll’s (1989) contention that people will make every effort to counteract threats, even efforts that are unlikely to be successful. Perhaps the importance of the job is enough justification for resource investment, regardless of perceptions of controllability. That said, it is also possible that these results might be due to the relatively broad measure of controllability. Perhaps a measure that addresses the extent to which individuals anticipate that they can secure their jobs through engaging in specific JOB INSECURITY AND JOB PRESERVATION 29 forms of behavior (e.g., higher job performance, etc.) would have yielded different results. Download 0.9 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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