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Organizational identification and workplace behavior: More than meets the eye
Institution:1. New York University, United States;2. University of Texas, Austin, United States;3. Lehigh University, United States;1. Chicago Magazine, United States;2. Stanford University, United States;1. Singapore Management University, Singapore;2. INSEAD, Singapore;3. London Business School, United Kingdom;1. Harvard University, United States;2. Northwestern University, United States;3. Duke University, United States;1. Department of Management and Organization, Carroll School of Management, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467,United States;2. Department of Management and Organizations, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University, 2001 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208, United States;1. Harvard Business School, Boston, MA 02163, United States;2. Harvard Kennedy School, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States;3. Goldman School of Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, United States
Abstract:Organizational identification is a theoretically profound and practically important construct. It fundamentally transforms the relationship between employees and their work organizations, because highly identified employees integrate their organizational memberships with their sense of who they are. This transformation enhances highly identified employees’ work performance and contributions to the organization. However, despite considerable research on the benefits of organizational identification for employee behavior, theorizing about this effect and its underlying mechanisms remains underdeveloped. In particular, there has not been sufficient theoretical development regarding the specific types of work behaviors that follow from organizational identification, the psychological mechanisms that underlie these behavioral consequences, or observers’ evaluations of these behaviors and those enacting them. To address these issues, we present a framework of the behavioral consequences of organizational identification as well as observers’ reactions to them. Our framework highlights two distinct motivational orientations that underlie organizational identification, one that reliably leads to conformist work behaviors and one that may lead to deviant work behaviors that violate the status quo to advance organizational interests. Moreover, our framework highlights that reactions to these behaviors will differ depending on the organization’s emphasis on means versus ends. Overall, we emphasize that the benefits of organizational identification for work behavior are not as straightforward or as widely recognized as implied in prior research.
Keywords:Organizational identification  Organizational identity  Work behavior
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