Co-workers’ reactions to (Mis)Alignment between supervisors’ intentions and Co-workers’ perceptions of I-deal secrecy: An uncertainty management perspective

IF 4 2区 管理学 Q2 MANAGEMENT Group & Organization Management Pub Date : 2024-08-28 DOI:10.1177/10596011241273430
Sophie De Winne, Elise Marescaux, Emma Raets, Nicky Dries
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Abstract

This study employs Uncertainty Management Theory (UMT) to explore how co-workers respond to supervisors’ communication about idiosyncratic deals (i-deals), specifically comparing secrecy and transparency. We suggest that co-workers’ perceptions of i-deal secrecy, as opposed to transparency, lead to uncertainty. Moreover, misalignment between co-workers’ perceptions and supervisors’ intentions regarding i-deal communication may create a second source of uncertainty. We propose that co-workers cope with this uncertainty by forming moral judgments about the i-deal communication, which subsequently relate to their trust in their supervisor and their turnover intentions. Data were collected from 27 supervisors and 224 co-workers across 27 teams, resulting in 224 matched co-worker-supervisor responses. Polynomial regressions reveal varying outcomes depending on the (mis)alignment between co-workers’ perceptions and supervisors’ intentions. Co-workers’ moral judgments, trust in their supervisor and turnover intentions are optimal when they perceive i-deal transparency, regardless of the supervisor’s intentions. These factors are suboptimal when co-workers’ perceptions of i-deal secrecy align with supervisors’ intentions, and detrimental when co-workers perceive i-deal secrecy while supervisors intend transparency. Our findings highlight the potential consequences of supervisors’ intentions for i-deal transparency, showing they can be positive or negative depending on co-workers’ perceptions. Moreover, supervisors’ intentions for i-deal secrecy are not necessarily problematic as long as co-workers perceive transparency. Yet, once secrecy intentions are revealed, suboptimal co-worker reactions occur.
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同事对上司意图与同事对 I-deal 保密认知(不)一致的反应:不确定性管理视角
本研究采用不确定性管理理论(UMT)来探讨同事如何应对上司关于特异性交易(i-deals)的沟通,特别是比较保密性和透明度。我们认为,与透明度相比,同事对 i-deals 保密的看法会导致不确定性。此外,同事对 i-deal 沟通的认知与上司的意图不一致,可能会产生第二个不确定性来源。我们提出,同事通过形成对 i-deal 沟通的道德判断来应对这种不确定性,这种判断随后会关系到他们对上司的信任和离职意向。我们从 27 个团队中的 27 位主管和 224 位同事那里收集了数据,得出了 224 个匹配的同事-主管回答。多项式回归结果显示,同事的看法与主管的意图(不)一致会导致不同的结果。当同事感知到 i-deal 透明度时,无论主管的意图如何,他们的道德判断、对主管的信任和离职意向都是最佳的。当同事对 i-deal 保密的感知与上司的意图一致时,这些因素都是次优的;当同事对 i-deal 保密的感知与上司的意图一致时,这些因素都是不利的。我们的研究结果凸显了主管对 i-deal 透明度的意图可能产生的后果,表明它们可能是积极的,也可能是消极的,这取决于同事的看法。此外,只要同事认为透明,主管的 i-deal 保密意图就不一定有问题。然而,一旦保密意图被揭露,同事们就会出现次优反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
71
期刊介绍: Group & Organization Management (GOM) publishes the work of scholars and professionals who extend management and organization theory and address the implications of this for practitioners. Innovation, conceptual sophistication, methodological rigor, and cutting-edge scholarship are the driving principles. Topics include teams, group processes, leadership, organizational behavior, organizational theory, strategic management, organizational communication, gender and diversity, cross-cultural analysis, and organizational development and change, but all articles dealing with individual, group, organizational and/or environmental dimensions are appropriate.
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