Impact of Supervisor's Implicit Person Theory and Commitment of Performance Management Behaviors

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Performance management is not a new area within IO psychology research, however recently there has been growing interest with how to increase its effectiveness. Scholars are calling for more research to examine the antecedents of actual...

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Main Author: Wolfred, Brad
Other Authors: Williams, Jane
Language:en_US
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/24757
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spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-247572021-01-28T05:08:16Z Impact of Supervisor's Implicit Person Theory and Commitment of Performance Management Behaviors Wolfred, Brad Williams, Jane Stockdale, Peggy Andel, Stephanie Implicit Theories Supervisors Management Leadership Behavior Commitment Performance Management Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) Performance management is not a new area within IO psychology research, however recently there has been growing interest with how to increase its effectiveness. Scholars are calling for more research to examine the antecedents of actual performance management behaviors that managers enact on a daily basis. The current study addresses this gap by utilizing Implicit Person Theory to understand the effect of supervisor perceptions on their behaviors that contribute towards the goal(s) of performance management. Previous research has suggested that Implicit Person Theory leads to more coaching behaviors, however, has failed to identify an explanatory mechanism. The current study relies on the three-component model of commitment to offer a mediating variable between Implicit Person Theory and differing degrees of performance management behaviors due to its more proximal relationship to the target behaviors compared to the broad antecedent of perception of others. The researchers tested this mediation using survey data from a broad sample of supervisors across the United States. Managers’ Incrementalism was positively and significantly related to discretionary performance management behaviors via affective commitment to performance management, however the relationship between Incrementalism and focal performance management behaviors via continuance commitment was non-significant. This research extends previous performance management research by providing evidence for the influence of key supervisor attitudes and implicit beliefs on varying levels of performance management behaviors. Theoretical contributions, limitations and future research directions are discussed. 2021-01-05T16:15:13Z 2021-01-05T16:15:13Z 2020-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1805/24757 en_US Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Implicit Theories
Supervisors
Management
Leadership Behavior
Commitment
Performance Management
spellingShingle Implicit Theories
Supervisors
Management
Leadership Behavior
Commitment
Performance Management
Wolfred, Brad
Impact of Supervisor's Implicit Person Theory and Commitment of Performance Management Behaviors
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Performance management is not a new area within IO psychology research, however recently there has been growing interest with how to increase its effectiveness. Scholars are calling for more research to examine the antecedents of actual performance management behaviors that managers enact on a daily basis. The current study addresses this gap by utilizing Implicit Person Theory to understand the effect of supervisor perceptions on their behaviors that contribute towards the goal(s) of performance management. Previous research has suggested that Implicit Person Theory leads to more coaching behaviors, however, has failed to identify an explanatory mechanism. The current study relies on the three-component model of commitment to offer a mediating variable between Implicit Person Theory and differing degrees of performance management behaviors due to its more proximal relationship to the target behaviors compared to the broad antecedent of perception of others. The researchers tested this mediation using survey data from a broad sample of supervisors across the United States. Managers’ Incrementalism was positively and significantly related to discretionary performance management behaviors via affective commitment to performance management, however the relationship between Incrementalism and focal performance management behaviors via continuance commitment was non-significant. This research extends previous performance management research by providing evidence for the influence of key supervisor attitudes and implicit beliefs on varying levels of performance management behaviors. Theoretical contributions, limitations and future research directions are discussed.
author2 Williams, Jane
author_facet Williams, Jane
Wolfred, Brad
author Wolfred, Brad
author_sort Wolfred, Brad
title Impact of Supervisor's Implicit Person Theory and Commitment of Performance Management Behaviors
title_short Impact of Supervisor's Implicit Person Theory and Commitment of Performance Management Behaviors
title_full Impact of Supervisor's Implicit Person Theory and Commitment of Performance Management Behaviors
title_fullStr Impact of Supervisor's Implicit Person Theory and Commitment of Performance Management Behaviors
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Supervisor's Implicit Person Theory and Commitment of Performance Management Behaviors
title_sort impact of supervisor's implicit person theory and commitment of performance management behaviors
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/24757
work_keys_str_mv AT wolfredbrad impactofsupervisorsimplicitpersontheoryandcommitmentofperformancemanagementbehaviors
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