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The role of organizational citizenship behaviour and rewards in strategy effectiveness

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The role of organizational citizenship behaviour and rewards in strategy effectiveness. / Thomas, Lisa; Ambrosini, Véronique; Hughes, Paul.
In: International Journal of Human Resource Management, Vol. 30, No. 18, 19.10.2019, p. 2628-2660.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Thomas, L, Ambrosini, V & Hughes, P 2019, 'The role of organizational citizenship behaviour and rewards in strategy effectiveness', International Journal of Human Resource Management, vol. 30, no. 18, pp. 2628-2660. https://doi.org/10.1080/09585192.2017.1391312

APA

Thomas, L., Ambrosini, V., & Hughes, P. (2019). The role of organizational citizenship behaviour and rewards in strategy effectiveness. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 30(18), 2628-2660. https://doi.org/10.1080/09585192.2017.1391312

Vancouver

Thomas L, Ambrosini V, Hughes P. The role of organizational citizenship behaviour and rewards in strategy effectiveness. International Journal of Human Resource Management. 2019 Oct 19;30(18):2628-2660. doi: 10.1080/09585192.2017.1391312

Author

Thomas, Lisa ; Ambrosini, Véronique ; Hughes, Paul. / The role of organizational citizenship behaviour and rewards in strategy effectiveness. In: International Journal of Human Resource Management. 2019 ; Vol. 30, No. 18. pp. 2628-2660.

Bibtex

@article{99b3015e932e481f933ad4c6e52de03f,
title = "The role of organizational citizenship behaviour and rewards in strategy effectiveness",
abstract = "In this paper we contribute to the strategy and OCB literature by empirically exploring how middle managers as strategic actors in product-market strategy making are enabled or constrained in the strategy process. We explore the role of organizationally targeted organizational citizenship behaviour (OCBO) as a conduit for strategy effectiveness. This is a departure from most OCB studies which concentrate on organizational effectiveness. We assess the mediating role of social and extrinsic rewards as organizational structural processes underlying the OCBO-strategy effectiveness relationship. Our results reveal that while OCBO has no direct influence on strategy effectiveness, participation as a form of social reward partially mediates the OCBO strategy effectiveness relationship. However, the negative mediation effect reveals that excessive participation reduces strategy effectiveness. In terms of extrinsic reward practices, process rewards partially and positively mediate the relationship. Focusing on OCBO our results contribute to the call for more nuanced studies into OCB relationships and performance and to the recent debate surrounding whether certain OCB behaviours are perceived as rewarded. We highlight that whilst OCBO is not in itself an important precondition for fostering effective strategy performance, organizational structural processes in the form of reward practices can foster beneficial OCBO which supports strategy effectiveness.",
author = "Lisa Thomas and V{\'e}ronique Ambrosini and Paul Hughes",
year = "2019",
month = oct,
day = "19",
doi = "10.1080/09585192.2017.1391312",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "2628--2660",
journal = "International Journal of Human Resource Management",
issn = "0958-5192",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "18",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The role of organizational citizenship behaviour and rewards in strategy effectiveness

AU - Thomas, Lisa

AU - Ambrosini, Véronique

AU - Hughes, Paul

PY - 2019/10/19

Y1 - 2019/10/19

N2 - In this paper we contribute to the strategy and OCB literature by empirically exploring how middle managers as strategic actors in product-market strategy making are enabled or constrained in the strategy process. We explore the role of organizationally targeted organizational citizenship behaviour (OCBO) as a conduit for strategy effectiveness. This is a departure from most OCB studies which concentrate on organizational effectiveness. We assess the mediating role of social and extrinsic rewards as organizational structural processes underlying the OCBO-strategy effectiveness relationship. Our results reveal that while OCBO has no direct influence on strategy effectiveness, participation as a form of social reward partially mediates the OCBO strategy effectiveness relationship. However, the negative mediation effect reveals that excessive participation reduces strategy effectiveness. In terms of extrinsic reward practices, process rewards partially and positively mediate the relationship. Focusing on OCBO our results contribute to the call for more nuanced studies into OCB relationships and performance and to the recent debate surrounding whether certain OCB behaviours are perceived as rewarded. We highlight that whilst OCBO is not in itself an important precondition for fostering effective strategy performance, organizational structural processes in the form of reward practices can foster beneficial OCBO which supports strategy effectiveness.

AB - In this paper we contribute to the strategy and OCB literature by empirically exploring how middle managers as strategic actors in product-market strategy making are enabled or constrained in the strategy process. We explore the role of organizationally targeted organizational citizenship behaviour (OCBO) as a conduit for strategy effectiveness. This is a departure from most OCB studies which concentrate on organizational effectiveness. We assess the mediating role of social and extrinsic rewards as organizational structural processes underlying the OCBO-strategy effectiveness relationship. Our results reveal that while OCBO has no direct influence on strategy effectiveness, participation as a form of social reward partially mediates the OCBO strategy effectiveness relationship. However, the negative mediation effect reveals that excessive participation reduces strategy effectiveness. In terms of extrinsic reward practices, process rewards partially and positively mediate the relationship. Focusing on OCBO our results contribute to the call for more nuanced studies into OCB relationships and performance and to the recent debate surrounding whether certain OCB behaviours are perceived as rewarded. We highlight that whilst OCBO is not in itself an important precondition for fostering effective strategy performance, organizational structural processes in the form of reward practices can foster beneficial OCBO which supports strategy effectiveness.

U2 - 10.1080/09585192.2017.1391312

DO - 10.1080/09585192.2017.1391312

M3 - Journal article

VL - 30

SP - 2628

EP - 2660

JO - International Journal of Human Resource Management

JF - International Journal of Human Resource Management

SN - 0958-5192

IS - 18

ER -