Understanding the Role of Machiavellianism in Unfavorable LMX Comparison Processes

Herman Tse, March L To, Catherine K. Lam, Xiao Song Lin

    Research output: Chapter in book/report/conference proceedingConference proceedingpeer-review

    Abstract

    Individuals are always sensitive to their relative status in different leader-member exchanges (LMXs) through the comparison of their own LMXs with those of others, which may affect their interaction with each other. Little research, however, has examined whether or not one’s LMX is outperformed by another coworker will always influence one to have a negative perception and reaction to this coworker within a dyad. Drawing on social comparison and utility theories and the research on Machiavellianism (Mach), we propose to test a moderated-mediation model uncovering why and when employees with high Mach can affiliate with their comparison target coworkers in unfavorable LMX comparison processes. Our results revealed that a lower level of A’s LMX compared with a higher level of B’s LMX elicits A’s perception of status threat caused by B when Mach is high. We also found that A’s perceived status threat motivates A to engage in affiliative behaviors - seeking help from B and displaying impression-management toward B when Mach is high. Furthermore, our results showed that the indirect effect of A’s perceived status threat is also significant when Mach is high. Finally, interpersonal help seeking and impression-management behaviors were found to be positively associated with individual-level job performance and supervisor-rated impression-management perception.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationAcademy of Management Proceedings 2017
    EditorsSonia Taneja
    PublisherAcademy of Management
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2017
    Event77th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, AOM 2017: At The Interface - Atlanta, United States
    Duration: 4 Aug 20179 Aug 2017
    https://aom.org/events/annual-meeting/past-annual-meetings/2017-at-the-interface (Conference website)
    https://journals.aom.org/toc/amproc/2017/1 (Conference proceedings)

    Publication series

    NameAcademy of Management Proceedings
    Number1
    Volume2017
    ISSN (Print)0065-0668
    ISSN (Electronic)2151-6561

    Conference

    Conference77th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, AOM 2017
    Country/TerritoryUnited States
    CityAtlanta
    Period4/08/179/08/17
    Internet address

    User-Defined Keywords

    • coworkers
    • Leader-member exchange
    • Machiavellianism

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