TY - JOUR
T1 - Roles Affect Individuals& Preferences for Organizations
T2 - A Values Perspective
AU - Arieli, Sharon
AU - Lee, Fiona
AU - Sagiv, Lilach
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020. American Psychological Association
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - People are guided by the roles they assume in their everyday lives. Roles are cognitive schemas that are associated with specific goals and expectations that organize and guide individuals’ perception and preferences. The social roles individuals assume affect their goals, which in turn affect their point of view and preferences. We propose and show that role schemas are malleable, allowing individuals to shift from one schema to another depending on the role they assume at the moment of judgment. Drawing on role theory and theories of espoused organizational values, we show that matching between the goals derived from a specific role and espoused organizational values influence the preferences of individuals toward an organization. An experiment with 476 working adults and students in three countries, found that individual assumed role (as a potential employee or an investor) and espoused organizational values (embeddedness-autonomy, egalitarianism-hierarchy, and mastery-harmony) affected individuals’ preferences to invest or work in organizations. Our findings suggest that role-specific goals are important drivers of how individuals perceive organizations, and that individuals seek “fit” between organizational values and their role-specific goals. Finally, we discuss supplementary analyses testing the classical notion of value-based person-organization fit.
AB - People are guided by the roles they assume in their everyday lives. Roles are cognitive schemas that are associated with specific goals and expectations that organize and guide individuals’ perception and preferences. The social roles individuals assume affect their goals, which in turn affect their point of view and preferences. We propose and show that role schemas are malleable, allowing individuals to shift from one schema to another depending on the role they assume at the moment of judgment. Drawing on role theory and theories of espoused organizational values, we show that matching between the goals derived from a specific role and espoused organizational values influence the preferences of individuals toward an organization. An experiment with 476 working adults and students in three countries, found that individual assumed role (as a potential employee or an investor) and espoused organizational values (embeddedness-autonomy, egalitarianism-hierarchy, and mastery-harmony) affected individuals’ preferences to invest or work in organizations. Our findings suggest that role-specific goals are important drivers of how individuals perceive organizations, and that individuals seek “fit” between organizational values and their role-specific goals. Finally, we discuss supplementary analyses testing the classical notion of value-based person-organization fit.
KW - espoused values
KW - organizational values
KW - role-specific goals
KW - social roles
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85086481555&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1037/xap0000243
DO - 10.1037/xap0000243
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C2 - 31556645
AN - SCOPUS:85086481555
SN - 1076-898X
VL - 26
SP - 350
EP - 359
JO - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied
JF - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied
IS - 2
ER -