• J Appl Psychol · Jan 2009

    The popularity contest at work: who wins, why, and what do they receive?

    • Brent A Scott and Timothy A Judge.
    • Department of Management, Michigan State University, USA. scott@bus.msu.edu
    • J Appl Psychol. 2009 Jan 1; 94 (1): 20-33.

    AbstractIn 2 studies, the authors investigated the popularity of employees at work. They tested a model that positioned personality in the form of core self-evaluations and situational position in the form of communication network centrality as antecedents of popularity and interpersonal citizenship and counterproductive work behaviors received from coworkers as outcomes of popularity. Data from 116 employees and 383 coworkers in Study 1 and 139 employees, their significant others, and 808 coworkers in Study 2 generally supported the model. Core self-evaluations and communication network centrality were positively related to popularity, and popular employees reported receiving more citizenship behaviors and fewer counterproductive work behaviors from their coworkers than less popular employees, even controlling for interpersonal liking. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved).

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