• J Soc Psychol · May 2015

    Better to give and to compete? Prosocial and competitive motives as interactive predictors of citizenship behavior.

    • M Teresa Cardador and Amy Wrzesniewski.
    • a University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
    • J Soc Psychol. 2015 May 1; 155 (3): 255-73.

    AbstractResearch has returned mixed results concerning the relationship between prosocial motivation and citizenship behavior. Building from research suggesting that mixed motives might explain these equivocal findings, we conducted two field studies examining the interaction between prosocial and competitive motives and two types of citizenship behavior. Prosocial motivation, but not competitive motivation, was positively related to citizenship behavior directed at others, though this relationship was weakened when prosocial motives were accompanied by competitive motives. Prosocial motives compensated for weak competitive motives to predict citizenship behavior directed toward the organization. Our studies expand research on prosocial and competitive motivation, mixed-motives, and citizenship behavior. Further, they carry personnel implications given that many organizations seek to hire employees high on both competitive and prosocial motivation.

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