TY - JOUR
T1 - Innovation across cultures: Connecting leadership, identification, and creative behavior in organizations
AU - Bracht, Eva M.
AU - Monzani, Lucas
AU - Boer, Diana
AU - Haslam, S. Alexander
AU - Kerschreiter, Rudolf
AU - Lemoine, Jeremy E.
AU - Steffens, Niklas K.
AU - Akfirat, Serap Arslan
AU - Avanzi, Lorenzo
AU - Barghi, Bita
AU - Dumont, Kitty
AU - Edelmann, Charlotte M.
AU - Epitropaki, Olga
AU - Fransen, Katrien
AU - Giessner, Steffen
AU - Gleibs, Ilka H.
AU - Gonzalez, Roberto
AU - Gonzalez, Ana Laguia
AU - Lipponen, Jukka
AU - Markovits, Yannis
AU - Molero, Fernando
AU - Moriano, Juan A.
AU - Neves, Pedro
AU - Orosz, Gabor
AU - Roland-Levy, Christine
AU - Schuh, Sebastian C.
AU - Sekiguchi, Tomoki
AU - Song, Lynda Jiwen
AU - Story, Joana S. P.
AU - Stouten, Jeroen
AU - Tatachari, Srinivasan
AU - Valdenegro, Daniel
AU - van Bunderen, Lisanne
AU - Voros, Viktor
AU - Wong, Sut, I
AU - Youssef, Farida
AU - Zhang, Xin-an
AU - van Dick, Rolf
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Innovation is considered essential for today's organizations to survive and thrive. Researchers have also stressed the importance of leadership as a driver of followers' innovative work behavior (FIB). Yet, despite a large amount of research, three areas remain understudied: (a) The relative importance of different forms of leadership for FIB; (b) the mechanisms through which leadership impacts FIB; and (c) the degree to which relationships between leadership and FIB are generalizable across cultures. To address these lacunae, we propose an integrated model connecting four types of positive leadership behaviors, two types of identification (as mediating variables), and FIB. We tested our model in a global data set comprising responses of N = 7,225 participants from 23 countries, grouped into nine cultural clusters. Our results indicate that perceived LMX quality was the strongest relative predictor of FIB. Furthermore, the relationships between both perceived LMX quality and identity leadership with FIB were mediated by social identification. The indirect effect of LMX on FIB via social identification was stable across clusters, whereas the indirect effects of the other forms of leadership on FIB via social identification were stronger in countries high versus low on collectivism. Power distance did not influence the relations.
AB - Innovation is considered essential for today's organizations to survive and thrive. Researchers have also stressed the importance of leadership as a driver of followers' innovative work behavior (FIB). Yet, despite a large amount of research, three areas remain understudied: (a) The relative importance of different forms of leadership for FIB; (b) the mechanisms through which leadership impacts FIB; and (c) the degree to which relationships between leadership and FIB are generalizable across cultures. To address these lacunae, we propose an integrated model connecting four types of positive leadership behaviors, two types of identification (as mediating variables), and FIB. We tested our model in a global data set comprising responses of N = 7,225 participants from 23 countries, grouped into nine cultural clusters. Our results indicate that perceived LMX quality was the strongest relative predictor of FIB. Furthermore, the relationships between both perceived LMX quality and identity leadership with FIB were mediated by social identification. The indirect effect of LMX on FIB via social identification was stable across clusters, whereas the indirect effects of the other forms of leadership on FIB via social identification were stronger in countries high versus low on collectivism. Power distance did not influence the relations.
KW - cross-cultural leadership
KW - innovative behavior
KW - multilevel modeling
KW - positive leadership
KW - social identification
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=ceibs_wosapi&SrcAuth=WosAPI&KeyUT=WOS:000772204600001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=WOS
U2 - 10.1111/apps.12381
DO - 10.1111/apps.12381
M3 - Journal
SN - 0269-994X
JO - Applied Psychology
JF - Applied Psychology
ER -