Management Department, Pamplin College of Business, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech.).
Division of Management & International Business, Price College of Business, University of Oklahoma.
J Appl Psychol. 2018 Aug;103(8):842-866. doi: 10.1037/apl0000300. Epub 2018 Apr 16.
For more than 30 years, researchers have investigated interpersonal helping in organizations, with much of this work focusing on understanding why employees help their colleagues. Although this is important, it is also critical that employees are willing to accept assistance that is offered by peers. Indeed, helping behavior should only enhance individual and organizational effectiveness if employees are actually willing to accept offers of assistance. Unfortunately, employees may sometimes have reservations about accepting help from their peers. In four studies, we examine the negative beliefs that employees have about accepting help from coworkers. In Study 1, we use inductive research to qualitatively understand why employees accept or decline coworker help. In Study 2, we develop a preliminary, second-order reflective measure of negative beliefs about accepting coworker help that is indicated by the five specific (first-order) reservations about accepting help identified in Study 1-diminished image, reciprocity obligation, self-reliance, coworker mistrust, and coworker incompetence. In Study 3, we refine our scale and demonstrate its convergent, discriminant, and criterion-related validity. Finally, in Study 4, we investigate the consequences of negative beliefs about accepting coworker help. We find that those who hold more negative beliefs are less likely to receive help from peers (and supervisors), report more negative job attitudes, and have lower levels of in-role performance, citizenship behavior, and creativity. Furthermore, employees with more negative beliefs about accepting help from coworkers are seen less favorably by their supervisors. Implications and future research directions are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record
三十多年来,研究人员一直在研究组织中的人际帮助,其中大部分工作都集中在理解为什么员工会帮助同事。虽然这很重要,但员工是否愿意接受同事提供的帮助也同样关键。事实上,如果员工真的愿意接受帮助,那么帮助行为只会增强个人和组织的效力。不幸的是,员工有时可能对接受同事的帮助持保留意见。在四项研究中,我们考察了员工对接受同事帮助的负面信念。在研究 1 中,我们使用归纳研究来定性地了解员工为什么接受或拒绝同事的帮助。在研究 2 中,我们开发了一个初步的、二阶的、反映接受同事帮助的负面信念的衡量标准,由研究 1 中确定的五个具体(一阶)接受帮助的保留意见表示——形象受损、互惠义务、自力更生、同事不信任和同事能力不足。在研究 3 中,我们进一步完善了我们的量表,并证明了其收敛、区分和与标准相关的有效性。最后,在研究 4 中,我们调查了对接受同事帮助的负面信念的后果。我们发现,那些持有更多负面信念的人不太可能从同事(和主管)那里得到帮助,他们报告的工作态度更消极,角色内绩效、公民行为和创造力水平也更低。此外,那些对接受同事帮助持有更多负面信念的员工,他们的主管对他们的评价也较低。文章讨论了其意义和未来的研究方向。