3.8 Article

Relating supervisor interpersonal emotion management- and task-oriented leadership to adaptive performance: a moderated-mediation model incorporating trust and gender

Journal

EQUALITY DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION
Volume 41, Issue 4, Pages 549-567

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/EDI-07-2021-0174

Keywords

Careers; Sex and gender issues; Women workers; Leadership

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The study suggests that interpersonal emotion management positively impacts employee adaptive job performance, especially for female leaders. Task-oriented leadership is related to adaptive performance, but not to trust or adaptive performance through trust. Female leaders may gain trust and adaptive performance from employees by engaging in higher levels of interpersonal emotion management.
Purpose The authors incorporated leadership and gender theories with research on trust to propose a model relating interpersonal emotion management (IEM, a type of relational leadership) and task-oriented (T-O) leadership to follower adaptive performance. The authors also examine the indirect effect of IEM and T-O on adaptive performance via trust and the possible moderating role of gender on these relationships. Design/methodology/approach The authors tested this model using a sample of 314 workers who rated their direct leaders (supervisors). Findings Overall, results supported the model for IEM as it was directly and indirectly related (via trust) to adaptive job performance (even after controlling for transformational leadership) and these relationships were more positive for women leaders. T-O leadership was related to adaptive job performance as expected but was unrelated to trust or, via trust, to adaptive performance. Findings also suggest that women direct leaders may garner more trust and adaptive performance from followers by engaging in higher levels of IEM, while also not experiencing backlash for engaging in the more agentic T-O behaviors during a crisis. Practical implications Despite an emphasis on women's relational leadership during a crisis, the authors findings show organizations are best served by ambidextrous leaders who can manage the emotions and tasks of their followers and that both women and men can engage in these leadership styles without penalty. Originality/value Much research regarding women's leadership advantage during a crisis is based on political leaders or has been conducted in lab settings. Further, it has focused on attitudes toward the women leaders rather than their performance. Research has also not considered both IEM along with the possible backlash women may experience for engaging in T-O leadership.

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