4.7 Article

Envy Influences Interpersonal Dynamics and Team Performance: Roles of Gender Congruence and Collective Team Identification

Journal

JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/01492063221121597

Keywords

advice seeking; collective team identification; envy; gender congruence; interpersonal deviance; team performance

Funding

  1. BK21 FOUR (Fostering Outstanding Universities for Research) in 2022
  2. Yonsei University's Signature Research Cluster Program [2022-22-0007]
  3. Yonsei University Research Fund [2020-22-0039]
  4. SHRM Foundation Dissertation Grant
  5. SIOP Graduate Student Scholarship
  6. University of Minnesota Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship
  7. Center for Human Resources and Labor Studies at the University of Minnesota
  8. Yonsei Business Research Institute

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This research expands on envy research by considering the influence of envy and gender congruence on interpersonal dynamics and team performance at the dyadic level. The study finds that envious employees are more likely to engage in interpersonal deviance towards envied team members, while envied employees are more likely to seek advice from envious team members. Gender congruence further impacts these relationships, with different patterns observed for males and females.
Our research extends past envy research by considering how envy and gender congruence shape interpersonal dynamics at the dyadic level and their bottom-up effects for team performance. Integrating social comparison theory and social identity theory, we examine when and how dyadic level envy influences team performance. Using time-lagged data from 428 dyads of 161 employees in 51 teams, our results show that envious employees are likely to engage in interpersonal deviance directed toward envied team members and that envied employees are likely to seek advice from envious team members. Gender congruence further influences these relationships, with different patterns for males and females. Specifically, while envious male employees are more likely to engage in interpersonal deviance toward envied male team members (i.e., male-male dyads), envied female team members are more likely to ask envious female employees for advice (i.e., female-female dyads). Interpersonal dynamics involving envy have performance implications, such that team performance is worse where envious employees are more likely to engage in interpersonal deviance directed toward envied team members, in comparison to teams where this relationship is weaker. Finally, collective team identification mitigates the negative effect of envious employees' interpersonal deviance on team performance.

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