被推动发声:亲社会情绪如何影响员工建言过程

Moved to speak up: How prosocial emotions influence the employee voice process

HUMAN RELATIONS · 2021
被引 31
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

研究员工因组织问题导致他人受苦时产生的亲社会情绪(共情关心、共情愤怒、内疚)如何促使他们建言,并分析关系、脚本和情绪文化等情境因素的影响。

Abstract

Employees often notice issues as they go about their work, but they are more likely to remain silent than to voice about those issues. This means that organizations miss out on critical opportunities for improvement. We deepen understanding of why and when employees do speak up by theorizing about voice episodes that arise when organizational issues (e.g. policies, actions) cause others to suffer. We suggest that when employees feel prosocial emotions—empathic concern, empathic anger, and/or guilt—in response to another’s suffering, they are more likely to voice about the issues creating that suffering. Specifically, we propose that these other-oriented emotions make it more likely that employees will see an opportunity for voice, feel sufficiently motivated to voice, and assess the potential benefits of speaking up as greater than the possible costs. We also posit that three contextual factors—relationship to sufferer, relational scripts, and emotional culture—influence whether (and how intensely) employees experience prosocial emotions in response to suffering triggered by an organizational issue, and thus affect the likelihood of voice. By theorizing the mechanisms through which prosocial emotions animate a specific episode of voice, we provide a foundation for understanding how employees can be moved to speak up.

组织行为学员工建言亲社会行为情绪管理