Regulatory focus and work-related outcomes: a review and meta-analysis
Version 2 2024-06-06, 12:38Version 2 2024-06-06, 12:38
Version 1 2017-01-30, 09:44Version 1 2017-01-30, 09:44
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 12:38authored byK Lanaj, C-HD Chang, RE Johnson
Regulatory focus theory (Higgins, 1997) has received growing attention in organizational psychology,
necessitating a quantitative review that synthesizes its effects on important criteria. In addition, there is
need for theoretical integration of regulatory focus theory with personality research. Theoretical integration
is particularly relevant, since personality traits and dispositions are distal factors that are unlikely
to have direct effects on work behaviors, yet they may have indirect effects via regulatory focus. The
current meta-analysis introduces an integrative framework in which the effects of personality on work
behaviors are best understood when considered in conjunction with more proximal motivational processes
such as regulatory focus. Using a distal–proximal approach, we identify personality antecedents
and work-related consequences of regulatory foci in a framework that considers both general and
work-specific regulatory foci as proximal motivational processes. We present meta-analytic results for
relations of regulatory focus with its antecedents (approach and avoid temperaments, conscientiousness,
openness to experience, agreeableness, self-esteem, and self-efficacy) and its consequences (work
behaviors and attitudes). In addition to estimates of bivariate relationships, we support a meta-analytic
path model in which distal personality traits relate to work behaviors via the mediating effects of general
and work-specific regulatory focus. Results from tests of incremental and relative validity indicated that
regulatory foci predict unique variance in work behaviors after controlling for established personality,
motivation, and attitudinal predictors. Consistent with regulatory focus theory and our integrative
theoretical framework, regulatory focus has meaningful relations with work outcomes and is not
redundant with other individual difference variables.
History
Journal
Psychological bulletin
Volume
138
Pagination
998-1034
Location
Washington, D.C.
ISSN
0033-2909
eISSN
1939-1455
Language
eng
Publication classification
C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal