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Thriving at work but insomniac at home: Understanding the relationship between supervisor bottom-line mentality and employee functioning

Version 2 2024-06-12, 12:18
Version 1 2020-11-27, 08:07
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-12, 12:18 authored by MT Babalola, S Ren, C Ogbonnaya, K Riisla, GT Soetan, K Gok
Bottom-line mentality (BLM) describes a one-dimensional frame of mind revolving around bottom-line pursuits, which pervades most organizations today. But how does working with high BLM supervisors affect employees’ functioning both at work and at home? Guided by this question, we draw on social information processing theory and insights from the person–environment fit literature for a nuanced understanding of the effects of supervisor BLM. Using data from two field studies conducted in China (340 employees) and the United States (174 employees), we find that supervisor BLM increases employee perceptions of a competitive climate that ultimately increases employee thriving at work and insomnia outside work. We further find that employee trait competitiveness moderated the indirect relationship (via perceived competitive climate) between supervisor BLM and thriving at work but not for insomnia; employees high (versus low) in trait competitiveness were found to thrive at work under the competitive climate stimulated by high BLM supervisors. Taken together, our findings highlight the need for organizational leaders to be cautious of being too narrowly focused on bottom-line outcomes and aware of the wider implications of BLM on different domains of their employees’ lives.

History

Journal

Human Relations

Volume

75

Article number

ARTN 0018726720978687

Pagination

33-57

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0018-7267

eISSN

1741-282X

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2020, The Authors

Issue

1

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD