“Want to” Versus “Have to”: Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivators as Predictors of Compliance Behavior Intention |
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Authors: | Marcel Hofeditz Ann‐Marie Nienaber Anders Dysvik Gerhard Schewe |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Organization, Human Resource Management and Innovation, University of Münster, Universit?tsstra?e 14–16, Münster, Germany, 48149;2. Coventry University Centre for Trust and Ethical Behaviour Coventry, United Kingdom;3. Department of Leadershipand Organizational Behavior, BI Norwegian Business School, Oslo Nydalsveien 37 0484 Oslo, Norway;4. University of Münster Centre of Management Münster, Germany |
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Abstract: | “Worthless,” “money burning,” or “black holes” is how media and professionals describe compliance practices today. Practitioners are unenthusiastic about control systems, codes of conducts, and systems for compliance management that are increasing in volume but not in effectiveness. In order to help practitioners clarify what actually makes employees comply with their compliance program, this study examines intrinsic and extrinsic motivators of 119 employees from procurement and sales. We contribute to the existing motivation literature, testing the self‐determination theory in low and high hierarchical levels. Our findings show that intrinsic motivators are more strongly and positively related to compliance intention on higher hierarchical levels than the lower ones. However, employees from higher hierarchies show overall less compliance intention than employees from lower hierarchies. © 2015 The Authors. Human Resource Management published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. |
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Keywords: | corporate governance compliance ethics motivation reward systems |
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