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Trust,individualism and job characteristics as predictors of employee preference for teamwork
Authors:Sandra Kiffin-Petersen  John Cordery
Affiliation:1. The Graduate School of Management, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley 6009, Australia (tel: +61 8 9380 3070;2. fax: +61 8 9380 1055;3. e-mail: skiffin@ecel.uwa.edu.au);4. Department of Organisational and Labour Studies, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley 6009, Australia (tel: +61 8 9380 2006;5. e-mail: jcordery@ecel.uwa.edu.au)
Abstract:Employee resistance has long been recognized as a key constraint on the success of organizational change initiatives. However, it is only recently that employee attitudes towards working in teams has been specifically investigated as a factor influencing team effectiveness. Using data from 218 employees in 40 self-managing work teams, we examined the relationship between trust, individualism, job characteristics and team members' attitudes towards teamwork. Providing a partial test of Mayer et al.'s (1995) relational model of trust, the results indicate that the two situational forms of trust (trust in co-workers and trust in management) were stronger predictors of an employee's preference for teamwork than propensity to trust. Trust in co-workers was found to partially mediate the relationship between a person's propensity to trust strangers and their preference for working in a team. The importance of considering the dispositional variables of propensity to trust and individualism as factors that influence an employee's preference for teamwork, as well as their trust in management, trust in co-workers and their opportunity for skill utilization are discussed.
Keywords:Propensity to trust  trust in co-workers  trust in management  individualism  job characteristics  preference for teamwork
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