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Task conflict and team performance: roles of expertise disparity and functional background diversity

Eun Kyung (Elise) Lee (Newcastle Business School, University of Newcastle, Newcastle, Australia)
Wonjoon Chung (Department of Management and Marketing, Faculty of Business, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Hong Kong)
Woonki Hong (School of Business Administration, Konkuk University, Seoul, Republic of Korea)

International Journal of Conflict Management

ISSN: 1044-4068

Article publication date: 21 April 2022

Issue publication date: 24 June 2022

1029

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to test a contingency model in which the relationship between task conflict and team performance depends on the extent to which team members differ in their levels of expertise and functional backgrounds.

Design/methodology/approach

Data were obtained from 71 student teams that completed a semester-long entrepreneurial project.

Findings

The results support the moderating role of expertise disparity in the process through which task conflict contributes to team performance. Task conflict had a curvilinear effect (inverted-U) on team performance in teams with high expertise disparity. In contrast, in teams with low expertise disparity, the relationship between task conflict and team performance was found to be linear and positive. The moderating role of functional background diversity was not supported.

Research limitations/implications

This paper shows that the relationship between task conflict and team performance can exist in both a linear and a curvilinear fashion, and that what determines the form of the relationship has to do with a team’s diversity characteristics. The focus of future conflict research should be whether and how teams can realize the possible beneficial effects of task conflict, not whether task conflict is simply good or bad.

Practical implications

Managers may deliberately consider the differences in expertness among members when creating teams or assigning members to a team. Further, they may want to avoid extensive task conflict when a team’s expertise levels are unevenly distributed to lessen expected performance loss.

Originality/value

This study’s examination of the roles of two moderators in catalyzing the processes through which potential effects of task conflict are realized enhances the understanding of equivocal results in conflict research. The empirical evidence that this study provides informs a long-standing debate in the conflict literature – whether task conflict is functional or dysfunctional for teams – in a new, insightful way.

Keywords

Citation

Lee, E.K.(E)., Chung, W. and Hong, W. (2022), "Task conflict and team performance: roles of expertise disparity and functional background diversity", International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 33 No. 4, pp. 668-683. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCMA-08-2021-0130

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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