Effects of socialization mechanisms on managers’ desire to have a significant impact through work: evidence from the banking sector
Journal of Accounting & Organizational Change
ISSN: 1832-5912
Article publication date: 17 April 2024
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to analyze the effects of socialization mechanisms (belief system and peer mentoring) on managers’ job engagement and their desire to have a significant impact through work, that is, the desire to substantially improve or facilitate the lives of others by performing their work. The study also examines the moderating role of organizational identification.
Design/methodology/approach
A survey was conducted with middle and lower-level managers at one of the largest banks in Brazil, the BankCo. The authors obtained a sample of 201 respondents and tested the research hypotheses with structural equation modeling. The authors also performed a complementary data analysis with fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis.
Findings
The results suggest that belief systems and peer mentoring directly promote job engagement and indirectly promote desire to have a significant impact to a better world through work (through full mediation of job engagement). The effects of job engagement on desire to have a significant impact through work are even greater when managers have high organizational identification. Finally, several causal combinations are sufficient for high levels of desire to have a significant impact through work.
Social implications
Beyond studies that examine how organizational mechanisms influence employee outcomes (e.g. performance), this study explores how socialization mechanisms can promote desire to have a significant impact through work. Thus, the authors demonstrate how organizational core values, mission statement and peer mentoring collaborate for managers to develop altruistic behavior, that is, directly related to other human values, such as empathy and ethics, being able to contribute to a world better.
Originality/value
This study developed and empirically tested a model that connects socialization mechanisms, job engagement, organizational identification and managers’ desire to have a significant impact through their work. Therefore, the paper provides insights into the relevance of socialization mechanisms for orchestrating managers’ proactive and altruistic behaviors.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful for the useful comments and suggestions from the editor (Zahirul Hoque), associate editor and two anonymous reviewers. Authors also gratefully acknowledge helpful comments from Cristian R. Foguesatto and Januário J. Monteiro. Authors acknowledge financial contribution from the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel – Brazil (CAP ES) – Finance Code 001.
Citation
Frare, A.B., Horz, V. and Cruz, A.P.C.d. (2024), "Effects of socialization mechanisms on managers’ desire to have a significant impact through work: evidence from the banking sector", Journal of Accounting & Organizational Change, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAOC-06-2023-0109
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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