Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T06:14:41.339Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

How to trigger employee proactive behavior? Introducing the ritual perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2024

Dan Ni
Affiliation:
School of Business, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China
Hailing Lu
Affiliation:
School of Economics and Management, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing, China
Yongli Wang*
Affiliation:
School of Business, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China
*
Corresponding author: Yongli Wang; Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Much research on the antecedents of proactive behavior has appeared in the literature, but this research introduces a new ritual perspective to rethink this question. Drawing on the process model of interaction rituals, we propose that work rituals urge employees to share emotional energy, and then, employees are likely to experience a higher level of work meaningfulness. In turn, employees tend to engage in more proactive behavior. Using data from a random assignment field experiment involving 204 employees from a communication corporation in China, we found support for our hypotheses. The implications of our research for theory and practice are discussed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press in association with Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management.

Proactive behavior, ‘taking initiative in improving current circumstances; it involves challenging the status quo rather than passively adapting present conditions’ (Crant, Reference Crant2000, p. 436), has been shown to benefit individual and organizational outcomes across different fields (Becherer & Maurer, Reference Becherer and Maurer1999; Kickul & Gundry, Reference Kickul and Gundry2002; Seibert, Kraimer, & Crant, Reference Seibert, Kraimer and Crant2001). Proactive behavior not only allows employees to identify challenges and achieve one’s success (Kim, Hon, & Lee, Reference Kim, Hon and Lee2010; Seibert, Kraimer, & Crant, Reference Seibert, Kraimer and Crant2001) but also is a determinant of organizations’ competitive advantage and success (Parker, Reference Parker2000). Due to increasingly uncertain, complex, and interdependent work environments, organizations are calling for employee initiatives to ensure adequate performance (Bindl & Parker, Reference Bindl, Parker, Parker and Bindl2017; Griffin, Neal, & Parker, Reference Griffin, Neal and Parker2007). Thus, much research has examined its antecedents and verified that individual factors (e.g., proactive personality, positive mood, and learning goal orientation) and contextual factors (e.g., leadership, social support, and job characteristics) play a crucial role in one’s proactive behavior (Cai, Parker, Chen, & Lam, Reference Cai, Parker, Chen and Lam2019; Fritz & Sonnentag, Reference Fritz and Sonnentag2009; Kim, Liu, & Diefendorff, Reference Kim, Liu and Diefendorff2015; Parker, Williams, & Turner, Reference Parker, Williams and Turner2006; Shin & Kim, Reference Shin and Kim2015). Despite the importance of those findings, scholars have theorized that proactive behavior is probably more a function of situational cues (Morrison & Phelps, Reference Morrison and Phelps1999) and called for exploring actions initiated by the managerial level intended to elicit employee proactive behavior (Crant, Reference Crant2000).

Among those situational cues in triggering proactive behavior, rituals become our special focus. The key reason is that one major aspect of situational cues involves social interactions. Notably, rituals can be seen as situational cues characterized by a form of social interactions. We cannot possibly avoid rituals (e.g., weddings, inaugurations, funerals, and graduations) in our lives. Rituals not only maintain and reinforce social structures and incorporate people into a larger social entity (Trice, Belasco, & Alutto, Reference Trice, Belasco and Alutto1969) but also form and change people’s beliefs, emotions, and identities (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009). It seems to play a crucial role in employees’ behaviors, but the accumulated knowledge of its influences on proactive behavior is scarce (Brooks et al., Reference Brooks, Schroeder, Risen, Gino, Galinsky, Norton and Schweitzer2016). In particular, little research has investigated whether work rituals – a form of social interactions in which members’ values and identity are demonstrated or enacted in a stylized manner, within the context of an occasion or event (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009) – affect employee proactive behavior, and, if so, through what psychological mechanisms.

This lack is problematic not merely because work rituals have been pervasive in organizations (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022; Smith & Stewart, Reference Smith and Stewart2011). More importantly, there is an essential link between work rituals and proactive behavior, given that work rituals involve the enactment of specified actions that may not exist in the past and may create a unique situational cue for proactive behavior. Prior research has highlighted that work rituals can be efficiently adopted as a tool to facilitate one’s behavior (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022). Although previous research has begun to examine the antecedents of proactive behavior from the perspective of social interactions, most of them focused on either a favorable side, such as trust (Parker et al., Reference Parker, Williams and Turner2006; Williams, Parker, & Turner, Reference Williams, Parker and Turner2010), leader-member exchange (Van Dyne, Kamdar, & Joireman, Reference Van Dyne, Kamdar and Joireman2008), and social support (Brav, Andersson, & Lantz, Reference Brav, Andersson and Lantz2009; Tucker, Chmiel, Turner, Hershcovis, & Stride, Reference Tucker, Chmiel, Turner, Hershcovis and Stride2008) or a negative side, such as interpersonal conflict (Chen, Sharma, Edinger, Shapiro, & Farh, Reference Chen, Sharma, Edinger, Shapiro and Farh2011; Mathieu, Maynard, Rapp, & Gilson, Reference Mathieu, Maynard, Rapp and Gilson2008; Schraub, Michel, Shemla, & Sonntag, Reference Schraub, Michel, Shemla and Sonntag2014) and being envied (Lee, Duffy, Scott, & Schippers, Reference Lee, Duffy, Scott and Schippers2018). Unlike them, work rituals are typically initiated at the managerial level (Powley, Reference Powley, Cooperrider and Avital2004) and are not as explicit as those well-examined constructs (e.g., leader support, organizational structure, and job characteristics). Put differently, instead of playing a role directly and instantly, work rituals imperceptibly affect one’s psychological reactions and then, ultimately, workplace behavior (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009). Additionally, unlike other interpersonal actions that may change each time they are performed, work rituals are repetitive, standardized, and predictable (Nielbo & Sørensen, Reference Nielbo and Sørensen2011, Reference Nielbo and Sørensen2016; Smith & Stewart, Reference Smith and Stewart2011). This allows those ordinary actions to be transformed into symbolic expressions and enables their meaning to be reinforced each time they are performed. Given these rationales, it is necessary to provide more specific guidance for scholars and practitioners on what impacts such rituals may have on employee proactive behavior.

To address these issues, we draw on Lepisto’s (Reference Lepisto2022) process model of interaction rituals and the interaction ritual literature (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004) to explore whether and how work rituals influence employee proactive behavior. The process model of interaction rituals (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022) highlights that interaction rituals as ‘momentary encounters’ (Collins, Reference Collins2004, p. 3) may exist when employees interact in organizational settings to shape a shared focus of attention. Such encounters vary in their symbolic and institutional functions in producing social outcomes, relying on the features of the interaction and the situations in which they may occur (Wollschleger, Reference Wollschleger2012). Guided by the process model of interaction rituals (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022), we consider work rituals, as a kind of interactional ritual in work, to assemble employees and allow for interacting with each other to develop a mutual focus of attention. In this research, the examples of work rituals include putting the roll screen for the activity at the door of the activity room so that employees can notice it, wearing formal suits to represent uniformity, bringing pens and notebooks for recording and sharing, and reading aloud about what they learned in the activity and discussing it in the group.

According to the theory (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022), interactions embedded in work rituals form daily social encounters. Such work rituals would evoke the emotional energy of individuals. After experiencing emotional energy, individuals do not stay internalized and private. Instead, they engage in the practice of sharing emotional energy with others, encompassing the sharing of feelings of elation, enthusiasm, strength, or initiative (Collins, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022). This process enables them to cultivate a sense of meaningfulness toward their work, which reflects the extent to which individuals perceive their job as meaningful, valuable, and worthwhile (Hackman & Oldham, Reference Hackman and Oldham1976; Kim et al., Reference Kim, Sezer, Schroeder, Risen, Gino and Norton2021). In turn, this perception affects employees’ behavioral reactions. In this study, we propose that work rituals are positively related to employee proactive behavior via sharing emotional energy and work meaningfulness (Fig. 1).

Figure 1. The theoretical model.

This research contributes to proactive behavior research and the organizational ritual literature. First, we apply a new theoretical lens of rituals to study the antecedents of employee proactive behavior. Researchers have focused on social interaction factors to explicate the reasons why employees engage in proactive behaviors. Our research departs from these existing perspectives of situational cues by emphasizing and testing the roles of work rituals characterized by social interactions. By doing so, our research not only adds a new antecedent to extend the nomological networks of proactive behavior but also provides valuable knowledge of how to induce more proactive behavior in employees.

Second, we add to the research on organizational rituals by linking work rituals to employee work-related behavior and examining its influential mechanisms. Recent research has begun to acknowledge the importance of rituals (Ozenc & Hagan, Reference Ozenc and Hagan2019), but the essential functions of work rituals in the workplace still need to be discovered. Our investigation helps us improve the understanding of the distal outcomes of work rituals and helps unpack the potential mechanism underlying the above relationship. Given the roots of rituals in anthropology, it is unsurprising that ritual research relies heavily on qualitative research (Ashforth, Kulik, & Tomiuk, Reference Ashforth, Kulik and Tomiuk2008; Gephart, Reference Gephart1978; Vaught & Smith, Reference Vaught and Smith1980). These attempts are valuable to the literature, but our research uses a field experiment to offer a more robust examination of the functions of work rituals, adding additional value to the current ritual literature.

Third, our research advances the process model of interaction rituals and the interaction ritual literature (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022) by arguing and testing that a serial mechanism resulting from work rituals – sharing emotional energy and work meaningfulness – is critical to employee proactive behavior. The current investigation is beneficial for obtaining more knowledge of the mechanisms embedded in the influences of work rituals and providing empirical evidence for the process model of interaction rituals.

Theory and hypotheses

The process model of interaction rituals and the interaction ritual literature

Based on interaction ritual chain theory (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004), Lepisto (Reference Lepisto2022) developed the process model of interaction rituals. This theoretical model not only highlights that successful interaction rituals urge employees to share emotional energy but also underlines the construct of meaningfulness embedded in interaction rituals and emotions. Although those focal elements can be mutually associated with each other, a basic process model is highlighted (Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022).

Specifically, interaction rituals are typically considered as momentary encounters (Collins, Reference Collins2004) when employees interact with each other to develop a mutual focus of attention. These encounters vary in their effectiveness in inducing social outcomes, relying on the characteristics of interactions and the situations in which they occur (Summers-Effler, Reference Summers-Effler2010; Wollschleger, Reference Wollschleger2012). According to the process model of interaction rituals (Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022) and the interaction ritual literature, interaction rituals are closely and directly related to emotional experiences and expression (Collins, Reference Collins1975, Reference Collins1981, Reference Collins and Kemper1990, Reference Collins2004). For example, previous studies have verified that rituals can reduce individuals’ anxiety and sadness (Anastasi & Newberg, Reference Anastasi and Newberg2008; Brooks et al., Reference Brooks, Schroeder, Risen, Gino, Galinsky, Norton and Schweitzer2016; Norton & Gino, Reference Norton and Gino2014). More importantly, work rituals can proliferate one’s emotional energy, encouraging one to share emotional energy, including displaying and talking about emotional energy (Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022). Indeed, Collins (Reference Collins1993) highlighted the influence of rituals on emotional energy and indicated that interaction rituals generate a variable level of emotional energy in each individual over time.

In turn, emotional energy can trigger a feeling of meaningfulness. The literature on interaction rituals suggests that ‘individual thinking is determined by the emotional energy’ (Collins, Reference Collins1993, p. 205). High levels of emotional energy in individuals consist of enthusiasm and confidence (Collins, Reference Collins1993), which can influence individuals’ cognitive processing of the value of something. This is because emotional energy is one of the key resources and can create a focus of attention around themselves. Sharing emotional energy helps employees feel closer to others at work. This feeling increases the possibility that employees consider their current activities and work meaningful and valuable. Ultimately, a sense of meaningfulness resulting from sharing emotional energy affects one’s distal outcomes. Based on the above rationale, we focus on one’s psychological (i.e., sharing emotional energy and work meaningfulness) and behavioral reactions to work rituals at the individual level. In the following section, we develop each hypothesis.

Work rituals and sharing emotional energy

Work rituals are a distinctive form of social interaction in which members express and embody their values and identity in a highly stylized manner, typically within the framework of a specific occasion or event (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009). According to this definition, work ritual components of an interaction are structured, patterned, and observable. The process model of interaction rituals suggests that work rituals will work to make employees feel good and share emotional energy. Sharing emotion energy is defined as sharing a feeling of elation, enthusiasm, strength, or initiative (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022). We propose that work rituals are valuable to help employees share the feeling of emotional energy.

Specifically, work rituals can be seen as a situational cue to evoke substantive emotional responses, and one proximal outcome of rituals includes sharing emotional energy (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Hill, Canniford, & Eckhardt, Reference Hill, Canniford and Eckhardt2022; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022; Smith & Stewart, Reference Smith and Stewart2011). Daily work tasks may be tedious, but the organization can mark those objects or activities embedded in work rituals. For example, organizations place the roll screen for the work activity to attract employees’ attention. Employees are asked to wear formal suits, take pens and notebooks for making notes and sharing, and read and discuss the given contents. Those work rituals are out of the ordinary and can draw employees’ attention away from mundane uses of behaviors. In essence, work rituals convey symbolism that distinguishes them from other organizational routines (Sosis & Ruffle, Reference Sosis, Ruffle and Alvard2004), and they help connect employees with each other (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022; Stein, Hobson, & Schroeder, Reference Stein, Hobson and Schroeder2021). The repetition of rituals strengthens associated emotions or feelings and thus encourages employees to share their emotional energy (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022; Smith & Stewart, Reference Smith and Stewart2011). Prior research has verified that individuals who participate in rituals tend to feel connection and energy (Csikszentmihalyi & Csikzentmihaly, Reference Csikszentmihalyi and Csikzentmihaly1990; Joo, Cho, Woosnam, & Suess, Reference Joo, Cho, Woosnam and Suess2023). This sense of energy is the product of distinct types of social interactions (Boyns & Luery, Reference Boyns and Luery2015; Methot, Rosado-Solomon, Downes, & Gabriel, Reference Methot, Rosado-Solomon, Downes and Gabriel2021), which typically happen in rituals.

Additionally, work rituals emphasize objects or actions authorized by the organization, which underlies that people may pay attention to and highly value it. Thus, employees need to act in accordance with the expectations of the organization (Rappaport, Reference Rappaport1999). Because work rituals can formalize and normalize some ingredients (Moore & Myerhoff, Reference Moore, Myerhoff, Moore and Myerhoff1977), employees should follow the established rules of the organization to perform accordingly (Smith & Stewart, Reference Smith and Stewart2011). For example, employees physically assembled in the same place to wear formal suits and discussed some topics with each other. By participating in work rituals, as a result, employees focus their shared attention on a work object or activity and can have more opportunities to interact with coworkers, develop a relationship with others, and share information with them in the context (Kim et al., Reference Kim, Sezer, Schroeder, Risen, Gino and Norton2021), which probably induces their emotional energy sharing.

Empirically, research indicated that rituals improve one’s feelings of belonging (Smith & Stewart, Reference Smith and Stewart2011) and connectivity (Newberg & d’Aquili, Reference Newberg and d’Aquili2000). Via interacting with others in work rituals, employees are likely to develop positive feelings, which brings more emotional energy (Celestine & Yeo, Reference Celestine and Yeo2021; Collins, Reference Collins2009). Boyns and Luery (Reference Boyns and Luery2015) also suggested that encounters between individuals in rituals can induce emotional energy. As a result, work rituals can make employees more likely to display and talk about positive feelings and experiences, inducing more emotional energy sharing (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022). Therefore, we propose the following hypothesis:

Hypothesis 1: Work rituals are positively related to employee sharing emotional energy.

Sharing emotional energy and work meaningfulness

We propose that sharing emotional energy is positively associated with work meaningfulness, defined as the extent to which individuals perceive a job to be meaningful, valuable, and worthwhile (Hackman & Oldham, Reference Hackman and Oldham1976). Specifically, sharing emotional energy activates employees’ cognitive systems associated with information processing (Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022). For example, employees who share emotional energy highlight the benefits they gain from the work rituals. Given that rituals are embedded in employees’ daily work, positive emotional states expressed by employees help enhance their recognition of the work. Relatedly, one of the core categories of positive emotional resources is energy (Gilbert, Foulk, & Bono, Reference Gilbert, Foulk, Bono, Cooper and Quick2017). Employees who share emotional energy can bring vitality and vigor in daily working (Baker, Reference Baker2019; Owens, Baker, Sumpter, & Cameron, Reference Owens, Baker, Sumpter and Cameron2016), which stimulates them to value and enjoy their work. In other words, sharing emotional energy encourages employees to evaluate the level of meaningfulness of work in a more positive manner (Collins, Reference Collins1993). As such, they are more likely to consider their work meaningful.

In addition, the precondition in sharing emotional energy is to give emphasis on employees’ own emotional self-awareness, namely, recognizing and understanding one’s emotional states, which was found to be closely related to promoted meaningfulness (Bar-On, Reference Bar-On and Geher2004; Boyatzis & Sala, Reference Boyatzis, Sala and Geher2004). Because emotional energy is evoked in the working context, it may enable employees to recognize a meaningful aspect of work (Grewal & Salovey, Reference Grewal, Salovey, Csikszentmihalyi and Selega2006). Based on the above arguments and evidence, we propose that:

Hypothesis 2: Employee sharing emotional energy is positively related to employee work meaningfulness.

Work meaningfulness and proactive behavior

We propose that work meaningfulness is positively related to proactive behavior. Work meaningfulness allows employees to find purpose, significance, and importance in their jobs (Seligman, Reference Seligman2002). Given that meaningfulness itself is a fundamental human need for employees (Britt, Adler, & Bartone, Reference Britt, Adler and Bartone2001), it is expected to make employees feel better and then be motivated to take the initiative in their job, such as proposing suggestions to improve the current circumstances (Hasan & Kashif, Reference Hasan and Kashif2021). A high level of work meaningfulness also permits employees to take ownership and obtain a sense of responsibility (Lee, Idris, & Delfabbro, Reference Lee, Idris and Delfabbro2017), making them more empowered in doing their tasks. Employees who feel that their job is meaningful, therefore, feel that they can achieve better work outcomes and invest their adequate efforts to fulfill more tasks that are not compulsory but benefit the organizations (Bunderson & Thompson, Reference Bunderson and Thompson2009; Lee et al., Reference Lee, Idris and Delfabbro2017). As such, those employees who experience a high level of work meaningfulness are more likely to engage in proactive behavior.

In particular, work meaningfulness infuses employees with a personal purpose that directs their motivation, energy, and efforts toward those valued goals (Colbert, Bono, & Purvanova, Reference Colbert, Bono and Purvanova2016; Spreitzer, Reference Spreitzer1995; Wu, Zhang, Wang, Zhou, & Hang, Reference Wu, Zhang, Wang, Zhou and Hang2024). Given the beneficial feature of proactivity, employees probably spend extra effort on proactive behavior in the workplace. Empirically, previous research has provided evidence in this regard such that work meaningfulness generates the perceptions of challenge, interest, significance (Tims, Derks, & Bakker, Reference Tims, Derks and Bakker2016), and person-job fit (Spreitzer, Reference Spreitzer1995), which leads to more proactive behavior. For these reasons, we anticipate finding a positive link between work meaningfulness and proactive behavior. As a result, we propose this hypothesis:

Hypothesis 3: Employee work meaningfulness is positively related to employee proactive behavior.

A serial mediation effect

Based on the process model of interaction rituals (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022), we expect that work rituals as interactional rituals in the working context can induce employees to share emotional energy. In turn, emotional reactions will stimulate cognitive systems (Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022) such that those employees who share emotional energy are likely to experience a high level of work meaningfulness. As such, they tend to actively engage in proactive behaviors in the workplace. Overall, we propose an integrative effect as follows:

Hypothesis 4: The indirect effect of work rituals on employee proactive behavior is mediated by employee sharing emotional energy and employee work meaningfulness.

Method

Participants and procedures

Participants were a total of 243 frontline employees in a large public communication corporation located in South China, which is one of the leading brands in the Chinese communication industry. The main business involves mobile communication services, fixed telephone services, broadband services, and data communication services. Those employees worked in the marketing planning department, human resources department, operation department, customer service department, sales department, etc. Participants were randomly assigned to one of two conditions: the intervention group (N = 121) or the control group (N = 122). We ensured that the data was confidential and that participation was voluntarily. Participants were allowed to quit this study at any time. They were not aware of the content of the research and were only informed of the basic topic (i.e., members’ interactions and workplace behavior). Finally, we obtained 204 valid questionnaires (N = 103 in the control condition; N = 101 in the intervention condition; 83.95% response rate). We conducted the online data collection with the help of the HR manager, who sent the survey links to participants. Among the 204 final samples, 53.90% were male, and the mean age was 25.57 (SD = 2.42). About 78.50% of them achieved a bachelor’s degree or above. Their average organizational tenure was 3.14 (SD = 1.66).

Research design

Both the intervention and control groups were subjected to topic-based work activities – namely, learning the Chinese spirit lasting 4 weeks. The company was aiming to integrate and emphasize the Chinese spirit. The following four classical topics involve actual and classic stories in history. Specifically, the Chinese spirit in this study includes four topics: (1) the dedication spirit characterized by serving, helping coworkers or others in need, and considering the interests of others; (2) the spirit of the role worker characterized by being passionate in one’s job and working hard; (3) the craftsmanship spirit characterized by persistence, meticulousness, and pursuit of excellence at work; (4) the spirit of reform characterized by taking risks, being innovative, and cooperating with each other.

Each week for 4 weeks, participants from the intervention group were asked to conduct the following work rituals: (1) put the roll screen for the activity made by the researcher team at the door of the activity room to attract attention; (2) wear formal suits to represent uniformity; (3) bring pens and notebooks for recording and sharing; (4) read aloud about what they learned in the activity and discuss in the group. The above intervention materials were developed based on the existing research on organizational rituals (e.g., Samier, Reference Samier1997; Vaughn, Reference Vaughn1995) and fully represent a stylized and symbolic manner (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009; Vaughn, Reference Vaughn1995). For example, artifacts (e.g., dress, logos, pens, and notebooks, Ozenc & Hagan, Reference Ozenc and Hagan2018; Pratt & Rafaeli, Reference Pratt and Rafaeli1997) as work rituals have been researched intensively in the literature (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009). Interactive activities among employees are typically distinguished by a set of physical characteristics pertaining to the meaning of individuals’ actions (Foster, Weigand, & Baines, Reference Foster, Weigand and Baines2006; Rossano, Reference Rossano2012), which become symbolic expressions in activities. Research assistants checked each participant to ensure the manipulation of work rituals. To avoid unexpected factors affecting our results, we asked participants from the control group to learn the same contents of the Chinese spirit as participants from the intervention group did in a designated activity room. However, they were learning by reading materials independently and then discussing them without any ritual requirements.

It is noted that those work rituals are embedded in working contexts in the following ways. The content of the intervention has physical relevance to the work and workplace because all of those rituals occurred in the workplace. It also has the communal feature embedded in the workplace because employees did not independently engage in those rituals. Instead, interpersonal interactions are necessary to finish work rituals. Moreover, the topics of the Chinese spirit that we selected are closely related to working or finishing a work task.

We ensured that those work rituals specifically reflect the working context by interviewing some employees in this company before conducting the experiment. We were informed that those rituals are not general for everyone in their daily lives. For example, when they had a meeting, they were not required to, such as, wear formal suits because there was no clear dress code in this company before. When they engaged in an activity, there were no roll screens for it. Thus, we consider the work rituals developed in our study are not necessarily general for every employee in their daily lives.

In the post-test survey, participants rated sharing emotional energy, work meaningfulness, and proactive behavior. After rating the above variables, they rated work rituals as the manipulation check. After the whole experiment, the research team debriefed that this study aimed to understand the influences of work rituals on employee working behavior.

Measures

We followed Brislin’s (Reference Brislin1970) back-translation procedure to translate the items into Chinese. All measures were assessed using a 5-point Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree; 5 = strongly agree). Cronbach’s αs for all scales in our study were equal or greater than .98.

Sharing emotional energy

We adapted the five-item emotional energy scale from Owens et al. (Reference Owens, Baker, Sumpter and Cameron2016). Examples of the items are ‘I share with others how I feel invigorated in work rituals when I interact with others’ and ‘I share with others how I feel increased vitality in work rituals when I interact with others.’

Work meaningfulness

We measured work meaningfulness with five items from Bunderson and Thompson’s (Reference Bunderson and Thompson2009) work meaningfulness scale. One example is ‘The work that I do is meaningful.’

Proactive behavior

We measured proactive behavior with the three-item scale of proactive behavior developed by Griffin, Neal, & Parker (Reference Griffin, Neal and Parker2007). An example of the items is ‘I initiate better ways of doing my core tasks.’

Control variables

As demographics have been found in previous research to be related to employee proactive behavior (e.g., Bohlmann, Rudolph, & Zacher, Reference Bohlmann, Rudolph and Zacher2021; Strauss, Parker, & O’Shea, Reference Strauss, Parker and O’Shea2017; Wu, Deng, & Li, Reference Wu, Deng and Li2018), we included employee gender, age, education, and organizational tenure as control variables to rule out alternative explanations. With and without those control variables, we still reach a consistent conclusion.

Results

Manipulation check

Given that little research has developed the scale of work rituals of interest, we developed the items based on previous research on organizational rituals (e.g., Samier, Reference Samier1997; Vaughn, Reference Vaughn1995). The items are ‘the work activity is of high rituality,’ ‘I’m impressed by the ritual of the work activity,’ and ‘I notice the work activity is full of ritual.’ We also gave participants the definition of work rituals. We checked the effectiveness of manipulation using the ANOVA test in SPSS software. The results showed a significant difference in work rituals (F (1, 202) = 12.56, p < .001, Cohen’s d = .50) for the intervention condition (M = 4.39, SD = 0.83) compared with the control condition (M = 3.95, SD = 0.94). The above results confirmed our manipulation of work rituals successfully.

Preliminary analysis

Table 1 contains means, SDs, and correlations for the research variables. Table 2 shows the means and SDs among two conditions.

Table 1. Descriptive statistics and correlations among study variables

Note. Condition: 0 = control condition (N = 103); 1 = intervention condition (N = 101). Gender: 0 = male, 1 = female. Education: 1 = technical secondary school, 2 = college, 3 = a bachelor’s degree, 4 = a master’s degree. Organizational tenure was measured by years.

* p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001.

Table 2. Descriptive statistics among two conditions

To test for construct distinctiveness, we conducted confirmatory factor analyses on the study constructs by examining the four-factor model as well as other alternative models. Since the small sample size-to-item ratio could impair overall model fit (Little, Rhemtulla, Gibson, & Schoemann, Reference Little, Rhemtulla, Gibson and Schoemann2013; Williams, Vandenberg, & Edwards, Reference Williams, Vandenberg and Edwards2009), we parceled the items of the constructs involving many items (i.e., sharing emotional energy and work meaningfulness). Specifically, the two constructs were parceled into two items respectively using the random algorithm recommended by Little, Cunningham, Shahar, and Widaman (Reference Little, Cunningham, Shahar and Widaman2002). As shown in Table 3, the four-factor model demonstrates good fit (χ2 = 64.06, df = 29, RMSEA = .08, CFI = .99, TLI = .99, SRMR = .02), and displays superior fit to any other alternative models. Hence, the constructs in the study are statistically distinct from one another.

Table 3. Comparison of measurement models

Note. N = 204. All models are compared with the four-factor model.

*** p < .001.

Hypothesis testing

Consistent with Hypothesis 1, the ANOVA results revealed that employees in the intervention condition (M = 4.39, SD = .80) reported higher levels of sharing emotional energy than those in the control condition (M = 3.92, SD = .94), F (1, 202) = 14.67, p < .001. The regression results (Table 4) also showed that work rituals were positively related to sharing emotional energy (B = .65, SE = .05, p < .001). Thus, Hypothesis 1 was supported.

Table 4. Regression results

Note. N = 204. Standard errors (SEs) of the coefficients are shown in the parentheses. Unstandardized coefficients are reported.

a Each model was compared with the basic model that had the same dependent variable and the control variables.

* p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001.

The ANOVA results revealed that employees in the intervention condition (M = 4.40, SD = .71) reported higher levels of work meaningfulness than those in the control condition (M = 3.99, SD = .87), F (1, 202) = 13.64, p < .001. Further, the results indicated there was a significant positive relationship between employee sharing emotional energy and work meaningfulness (B = .58, SE = .06, p < .001), supporting Hypothesis 2. Further, the ANOVA results revealed that employees in the intervention condition (M = 4.29, SD = .81) reported higher levels of proactive behavior than those in the control condition (M = 3.83, SD = .87), F (1, 202) = 14.98, p < .001. The results showed there was a significant positive relationship between employee work meaningfulness and proactive behavior (B = .47, SE = .07, p < .001), supporting Hypothesis 3.

We used PROCESS macro (Model = 6) with 20,000 resamples (Hayes, Reference Hayes2013) in SPSS to test this hypothesis. The results showed that this serial indirect effect was significant (indirect effect = .18, CI = [.112, .257]). Thus, Hypothesis 4 was supported.

Discussion

This study adopted the process model of interaction rituals (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022) to examine the influences of work rituals on employee proactive behavior in the workplace. Our field experiment with randomization using the sample from a communication corporation showed that work rituals urge employees to share their emotional energy; in turn, employees were more likely to experience a high level of work meaningfulness, which ultimately increased their proactive behavior.

Theoretical contributions

The present study adds to the body of the proactive behavior literature and research on organizational rituals. First, our research contributes to the proactive behavior literature. Regarding the proactive behavior literature, prior research has generally emphasized the role of contextual factors in influencing employee proactive behavior (e.g., leadership and job characteristics; Grant & Ashford, Reference Grant and Ashford2008; Grant, Gino, & Hofmann, Reference Grant, Gino and Hofmann2011; Parker et al., Reference Parker, Williams and Turner2006) while not fully examined relational or interpersonal predictors of proactive behavior. However, it is still little known about the consequences of work rituals, as a situational cue characterized by a form of social interactions, on proactive behavior. This is unfortunate because work rituals are widespread in the workplace, and it has been theoretically considered a crucial kind of situational cues that affect employee behavior (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009; Trice, Belasco, & Alutto, Reference Trice, Belasco and Alutto1969). In comparison, our research explores a new antecedent of employee proactive behavior by introducing the construct of work rituals and linking it with proactive behavior. Different from those well-examined factors, work rituals are a special form of social interaction actions and emphasize that employees’ values and identity are demonstrated or enacted within work rituals (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009). We believe that bringing the concept of work rituals to the proactive behavior literature advances the nomological networks of proactive behavior, thereby shedding new light on proactive behavior research.

Given that we found that work rituals can exert an effect on employee proactive behavior, our investigation also confirmed the arguments of previous research that proactive behavior can be particularly a function of situational cues (Morrison & Phelps, Reference Morrison and Phelps1999). The current research also further responds to the call for examining social actions initiated by the managerial level intended to enhance employee proactive behavior (Crant, Reference Crant2000) because work rituals, different from most workplace actions, are typically conducted at the managerial level.

Moreover, our study advances the proactive behavior literature by proposing and testing a new mechanism. Specifically, according to the recent review of Cai et al. (Reference Cai, Parker, Chen and Lam2019), prior research primarily focused on the three mechanisms of proactive motivation, namely, ‘can do’ (e.g., self-efficacy, control, and perceived costs), ‘reason to’ (e.g., goal selection and persistence), and ‘energized to’ (e.g., ‘hot’ affect-related motivational states). Our findings help further confirm the important roles of ‘reason to’ and ‘energized to’ in influencing proactivity, which enriches our understanding of the influencing mechanisms embedded in proactive behavior.

Second, we advance the knowledge of the construct of work rituals and their role in the workplace. Organizational rituals in different forms have long been shown to play an irreplaceable role in a working setting at different levels, and rituals profoundly affect employees’ psychological and behavioral outcomes (Islam, Reference Islam, Wilmott, Mir and Greenwood2015; Samier, Reference Samier1997; Smith & Stewart, Reference Smith and Stewart2011). To date, however, the knowledge of whether and how work-related interaction rituals influence employee outcomes is limited. This ignorance is problematic since employees are constantly affected by rituals at work; without this knowledge, we cannot have a full picture of how employees experience and behave in work-related interaction rituals, impeding our understanding of its essential functions. Fortunately, our research takes a step further in this regard by linking work rituals to employee proactive behavior. We indicated that work rituals, characterized by social interactions conferring symbolic meaning in an organizational context (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009), did have social influences on employees’ outcomes.

More importantly, most scholars merely theorized (e.g., Brown, Reference Brown2011; Matheson, Reference Matheson2019) or adopted a qualitative approach (Erhardt, Martin-Rios, & Heckscher, Reference Erhardt, Martin-Rios and Heckscher2016) to examine the functions of interaction rituals in the workplace. Although a few scholars have begun to provide empirical evidence in this aspect using a quantitative approach, it explains comparatively less about the consequence of work-related interaction rituals on focal employees’ outcomes (Brooks et al., Reference Brooks, Schroeder, Risen, Gino, Galinsky, Norton and Schweitzer2016; Krishnan, Cook, Kozhikode, & Schilke, Reference Krishnan, Cook, Kozhikode and Schilke2021). In the current research, we contribute to the research on organizational rituals by testing the process model of interaction rituals (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022) using an experimental method in a working setting rather than using qualitative methods (e.g., case studies or interviews) as most previous research did. Our findings showed that work rituals intervention is a promising way to influence employee proactive behavior. Indeed, to our best knowledge, studies on ritual interventions are relatively scarce yet. Thereby, our experimental research provides a more robust test on the effects of work rituals in the workplace.

Last, our research verified the core arguments of the process model of interaction rituals and the interaction ritual literature (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022) by testing the mechanisms underlying the relationship between work rituals and employee behavioral outcomes. The study results indicated that work rituals play a crucial role in one’s proactive behavior via sharing emotional energy and work meaningfulness. Consistent with the argument of the literature (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022), the findings highlighted that both affective and cognitive mechanism in order explains the impact of work rituals on subsequent behavioral reactions. In particular, our research is in line with the previous research such that rituals are considered to be effective interventions to facilitate employee’s work outcomes by stimulating employees to build positive psychological status first and then their behaviors (Smith & Stewart, Reference Smith and Stewart2011).

Practical implications

Our findings highlight that engaging in work rituals may ultimately benefit employees’ proactive behavior. As a result, important approaches for organizations to improve proactive behavior focus on introducing and encouraging ritual activities in daily work. For instance, organizations can put the roll screen for the activity to attract employees’ attention and request employees to wear formal suits, bring pens and notebooks to record and share, read aloud about what they learned in the activity, and discuss in the group. Meanwhile, employees themselves should not only enhance their awareness of the benefits of work rituals but also be encouraged to actively participate in such work rituals. By doing so, we can expect that employees can benefit from work rituals and are more likely to engage in proactive behavior as a result.

Additionally, the current findings underscore the need for more attention to the crucial role of sharing emotional energy. For example, organizations can encourage employees to conduct interpersonal interactions in an effective way so as to stimulate their emotional energy and, more importantly, to share rather than suppress them. As for the employees themselves, we suggest that employees should actively share their positive emotional experiences in the workplace. For instance, employees can actively share their desirable emotions in work rituals when interacting with other colleagues.

Given that our findings highlight the direct influence of work meaningfulness on promoting employee proactive behavior, organizations should try to make efforts to increase work meaningfulness for employees by broadening or redesigning the job, rotating employees to enrich the job content, and clearly communicating the meaningful features of work to them. From an employee’s perspective, they should make efforts to be self-motivating by considering the broader purpose of their work. As such, we can expect that employees could be more proactively engaged in their routine work.

Limitations and future directions

Despite the above theoretical and practical implications, we acknowledge that our research has some limitations. First, the randomized field experiment helps us reach a causal conclusion to a large extent, but all variables were self-reported by employees, which may be subject to common method bias (Podsakoff, MacKenzie, Lee, & Podsakoff, Reference Podsakoff, MacKenzie, Lee and Podsakoff2003). Although it is reasonable to ask employees to rate their psychological reactions, future studies could build upon our work by using objective data and other-reports to measure proactive behavior.

Second, the generalizability of our findings may be limited by the Chinese sample. Although operations and managerial practices in the Chinese communication corporation are similar to those in other countries, the collectivistic culture highlighted in China (Hofstede, Reference Hofstede1980), which emphasizes the importance of societal norms embedded in rituals, may potentially influence our interventions’ effects. We encourage future research to collect more data from different countries and regions to replicate our findings. Additionally, although our sample may consider work rituals not quite general in their daily lives, we cannot ensure whether other samples may consider them to be general in the working context. Thus, we encourage future research to collect additional samples to further test the model and refine the contents of work rituals if necessary.

Third, a remaining question is whether or not the effects of our interventions on employee reactions depend on some unexamined factors. Based on the process model of interaction rituals (Collins, Reference Collins1993, Reference Collins2004; Lepisto, Reference Lepisto2022), work rituals play a role in employees’ psychological and behavioral reactions without boundary conditions. However, in essence, employees not only have visible differences in attitudes toward rituals but also work in social interactions that may affect their attention to and recognition of rituals. Therefore, during the process of implementing our interventions, a variety of individual and situational factors may influence its effects, such as employees’ personalities, attitudes toward work rituals, leadership, and team climates. For example, it is possible that employees feel burdened by work rituals and share negative emotions, depending on their attitudes toward and the amount of work rituals. It is promising for scholars to examine the boundary conditions of our model.

Moreover, it is noted that Chinese cultures may be a key confounding factor in our model, given that we focused on the Chinese spirit. However, we consider it not a huge issue because each condition experienced the Chinese spirit. The Chinese spirit is just one of the vehicles of work rituals. Although we included the Chinese spirit, those specific contents do not necessarily involve the Chinese culture, such as the collective culture. This is because the contents of the Chinese spirit, such as dedication to work, hard-working and contribution, being equipped with skills, and daring to reform and innovate, probably exist in many countries. Thus, we believe that our manipulation materials have some generalizability.

Last, our study focused on the serial process model where work rituals influence proactive behavior via sharing emotional energy and then work meaningfulness. However, it is noted that prior research has verified the three mechanisms of proactive motivation, namely, ‘can do’, ‘reason to’, and ‘energized to’ (Cai et al., Reference Cai, Parker, Chen and Lam2019). Thus, it is possible that the effect of work rituals on proactive behavior is mediated by sharing emotional energy and work meaningfulness, respectively. Yet, we acknowledge that our findings did not fully support this possibility of multiple mediators in this model. One possible reason is that work rituals essentially capture a form of social interactions (Islam & Zyphur, Reference Islam and Zyphur2009) and thus may first influence members’ social reactions (i.e., sharing their emotional energy with others) and then their cold reactions – the cognition of their work (i.e., work meaningfulness). Overall, we encourage future research to further examine theoretically and empirically the alternative model.

Data availability statement

There are no prior use or publication of any part of this article. We guarantee that all authors would follow data sharing and data accessibility policy.

Acknowledgements

This research is supported by a grant awarded to Dr. Dan Ni from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 72202248).

Ethical standards

There are no potential conflicts of interest. Research involving human participants. As to ethical approval, we complied with the American Psychological Association’s ethical guidelines regarding data collection procedures.

Dan Ni is an assistant professor in the School of Business, Sun Yat-sen University. She received her PhD from School of Economics and Management at Tsinghua University. Her research interests include organizational behavior, leadership, and mindfulness. Her work has appeared in Journal of Applied Psychology, Journal of Management, Human Resource Management, Human Relations, among others.

Hailing Lu is an assistant professor in the School of Economics and Management, Nanjing University of Science and Technology. He received his PhD from School of Business, Sun Yat-sen University. His research interests include organizational behavior. His work has appeared in Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies, among others.

Yongli Wang is a professor in the School of Business, Sun Yat-sen University. She received her PhD from the Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Her research interests include management psychology. Her work has appeared in Journal of Organizational Behavior, International Journal of Hospitality Management, among others.

References

Anastasi, M. W., & Newberg, A. B. (2008). A preliminary study of the acute effects of religious ritual on anxiety. The Journal of Alternative & Complementary Medicine, 14(2), 163165.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ashforth, B. E., Kulik, C. T., & Tomiuk, M. A. (2008). How service agents manage the person—Role interface. Group & Organization Management, 33(1), 545.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, W. E. (2019). Emotional energy, relational energy, and organizational energy: Toward a multilevel model. Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior, 6(1), 373395.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-On, R. (2004). The Bar-On emotional quotient inventory (EQ-i): Rationale, description and summary of psychometric properties. In Geher, G. (Ed.), Measuring emotional intelligence: Common ground and controversy (pp. 111142). Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishing.Google Scholar
Becherer, R. C., & Maurer, J. G. (1999). The proactive personality disposition and entrepreneurial behavior among small company presidents. Journal of Small Business Management, 37(1), 2836.Google Scholar
Bindl, U. K., & Parker, S. K. (2017). New perspectives and directions for understanding proactivity in organizations. In Parker, S. K. & Bindl, U. K. (Eds.), Proactivity in organizations (pp. 559584). New York, NY: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bohlmann, C., Rudolph, C. W., & Zacher, H. (2021). Effects of proactive behavior on within-day changes in occupational well-being: The role of organizational tenure and emotion regulation skills. Occupational Health Science, 5(3), 277306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boyatzis, R. E., & Sala, F. (2004). Assessing emotional intelligence competencies. In Geher, G. (Ed.), The measurement of emotional intelligence (pp. 147180). Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science.Google Scholar
Boyns, D., & Luery, S. (2015). Negative emotional energy: A theory of the “dark-side” of interaction ritual chains. Social Sciences, 4(1), 148170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brav, A., Andersson, K., & Lantz, A. (2009). Group initiative and self‐organizational activities in industrial work groups. European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology, 18(3), 347377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brislin, R. W. (1970). Back-translation for cross-cultural research. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1(3), 185216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Britt, T. W., Adler, A. B., & Bartone, P. T. (2001). Deriving benefits from stressful events: The role of engagement in meaningful work and hardiness. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 6(1), 5363.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brooks, A. W., Schroeder, J., Risen, J. L., Gino, F., Galinsky, A. D., Norton, M. I., & Schweitzer, M. E. (2016). Don’t stop believing: Rituals improve performance by decreasing anxiety. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 137, 7185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, K. R. (2011). Interaction ritual chains and the mobilization of conscientious consumers. Qualitative Sociology, 34(1), 121141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bunderson, J. S., & Thompson, J. A. (2009). The call of the wild: Zookeepers, callings, and the double-edged sword of deeply meaningful work. Administrative Science Quarterly, 54(1), 3257.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cai, Z., Parker, S. K., Chen, Z., & Lam, W. (2019). How does the social context fuel the proactive fire? A multilevel review and theoretical synthesis. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 40(2), 209230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Celestine, N. A., & Yeo, G. (2021). Having some fun with it: A theoretical review and typology of activity‐based play‐at‐work. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 42(2), 252268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, G., Sharma, P. N., Edinger, S. K., Shapiro, D. L., & Farh, J. L. (2011). Motivating and demotivating forces in teams: Cross‐level influences of empowering leadership and relationship conflict. Journal of Applied Psychology, 96(3), 541557.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Colbert, A. E., Bono, J. E., & Purvanova, R. K. (2016). Flourishing via workplace relationships: Moving beyond instrumental support. Academy of Management Journal, 59(4), 11991223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, R. (1975). Conflict sociology: Toward an explanatory science. NY: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Collins, R. (1981). On the microfoundations of macrosociology. American Journal of Sociology, 86(5), 9841014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, R. (1990). Stratification, emotional energy, and the transient emotions. In Kemper, T. D. (Ed.), Research agendas in the sociology of emotions (pp. 2757). Albany: SUNY Press.Google Scholar
Collins, R. (1993). Emotional energy as the common denominator of rational action. Rationality and Society, 5(2), 203230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, R. (2004). Interaction ritual chains. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, R. (2009). The sociology of philosophies: A global theory of intellectual change. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Crant, J. M. (2000). Proactive behavior in organizations. Journal of Management, 26(3), 435462.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Csikszentmihalyi, M., & Csikzentmihaly, M. (1990). Flow: The psychology of optimal experience. New York: Harper & Row.Google Scholar
Erhardt, N., Martin-Rios, C., & Heckscher, C. (2016). Am I doing the right thing? Unpacking workplace rituals as mechanisms for strong organizational culture. International Journal of Hospitality Management, 59, 3141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foster, D. J., Weigand, D. A., & Baines, D. (2006). The effect of removing superstitious behavior and introducing a pre-performance routine on basketball free-throw performance. Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, 18(2), 167171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fritz, C., & Sonnentag, S. (2009). Antecedents of day-level proactive behavior: A look at job stressors and positive affect during the workday. Journal of Management, 35(1), 94111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gephart, R. P. Jr. (1978). Status degradation and organizational succession: An ethnomethodological approach. Administrative Science Quarterly, 23(4), 553581.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilbert, E. K., Foulk, T. A., & Bono, J. E. (2017). Building positive psychological resources: The effects of mindfulness, work breaks, and positive reflection. In Cooper, C. L. & Quick, J. C. (Eds.), The handbook of stress and health: A guide to research and practice (pp. 538552). Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grant, A. M., & Ashford, S. J. (2008). The dynamics of proactivity at work. Research in Organizational Behavior, 28, 334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grant, A. M., Gino, F., & Hofmann, D. A. (2011). Reversing the extraverted leadership advantage: The role of employee proactivity. Academy of Management Journal, 54(3), 528550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grewal, D., & Salovey, P. (2006). Benefits of emotional intelligence. In Csikszentmihalyi, M. & Selega, I. (Eds.), A life worth living: Contributions to positive psychology (pp. 104119). New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Griffin, M. A., Neal, A., & Parker, S. K. (2007). A new model of work role performance: Positive behavior in uncertain and interdependent contexts. Academy of Management Journal, 50(2), 327347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hackman, J. R., & Oldham, G. R. (1976). Motivation through the design of work: Test of a theory. Organizational Behavior and Human Performance, 16(2), 250279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hasan, F., & Kashif, M. (2021). Psychological safety, meaningfulness and empowerment as predictors of employee well-being: A mediating role of promotive voice. Asia-Pacific Journal of Business Administration, 13(1), 4059.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayes, A. F. (2013). Introduction to mediation, moderation, and conditional process analysis: A regression-based approach. New York, NY: Guilford.Google Scholar
Hill, T., Canniford, R., & Eckhardt, G. M. (2022). The roar of the crowd: How interaction ritual chains create social atmospheres. Journal of Marketing, 86(3), 121139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hofstede, G. (1980). Culture’s consequences: International differences in work-related values. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Islam, G. (2015). Organizational ritual: Rupture, repetition, and the institutional event. In Wilmott, H., Mir, R. & Greenwood, M. (Eds.), Handbook of philosophy and organization (pp. 542549). London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Islam, G., & Zyphur, M. J. (2009). Rituals in organizations: A review and expansion of current theory. Group & Organization Management, 34(1), 114139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Joo, D., Cho, H., Woosnam, K. M., & Suess, C. (2023). Re-theorizing social emotions in tourism: Applying the theory of interaction ritual in tourism research. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 31(2), 367382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kickul, J., & Gundry, L. (2002). Prospecting for strategic advantage: The proactive entrepreneurial personality and small firm innovation. Journal of Small Business Management, 40(2), 8597.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, T. Y., Hon, A. H., & Lee, D. R. (2010). Proactive personality and employee creativity: The effects of job creativity requirement and supervisor support for creativity. Creativity Research Journal, 22(1), 3745.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, T. Y., Liu, Z., & Diefendorff, J. M. (2015). Leader–member exchange and job performance: The effects of taking charge and organizational tenure. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 36(2), 216231.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, T., Sezer, O., Schroeder, J., Risen, J., Gino, F., & Norton, M. I. (2021). Work group rituals enhance the meaning of work. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 165, 197212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krishnan, R., Cook, K. S., Kozhikode, R. K., & Schilke, O. (2021). An interaction ritual theory of social resource exchange: Evidence from a Silicon Valley accelerator. Administrative Science Quarterly, 66(3), 659710.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, K., Duffy, M. K., Scott, K. L., & Schippers, M. C. (2018). The experience of being envied at work: How being envied shapes employee feelings and motivation. Personnel Psychology, 71(2), 181200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, M. C. C., Idris, M. A., & Delfabbro, P. H. (2017). The linkages between hierarchical culture and empowering leadership and their effects on employees’ work engagement: Work meaningfulness as a mediator. International Journal of Stress Management, 24(4), 392415.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lepisto, D. A. (2022). Ritual work and the formation of a shared sense of meaningfulness. Academy of Management Journal, 65(4), 13271352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Little, T. D., Cunningham, W. A., Shahar, G., & Widaman, K. F. (2002). To parcel or not to parcel: Exploring the question, weighing the merits. Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 9(2), 151173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Little, T. D., Rhemtulla, M., Gibson, K., & Schoemann, A. M. (2013). Why the items versus parcels controversy needn’t be one. Psychological Methods, 18(3), 285300.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Matheson, C. (2019). Identifying and explaining organizational cultures in the public sector: A study of the Australian Public Service using the interaction ritual theory of Randall Collins. Administration & Society, 51(9), 13631396.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mathieu, J., Maynard, T. M., Rapp, T., & Gilson, L. (2008). Team effectiveness 1997‐2007: A review of recent advancements and a glimpse into the future. Journal of Management, 34(3), 410476.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Methot, J. R., Rosado-Solomon, E. H., Downes, P. E., & Gabriel, A. S. (2021). Office chitchat as a social ritual: The uplifting yet distracting effects of daily small talk at work. Academy of Management Journal, 64(5), 14451471.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, S. F., & Myerhoff, B. (1977). Introduction: Secular ritual—Forms and meanings. In Moore, S. & Myerhoff, B. G. (Eds.), Secular ritual (pp. 324). Assen: Van Gorcum.Google Scholar
Morrison, E. W., & Phelps, C. C. (1999). Taking charge at work: Extrarole efforts to initiate workplace change. Academy of Management Journal, 42(4), 403419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newberg, A. B., & d’Aquili, E. G. (2000). The neuropsychology of religious and spiritual experience. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 7(11–12), 251266.Google Scholar
Nielbo, K. L., & Sørensen, J. (2011). Spontaneous processing of functional and non-functional action sequences. Religion, Brain & Behavior, 1(1), 1830.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nielbo, K. L., & Sørensen, J. (2016). Attentional resource allocation and cultural modulation in a computational model of ritualized behavior. Religion, Brain & Behavior, 6(4), 318335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norton, M. I., & Gino, F. (2014). Rituals alleviate grieving for loved ones, lovers, and lotteries. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 143(1), 266272.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Owens, B. P., Baker, W. E., Sumpter, D. M., & Cameron, K. S. (2016). Relational energy at work: Implications for job engagement and job performance. Journal of Applied Psychology, 101(1), 3549.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ozenc, F. K., & Hagan, M. (2018). Ritual design: Crafting team rituals for meaningful organizational change. Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, 585, 146157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ozenc, F. K., & Hagan, M. (2019). Rituals for work: 50 ways to create engagement, shared purpose, and a culture that can adapt to change. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Parker, S. K. (2000). From passive to proactive motivation: The importance of flexible role orientations and role breadth self-efficacy. Applied Psychology: An International Review, 49(3), 447469.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parker, S. K., Williams, H. M., & Turner, N. (2006). Modeling the antecedents of proactive behavior at work. Journal of Applied Psychology, 91(3), 636652.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Podsakoff, P. M., MacKenzie, S. B., Lee, J. Y., & Podsakoff, N. P. (2003). Common method biases in behavioral research: A critical review of the literature and recommended remedies. Journal of Applied Psychology, 88(5), 879903.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Powley, E. H. (2004). Underlying ritual practices of the appreciative inquiry summit: Toward a theory of sustained appreciative change. In Cooperrider, D. L. & Avital, M. (Eds.), Constructive discourse and human organization: Advances in appreciative inquiry (vol 1, pp. 241261). Amsterdam: JAI Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pratt, M. G., & Rafaeli, A. (1997). Organizational dress as a symbol of multilayered social identities. Academy of Management Journal, 40(4), 862898.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rappaport, R. A. (1999). Ritual and religion in the making of humanity (vol. 110). Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rossano, M. J. (2012). The essential role of ritual in the transmission and reinforcement of social norms. Psychological Bulletin, 138(3), 529549.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Samier, E. (1997). Administrative ritual and ceremony: Social aesthetics, myth and language use in the rituals of everyday organizational life. Educational Management & Administration, 25(4), 417436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schraub, E. M., Michel, A., Shemla, M., & Sonntag, K. (2014). The roles of leader emotion management and team conflict for team members’ personal initiative: A multilevel perspective. European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology, 23(2), 263276.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seibert, S. E., Kraimer, M. L., & Crant, J. M. (2001). What do proactive people do? A longitudinal model linking proactive personality and career success. Personnel Psychology, 54(4), 845874.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seligman, M. E. P. (2002). Authentic happiness: Using the new positive psychology to realize your potential for lasing fulfillment. New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
Shin, Y., & Kim, M. J. (2015). Antecedents and mediating mechanisms of proactive behavior: Application of the theory of planned behavior. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 32(1), 289310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, A. C., & Stewart, B. (2011). Organizational rituals: Features, functions and mechanisms. International Journal of Management Reviews, 13(2), 113133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sosis, R., & Ruffle, B. J. (2004). Ideology, religion, and the evolution of cooperation: Field tests on Israeli kibbutzim. In Alvard, M. (Ed.), Research in economic anthropology (vol 23, pp. 89117). Bingley: Emerald Group Publishing Limited.Google Scholar
Spreitzer, G. M. (1995). Psychological empowerment in the workplace: Construct definition, measurement, and validation. Academy of Management Journal, 38(5), 14421465.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stein, D. H., Hobson, N. M., & Schroeder, J. (2021). A sacred commitment: How rituals promote group survival. Current Opinion in Psychology, 40, 114120.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Strauss, K., Parker, S. K., & O’Shea, D. (2017). When does proactivity have a cost? Motivation at work moderates the effects of proactive work behavior on employee job strain. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 100, 1526.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Summers-Effler, E. (2010). Laughing saints and righteous heroes: Emotional rhythms in social movement groups. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tims, M., Derks, D., & Bakker, A. B. (2016). Job crafting and its relationships with person–job fit and meaningfulness: A three-wave study. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 92, 4453.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trice, H. M., Belasco, J., & Alutto, J. A. (1969). The role of ceremonials in organizational behavior. ILR Review, 23(1), 4051.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tucker, S., Chmiel, N., Turner, N., Hershcovis, M. S., & Stride, C. B. (2008). Perceived organizational support for safety and employee safety voice: The mediating role of coworker support for safety. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 13(4), 319330.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Dyne, L., Kamdar, D., & Joireman, J. (2008). In-role perceptions buffer the negative impact of low LMX on helping and enhance the positive impact of high LMX on voice. Journal of Applied Psychology, 93(6), 11951207.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vaughn, M. A. (1995). Organization symbols: An analysis of their types and functions in a reborn organization. Management Communication Quarterly, 9(2), 219250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vaught, C., & Smith, D. L. (1980). Incorporation and mechanical solidarity in an underground coal mine. Sociology of Work and Occupations, 7(2), 159187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, H. M., Parker, S. K., & Turner, N. (2010). Proactively performing teams: The role of work design, transformational leadership, and team composition. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, 83(2), 301324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, L. J., Vandenberg, R. J., & Edwards, J. R. (2009). Structural equation modeling in management research: A guide for improved analysis. Academy of Management Annals, 3(1), 543604.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wollschleger, J. (2012). Interaction ritual chains and religious participation. Sociological Forum, 27(4), 896912.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wu, C. H., Deng, H., & Li, Y. (2018). Enhancing a sense of competence at work by engaging in proactive behavior: The role of proactive personality. Journal of Happiness Studies, 19(3), 801816.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wu, J., Zhang, L., Wang, J., Zhou, X., & Hang, C. (2024). The relation between humble leadership and employee proactive socialization: The roles of work meaningfulness and perceived overqualification. Current Psychology, 43(8), 69106922.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. The theoretical model.

Figure 1

Table 1. Descriptive statistics and correlations among study variables

Figure 2

Table 2. Descriptive statistics among two conditions

Figure 3

Table 3. Comparison of measurement models

Figure 4

Table 4. Regression results