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Reframing commitment in authentic leadership: Untangling relationship–outcome processes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 December 2019

Andrei A. Lux*
Affiliation:
Edith Cowan University, 270 Joondalup Drive, Perth WA 6027, Australia
Steven L. Grover
Affiliation:
Macquarie University, 4 Eastern Road, Sydney NSW 2113, Australia
Stephen T. T. Teo
Affiliation:
Edith Cowan University, 270 Joondalup Drive, Perth WA 6027, Australia
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

Affective organizational commitment is theorized and empirically tested as a key mediator between authentic leadership and desirable employee outcomes. The results of a two-wave survey of 830 business people in Australia support a serial mediation model of authentic leadership efficacy. Followers' perceptions of authentic leadership behavior influence their personal identification and affect-based trust in the leader, which in turn are mediated by affective organizational commitment to positively influence their work engagement and job satisfaction. These findings reinforce previous work that positions personal identification and affect-based trust as the two primary mediating mechanisms of authentic leadership. This paper extends prior research by demonstrating the important role of followers' affective bonds with their organization in the operation of authentic leadership, moving beyond the dyad in our understanding of follower outcomes.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management 2019

Introduction

Authentic leadership is a dominant theory of contemporary business leadership, gripping scholars and practitioners alike and enjoying ample research attention (for a recent review, see Iszatt-White & Kempster, Reference Iszatt-White and Kempster2018). Authentic leaders ‘are guided by sound moral convictions and act in concordance with their deeply held values, even under pressure; they are keenly aware of their views, strengths, and weaknesses, and strive to understand how their leadership impacts others’ (Peus, Wesche, Streicher, Braun, & Frey, Reference Peus, Wesche, Streicher, Braun and Frey2012, p. 332). Authentic leadership affects a host of positive organizational outcomes (for a meta-analysis, see Banks, McCauley, Gardner, & Guler, Reference Banks, McCauley, Gardner and Guler2016), and yet questions remain about how the construct produces these desirable effects.

Prior research shows that followers' personal identification with leaders and affect-based trust mediates the relations between authentic leadership and employee outcomes (Alilyyani, Wong, & Cummings, Reference Alilyyani, Wong and Cummings2018), because followers have stronger and more positive relationships with leaders with whom they share values and trust. Authentic leadership also has broader work- or job-related outcomes such as engagement and satisfaction. The influence of authentic leadership, however, goes beyond the leader-follower dynamic to also affect followers' experiences within organizations. Followers' affective commitment to their organization is the missing link between the relational mechanisms and employee outcomes. More precisely, we theorize that through increased personal identification and trust, authentic leadership positively influences employees' affective commitment to the organization, which in turn promotes work engagement and job satisfaction (Banks et al., Reference Banks, McCauley, Gardner and Guler2016; Hoch, Bommer, Dulebohn, & Wu, Reference Hoch, Bommer, Dulebohn and Wu2018). As the nature of work becomes more transient (Klein, Molloy, & Brinsfield, Reference Klein, Molloy and Brinsfield2012), understanding how employees' emotional association with an organization affects their experiences of leadership, engagement, and satisfaction is more important now than ever before.

The present study therefore examines the role of followers' affective attachment to their organization in the processes between followers' experience of authentic leadership behavior and their work-related outcomes. We contribute to the literature by demonstrating that affective organizational commitment connects known relational mediators with desirable follower outcomes. We thereby explain how authentic leadership influences employees' work engagement and job satisfaction through a sequential mediation process, and provide empirical evidence to support these relations. Figure 1 illustrates our theoretical framework and we explain the specific linkages in the following sections.

Figure 1. Serial multiple mediation analysis of authentic leadership processes.

Note. N = 281, * p < .05, ** p < .001. Non-significant (p > .05) mediation paths are suppressed for clarity. Dotted path indicates correlation.

Hypothesis Development

Personal identification

Personal identification is defined as a ‘perceived oneness with another individual’ (for a review, see Ashforth, Schinoff, & Rogers, Reference Ashforth, Schinoff and Rogers2016, p. 28). Kark and Shamir (Reference Kark, Shamir, Avolio and Yammarino2002) explain that personal identification is the ‘process whereby [an] individual's beliefs about a person become self-referential or self-defining’ (p. 70). Personal identification is distinct from the related concepts of social and relational identification. Social identification is derived from social identity theory (Tajfel & Turner, Reference Tajfel, Turner, Worchel and Austin1986) and refers to the attributes that reflect group membership; for example, employees may come to identify with their team or organization. Relational identification is the process whereby individuals' self-concept is derived from their role relationships with significant others (Brewer & Gardner, Reference Brewer and Gardner1996), such as how employees may define themselves as followers of a leader. Personal identification, however, refers to the process whereby individuals come to identify with the distinct attributes of a specific person – their leader in this case – and therefore captures the value congruence between leaders and followers (Ashforth, Schinoff, & Rogers, Reference Ashforth, Schinoff and Rogers2016).

Followers more readily identify with authentic leaders because their core values are accessible so that followers can form self-defining relationships with them. In contrast, less authentic leaders at least partly mask their values, which act as a barrier to the personal identification process. Leadership has a stronger impact on followers' outcomes when they identify with their leader (Campbell, Trapnell, Heine, Katz, Lavallee, & Lehman, Reference Campbell, Trapnell, Heine, Katz, Lavallee and Lehman1996; Howell & Shamir, Reference Howell and Shamir2005; Kark, Shamir, & Chen, Reference Kark, Shamir and Chen2003; Peterlin, Penger, & Dimovski, Reference Peterlin, Penger and Dimovski2009). As followers come to identify with their authentic leader, they begin to strive toward ‘goals that are, in part, derived from and congruent with those of the leader’ (Avolio & Gardner, Reference Avolio and Gardner2005, pp. 326–327). Social identity theory suggests that leaders are representative of the wider organization to their followers (Kalshoven & Den Hartog, Reference Kalshoven and Den Hartog2009; Van Knippenberg, Reference Van Knippenberg2011). Therefore, as followers come to personally identify with their authentic leader, they then begin to form more positive affective connections to the organization as whole. Hence:

Hypothesis 1

Followers' personal identification with their leader mediates the relationship between their perceptions of authentic leadership and their affective organizational commitment.

Interpersonal trust

Trust consistently emerges as an important factor in the authentic leadership relationship (Gardner, Avolio, Luthans, May, & Walumbwa, Reference Gardner, Avolio, Luthans, May and Walumbwa2005; Hasel & Grover, Reference Hasel and Grover2017; Wong & Cummings, Reference Wong and Cummings2009; Wong, Spence-Laschinger, & Cummings, Reference Wong, Spence-Laschinger and Cummings2010). Rousseau, Sitkin, Burt, and Camerer (Reference Rousseau, Sitkin, Burt and Camerer1998) define trust as ‘the intention to accept vulnerability based upon positive expectations of the intentions or behaviors of another’ (p. 395). Trust is therefore built upon a foundation of confidence in another person's ‘competence and willingness to act in a fair, ethical, and predictable manner’ (Nyhan & Marlowe, Reference Nyhan and Marlowe1997, p. 616): the belief that their actions will ‘be beneficial, or at least not detrimental, to one's interests’ (Robinson, Reference Robinson1996, p. 576). The relationships cultivated through authentic leadership are characterized by candor and behavioral integrity. Based on the ability, benevolence, and integrity framework of trust (Mayer, Davis, & Schoorman, Reference Mayer, Davis and Schoorman1995), followers are therefore more willing to make themselves vulnerable to authentic leaders with transparent goals and values, which is relatively safe as compared to less authentic leaders.

Research shows that authentic leadership relates positively to trust (Gardner et al., Reference Gardner, Avolio, Luthans, May and Walumbwa2005; Wong & Cummings, Reference Wong and Cummings2009; Wong, Spence-Laschinger, & Cummings, Reference Wong, Spence-Laschinger and Cummings2010), and Dirks and Ferrin (Reference Dirks and Ferrin2002) show in their meta-analysis that followers' trust in leadership is positively related to job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and work performance. Relationship-oriented leadership theories – such as authentic leadership – are more strongly associated with affective trust, rather than cognitive trust (Colquitt, Baer, Long, & Halvorsen-Ganepola, Reference Colquitt, Baer, Long and Halvorsen-Ganepola2014; Hasel & Grover, Reference Hasel and Grover2017). Cognitive trust is an instrumental pragmatism similar to the notion of reciprocity, whereas affective trust emanates from a positive personal relationship such as that wrought from the authentic expression of shared values. Based on social identity theory, leaders serve as prototypical representatives of the organization (Kalshoven & Den Hartog, Reference Kalshoven and Den Hartog2009; Van Knippenberg, Reference Van Knippenberg2011). When employees feel that they cannot trust their leaders, they attempt to reduce their vulnerability by psychologically distancing themselves from the organization (Nyhan, Reference Nyhan1999). Therefore, authentic leaders who have trusting relationships with their followers evoke a more positive emotional connection to the organization itself. Thus, we hypothesize that:

Hypothesis 2

Followers' affect-based trust in their leader mediates the relations between their perceptions of authentic leadership and their affective organizational commitment.

Followers' personal identification and affect-based trust relate because trust is based in part on behavioral consistency (Butler, Reference Butler1991; Nyhan & Marlowe, Reference Nyhan and Marlowe1997). As employees come to know and personally identify with their leader, the leader's consistent actions make more sense and thereby produce increased trust. The open and honest nature of authentic leadership relationships builds followers' confidence in the leader's actions and intentions, which likewise promotes interpersonal trust. Therefore, authentic leadership behavior directly influences followers' trust in the leader (Clapp-Smith, Vogelgesang, & Avey, Reference Clapp-Smith, Vogelgesang and Avey2009), while followers' personal identification with their leader mediates the relation between their perceptions of authentic leadership and their affect-based trust in the leader. Existing empirical studies support this partial mediation effect on trust (Fox, Gong, & Attoh, Reference Fox, Gong and Attoh2015; Wong, Spence-Laschinger, & Cummings, Reference Wong, Spence-Laschinger and Cummings2010). Congruent with their results, we propose that followers' personal identification functions as a mediating mechanism through which authentic leadership produces increased follower trust.

Hypothesis 3

Followers' personal identification with their leader partially mediates the relationship between followers' perceptions of authentic leadership and their affect-based trust in the leader.

We thereby position followers' affect-based trust as the second sequential mediating mechanism that connects authentic leadership to positive follower outcomes. The following section explores the concept of commitment to theorizing its operation at the center of authentic leadership processes.

Organizational commitment

Businesses require a stable workforce in order to be effective and employees who are unlikely to leave an organization are conceived of as being committed (Allen & Meyer, Reference Allen and Meyer1990). However, merely maintaining workforce continuity is inadequate because ‘what employees do on the job is as important, or more important, than whether they remain’ (Allen & Meyer, Reference Allen and Meyer1990, p. 15): employees must also be willing to go beyond their basic role requirements in order to consistently deliver superior performance (Katz, Reference Katz1964; Organ, Podsakoff, & MacKenzie, Reference Organ, Podsakoff, MacKenzie, Huff, Schneider and Taylor2005). Accordingly, Buchanan (Reference Buchanan1974) focuses instead on workers' dedication when defining organizational commitment as ‘a partisan, affective attachment to the goals and values of the organization, to one's role in relation to the goals and values, and to the organization for its own sake, apart from its purely instrumental worth’ (p. 533).

Allen and Meyer (Reference Allen and Meyer1990) isolate three different kinds of commitment: continuance, normative, and affective. Individuals with continuance commitment are conscious of the costs associated with leaving and therefore need to maintain employment; those with normative commitment perceive an obligation to stay because they ought to; and those with affective organizational commitment are emotionally attached to their organization and remain because they want to (Allen & Meyer, Reference Allen and Meyer1990). The kind of commitment experienced by employees affects the extent and quality of their contribution to the overall effectiveness of the organization, with those that want to belong adding more value than those who either need to or who feel obligated to (Meyer & Allen, Reference Meyer and Allen1991). Empirical studies find employees' affective organizational commitment to be positively related to desirable organizational outcomes, such as reduced turnover (Meyer & Allen, Reference Meyer and Allen1991), citizenship (Shore & Wayne, Reference Shore and Wayne1993), service quality (Malhotra & Mukherjee, Reference Malhotra and Mukherjee2004), and performance (Meyer, Paunonen, Gellatly, Goffin, & Jackson, Reference Meyer, Paunonen, Gellatly, Goffin and Jackson1989). In contrast, continuance and normative commitment are either unrelated to or negatively correlated with performance ratings (Malhotra & Mukherjee, Reference Malhotra and Mukherjee2004; Meyer et al., Reference Meyer, Paunonen, Gellatly, Goffin and Jackson1989). Klein, Molloy, and Brinsfield (Reference Klein, Molloy and Brinsfield2012) therefore exclude employees' acquiescent or instrumental association with an organization to redefine commitment as an innately affective bond that is characterized by ‘volition, dedication, and responsibility’ (p. 134).

Social identity theory suggests that followers who form positive workplace relationships with their supervisors are then more likely to develop stronger emotional attachments to the wider organization (Kalshoven & Den Hartog, Reference Kalshoven and Den Hartog2009; Van Knippenberg, Reference Van Knippenberg2011). Indeed, previous studies report positive relations between followers' perceptions of authentic leadership and their affective organizational commitment (e.g. Giallonardo, Wong, & Iwasiw, Reference Giallonardo, Wong and Iwasiw2010; Jensen & Luthans, Reference Jensen and Luthans2006; Peus et al., Reference Peus, Wesche, Streicher, Braun and Frey2012; Walumbwa, Avolio, Gardner, Wernsing, & Peterson, Reference Walumbwa, Avolio, Gardner, Wernsing and Peterson2008; Wong, Spence-Laschinger, & Cummings, Reference Wong, Spence-Laschinger and Cummings2010). The influence of authentic leadership, thus, goes beyond the leader-follower dynamic to affect followers' experiences within the organization. Yet studying organizational commitment only as a terminal product of good leadership precludes an understanding of how employees' emotional association with their organization shapes their work-related outcomes.

Followers' affective attachment to the organization is the missing link between the known relational mechanisms and followers' desirable organizational outcomes in authentic leadership theory. More precisely, we propose that through increased personal identification and trust, authentic leadership positively influences employees' affective commitment to the organization, which in turn promotes work engagement and job satisfaction (Banks et al., Reference Banks, McCauley, Gardner and Guler2016; Hoch et al., Reference Hoch, Bommer, Dulebohn and Wu2018). Affective commitment thereby serves as the key mediating link between the relational authentic leadership processes and the desirable follower outcomes. Prior studies likewise position followers' affective organizational commitment as an important antecedent of their work engagement and job satisfaction (Meyer, Stanley, Herscovitch, & Topolnytsky, Reference Meyer, Stanley, Herscovitch and Topolnytsky2002; Poon, Reference Poon2013). Therefore, we propose that:

Hypothesis 4

Followers' affective organizational commitment mediates the relationship between their personal identification with their leader and their work engagement (Hypothesis 4a) and job satisfaction (Hypothesis 4b).

Hypothesis 5

Followers' affective organizational commitment mediates the relationship between their affect-based trust in their leader and their work engagement (Hypothesis 5a) and job satisfaction (Hypothesis 5b).

In summary, we argue that authentic leadership delivers positive follower outcomes through a sequential mediation process of personal identification, affect-based trust, and affective organizational commitment. These three mechanisms produce increased work engagement and job satisfaction, which have a reciprocal causal relationship and together serve as key metrics of leadership efficacy. See Figure 1 for a graphical representation of our theoretical framework.

Method

We distributed web-based surveys to a sample of employed business-people in Australia. Data collection was split into two waves several weeks apart to mitigate potential common method bias (Podsakoff, MacKenzie, Lee, & Podsakoff, Reference Podsakoff, MacKenzie, Lee and Podsakoff2003). The first survey wave collected authentic leadership and personal identification responses while the second wave collected the remaining latent variables. The following sections discuss the methods used to test our hypotheses and address in turn each of the scales selected for this study, before moving on to present the analyses and results.

Sample

We approached PureProfile, an Australian-based research company, to distribute surveys to their panel members. Such a recruitment strategy is common in the management literature (see Pugh, Groth, & Hennig-Thurau, Reference Pugh, Groth and Hennig-Thurau2011; Teo, Pick, Xerri, & Newton, Reference Teo, Pick, Xerri and Newton2016). An anonymous survey link was emailed to panel members who met our selection criteria: employed adults living in Australia who had an immediate supervisor at work and were not self-employed. We take a position-based view of leadership and operationalized respondents' supervisor to be their leader in our sample (Grint, Jones, & Holt, Reference Grint, Jones, Holt, Storey, Jean, Denis, Hart and Ulrich2017). No specific industry or organization type was targeted so that the results could be generalized across a broad range of workplaces.

A total of 1710 participants were contacted by PureProfile to complete the online survey. Some of the participants were excluded because they did not meet the selection criteria (e.g. 24 were not living in Australia; 193 were not currently employed; 138 were self-employed; 307 had no immediate supervisor at work; 216 completed the survey in under 6 min; and two participants returned invalid responses). In total, we retained 830 responses (48.5% response rate) to the wave one surveys. After a one week interval, 281 of these respondents completed the wave two surveys (33.9%). The response rates were at acceptable levels (Ribisl, Walton, Mowbray, Luke, Davidson, & Bootsmiller, Reference Ribisl, Walton, Mowbray, Luke, Davidson and Bootsmiller1996) and yielded sufficient data for mediation analysis and regressive structural equation modeling (Fritz & MacKinnon, Reference Fritz and MacKinnon2007; Wolf, Harrington, Clark, & Miller, Reference Wolf, Harrington, Clark and Miller2013).

The average age for the larger sample was 46.5 years old (SD = 11.8) and 63.1% of the respondents were female. The majority of respondents were born in Australia (71.3%), spent their first five formative years there (72.8%), and lived in Australia at the time of the survey (95.4%). On average, the respondents had spent over 85% of their lives in their current country of residence and 87.2% spoke English as their first language. Approximately three quarters had attained education beyond the secondary school level, including trade certificates (23.4%) and bachelor degrees (33.4%). Most were employed full-time (64.9%) for large organizations (52.7%, with 250 employees or more). No one particular industry dominated the sample and respondents were engaged across a wide variety of sectors, including professional services (16.7%), government (14.2%), education (13.9%), health (11.2%), retail (8.9%), etc. Respondents had spent an average of 9.9 years (SD = 9.4) at their current place of employment and had worked for 4.2 years (SD = 4.9) with their current supervisor. No substantive differences were observed in the demographic composition between the respondents in wave one and the sub-sample who also completed wave two.

Measures

The surveys contained a total of 52 scale items comprised of the Authentic Leadership Inventory (ALI; Neider, & Schriesheim, Reference Neider and Schriesheim2011), the Personal Identification with Leader Scale (PILS) adapted from Kark, Shamir, and Chen (Reference Kark, Shamir and Chen2003), a measure of Affect-based Trust (ABT; McAllister, Reference McAllister1995), the Affective Commitment Scale (ACS; Allen & Meyer, Reference Allen and Meyer1990), the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale-9 (UWES-9; Schaufeli, Bakker, & Salanova, Reference Schaufeli, Bakker and Salanova2006), and the Brief Index of Affective Job Satisfaction (BIAJS; Thompson & Phua, Reference Thompson and Phua2012). The following sections discuss each of these scales in greater detail, presenting the rationale for their inclusion before moving on to consider control variables and the impact of common method variance.

Authentic leadership

The theoretical construct of authentic leadership was first operationalized by Walumbwa et al., (Reference Walumbwa, Avolio, Gardner, Wernsing and Peterson2008) through the Authentic Leadership Questionnaire (ALQ). This instrument treats authentic leadership as a higher-order latent factor represented by four dimensions, as per the dominant conceptualization in the academic literature (Avolio, Walumbwa, & Weber, Reference Avolio, Walumbwa and Weber2009). The ALQ is thus advantaged by a sound theoretical foundation, which is an essential step toward the development of valid and reliable psychometric measures (Hinkin, Reference Hinkin1995). However, the original content validation process relied extensively on a small sample of subject matter experts and the reported CFA results indicated that the best-fitting empirical model did not match the theoretical framework. These discrepancies raise concerns over the integrity of such subjective methods and a rigorous quantitative approach toward scale development is emerging (see Hinkin & Tracey, Reference Hinkin and Tracey1999).

In order to address the concerns over the ALQ, Neider and Schriesheim (Reference Neider and Schriesheim2011) used the same well-established conceptual foundation and developed a new scale called the ALI. They used an ANOVA-based approach to assess content validity, thereby reducing the impact of subjectivity on item selection and validity assessment (Schriesheim & Cogliser, Reference Schriesheim and Cogliser2009; Schriesheim, Cogliser, Scandura, Lankau, & Powers, Reference Schriesheim, Cogliser, Scandura, Lankau and Powers1999). While both the ALQ and the ALI share an identical theoretical basis, the more rigorous scale development procedures implemented in the formation of the ALI distinguish it as the preferred measure. Therefore, the 16-item ALI was used in the present study to capture followers' perceptions of authentic leadership.

Personal identification

Kark, Shamir, and Chen (Reference Kark, Shamir and Chen2003) created a social identification scale as an amalgam of previous work by Mael and Ashforth (Reference Mael and Ashforth1992) and Shamir, Zakay, Breinin, and Popper (Reference Shamir, Zakay, Breinin and Popper1998): its purpose was to capture employees' identification with their branch or department. Kark and colleagues then rephrased these items to make a similar scale which measured employees' personal identification with their branch manager. The resulting 10-item scale demonstrated reliability (α = .93) and its construct validity was assessed through confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) (Kark, Shamir, & Chen, Reference Kark, Shamir and Chen2003). The full scale was provided by the authors upon request and without restriction. To fit the needs of the present work, the original wording was amended to direct the questions toward followers' ‘immediate supervisor’ and the resulting instrument was called the PILS. See supplementary Appendix A for a full list of PILS items.

Affect-based trust

McAllister (Reference McAllister1995) differentiates between cognition- and affect-based trust, the latter demonstrating positive relations with organizational outcomes and leader-follower interactions. Cognition-based trust is generally associated with mutually beneficial exchanges (reciprocity), whereas affect-based trust ‘most explicitly evokes a relationship and… sentiments like commitment and intrinsic significance’(Colquitt et al., Reference Colquitt, Baer, Long and Halvorsen-Ganepola2014, p. 5). Hence, ABT was selected as most suitable for investigating the operation of authentic leader-follower relations. McAllister (Reference McAllister1995) followed a rigorous scale development methodology in creating a five-item measure of ABT, and all five items were included in the present study.

Affective commitment

Meyer and Allen (Reference Meyer and Allen1984) developed the eight-item ACS to measure affective organizational commitment at the individual level. Later studies have established that this unidimensional scale is both valid and reliable with internal consistency estimates between .84 and .88 (Allen & Meyer, Reference Allen and Meyer1990; McGee & Ford, Reference McGee and Ford1987; Meyer, Allen, & Gellatly, Reference Meyer, Allen and Gellatly1990; Meyer et al., Reference Meyer, Paunonen, Gellatly, Goffin and Jackson1989). More recently, Malhotra and Mukherjee (Reference Malhotra and Mukherjee2004) used CFA with Varimax rotation to reconfirm that the items were loading as expected and added support for the discriminant validity of the ACS. Thus, all eight ACS items were used in the present study to gauge followers' affective organizational commitment.

Work engagement

Employee work engagement is defined as ‘a positive work-related state of fulfillment that is characterized by vigor, dedication, and absorption’ (Schaufeli, Bakker, & Salanova, Reference Schaufeli, Bakker and Salanova2006, p. 701). It has featured in a number of empirical authentic leadership studies (see Gardner, Cogliser, Davis, & Dickens, Reference Gardner, Cogliser, Davis and Dickens2011) and constitutes an important follower outcome metric for leadership research. Schaufeli, Bakker, and Salanova (Reference Schaufeli, Bakker and Salanova2006) reanalyzed earlier data to reduce their original Utrecht Work Engagement Scale from 17 items to nine items (UWES-9), which likewise demonstrated acceptable psychometric properties without sacrificing validity or reliability over the original.

Job satisfaction

The construct of job satisfaction appears repeatedly across business research over the last 75 years, resulting in a ‘problematically large’ (p. 276) array of measurement scales (Thompson & Phua, Reference Thompson and Phua2012). Whitman, Van Rooy, and Viswesvaran (Reference Whitman, Van Rooy and Viswesvaran2010) concluded in their meta-analysis that the majority of researchers used ‘ad hoc measures’ (p. 55) that lack validity. Moreover, this nebulous variety of scales makes it difficult to draw direct comparisons between studies and hinders the incremental development of knowledge in the field (O'Connor, Peters, & Gordon, Reference O'Connor, Peters and Gordon1978). To address this issue, Thompson and Phua (Reference Thompson and Phua2012) have developed a concise, theoretically grounded, and psychometrically valid 4-item scale called the BIAJS. As such, the BIAJS was well-suited to capturing followers' job satisfaction in the present study and all four items were included in their original configuration.

Control variables

We controlled for social desirability and several work-related demographic factors. Social desirability captures the tendency for respondents to inflate self-reported survey outcomes, and must therefore be controlled during hypothesis testing (Van de Mortel, Reference Van de Mortel2008). We used a 13-item scale developed by Reynolds (Reference Reynolds1982) to measure social desirability. In addition, we controlled for: (a) the industry that respondents are employed in, since leadership efficacy varies between sectors (Hooijberg & Choi, Reference Hooijberg and Choi2001); (b) respondents' employment status (i.e. full-time, part-time, or casual), which can determine their job satisfaction and organizational commitment (Thorsteinson, Reference Thorsteinson2003); (c) the size of the organization that they work for, which affects leadership outcomes (e.g. Koene, Vogelaar, & Soeters, Reference Koene, Vogelaar and Soeters2002; Vaccaro, Jansen, Van Den Bosch, & Volberda, Reference Vaccaro, Jansen, Van Den Bosch and Volberda2012); and (d) how long they have been working with their current supervisor, which is a predictor of trust (Perry, Reference Perry2004). These variables were included as covariates in the initial serial mediation analyses because they have known correlations to the focal study constructs and parsing out their variance generates a more robust representation of the relations between the latent constructs of interest (for a review, see Becker, Reference Becker2005). We next consider the phenomenon of common method variance before moving on to present our analyses and results.

Common method variance

The present work addresses relations between different employee work attitudes, which must be measured at the individual level. Hence, it is impossible to control for common method variance (CMV) by collecting predictor and criterion data from different sources (Podsakoff et al., Reference Podsakoff, MacKenzie, Lee and Podsakoff2003). While common method variance cannot be eliminated, we follow the Podsakoff et al., (Reference Podsakoff, MacKenzie, Lee and Podsakoff2003) procedures to mitigate its impact. As such, we address common method issues proactively in the present study using two techniques. First, by splitting the survey into two stages we separate the measurement of predictor and criterion variables with a temporal delay between data points: collecting independent variables in the first survey wave and then dependent variables two weeks later via a follow-up survey. Second, by using construct-validated scales wherever possible to maximize the likelihood that responses are indicative of the distinct latent constructs, rather than an underlying common method variance (Podsakoff et al., Reference Podsakoff, MacKenzie, Lee and Podsakoff2003).

Although the debates around common method variance are still ongoing (for reviews, see Conway & Lance, Reference Conway and Lance2010; Richardson, Simmering, & Sturman, Reference Richardson, Simmering and Sturman2009), the potential implications for validity ‘cannot be ignored’ (Ashkanasy, Reference Ashkanasy2008, p. 264). Therefore, two additional post-hoc statistical techniques were used to ascertain whether CMV issues were present in the data. The first procedure involves conducting an exploratory factor analysis with all of the construct-level variable items, to see if ‘either (a) a single factor will emerge from the factor analysis or (b) one general factor will account for the majority of covariance among the measures’ (Podsakoff et al., Reference Podsakoff, MacKenzie, Lee and Podsakoff2003, p. 889). The second procedure uses an unmeasured latent variable with CFA across all construct items to estimate CMV effects: Harman's single-factor test (Williams & Anderson, Reference Williams and Anderson1994; Williams, Edwards, & Vandenberg, Reference Williams, Edwards and Vandenberg2003).

Results of the unrotated principal component factor analysis revealed four distinct factors with eigenvalues greater than 1.0, rather than a single factor. Interpreting the Varimax rotated solution, these four factors together accounted for 69.0% of the total variance and the first (largest) factor did not account for a majority of the variance (29.1%). Thus, one general factor was not apparent. Furthermore, the CFA showed that the single-factor model did not fit the data well (χ2/df (723) = 6.85, p = .00, GFI = .42; CFI = .59; NFI = .56; RMSEA = .15). These results do not preclude the possibility of CMV issues, but rather suggest that CMV is not of overriding concern and is therefore unlikely to inhibit the interpretations of later tests. Hence, no post-hoc CMV correction techniques were included during subsequent analyses.

Analysis and results

Reliability analyses using Cronbach's coefficient alpha and composite reliability (CR) showed that all of the measures exceeded the .70 acceptable thresholds for both indices (DeVellis, Reference DeVellis, Bickman and Rog2012; Hair, Black, Babin, & Anderson, Reference Hair, Black, Babin and Anderson2010; Nunnally, Reference Nunnally1978), confirming that the scales are sufficiently reliable (see Tables 1 and 2 for the results). The average variance extracted (AVE) scores were all above .50, demonstrating that the items comprising each instrument have convergent validity (Hair et al., Reference Hair, Black, Babin and Anderson2010).

Table 1. Correlation analysis of latent study variables

Note. N = 281.

Coefficient alphas are in brackets on the diagonal.

*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01.

Table 2. Reliability and validity analysis of study scales

Note. N = 281.

Bold, italicized numbers denote Fornell and Larcker (Reference Fornell and Larcker1981) AVE test.

AVE, average variance extracted; CR, composite reliability; MSV, maximum shared variance.

We next established discriminant validity using the Fornell and Larcker (Reference Fornell and Larcker1981) test with measurement error-adjusted inter-construct correlations derived from a CFA. The square root of the AVE score for each latent construct was higher than the absolute correlation with any other latent variable, thereby confirming the discriminant validity of each scale. The measures used in the present study were thus sufficiently reliable, internally consistent, and distinct to proceed with subsequent analysis. The one exception was work engagement, which had an AVE square root of .75 and yet correlated at .88 with job satisfaction, suggesting some empirical overlap. This outcome supports our earlier arguments that respondents' work engagement and job satisfaction have a reciprocal causal relationship. Including both constructs in a linear causal model would introduce multicollinearity. We therefore kept the two constructs separate as distinct dependent variables in our initial mediation models, and then covaried them during scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis.

Before testing our hypothesized seven-factor model (including social desirability), we assessed the measurement model fit by comparing it to several nested measurement models, collapsing our seven-factor solution down to a single-factor model (see Table 3). We used IBM AMOS v24 to conduct multiple CFAs. The results indicate that the hypothesized seven-factor solution is the best fit to the data (χ2/df (702) = 1.67, p = .00, GFI = .83; CFI = .96; NFI = .90; RMSEA = .05), and it is therefore appropriate to proceed with hypothesis testing.

Table 3. Results of nested model comparison

Note. N = 281.

ABT, affect-based trust; AL, authentic leadership; AOC, affective organizational commitment; JS, job satisfaction; PI, personal identification; SD, social desirability; WE, work engagement.

***p < 0.001.

Mediation analysis was conducted with Hayes (Reference Hayes and Kenny2013) PROCESS macro using the Preacher and Hayes (Reference Preacher and Hayes2004) bootstrapping method. The technique involves ‘taking a large number of samples… from the data, sampling with replacement, and computing the indirect effect in each sample’ (Preacher & Hayes, Reference Preacher and Hayes2004, p. 722). A confidence interval is then calculated at 95% and should zero falls outside of this interval the indirect effect is considered significantly different from zero at p < .05 (two-tailed). The PROCESS macro automates this sequence and can be accessed through a custom SPSS dialog. We used serial mediation Model 6 to test our hypotheses (for a guide, see Hayes, Reference Hayes and Kenny2013, pp. 143–156). All of the tests were run with 10,000 bias-corrected bootstrap samples, using IBM SPSS v24.

The results of the serial mediation analyses for work engagement and job satisfaction are presented in Tables 4 and 5 respectively. All five of our hypotheses are supported by the data. Both followers' personal identification and affect-based trust in their leader completely mediate the effects of perceived authentic leadership on followers' affective organizational commitment. Personal identification also partially mediates the effects of authentic leadership on respondent's affect-based trust in their leader. Lastly, followers' affective organizational commitment completely mediates the effects of both personal identification and affect-based trust on respondents' work engagement and job satisfaction. See Figure 1 for a path model of these relationships – the non-significant mediation pathways are suppressed for clarity.

Table 4. Serial multiple mediation analysis of authentic leadership on work engagement

Note. N = 281.

*p < .05, **p < .001.

Table 5. Serial multiple mediation analysis of authentic leadership on job satisfaction

Note. N = 281.

*p < .05, **p < .001.

These two models demonstrate strong predictive power by explaining a large portion of the variance for each of the three mediating mechanisms and the two outcome variables: personal identification (R 2 = .52, p < .001), affect-based trust (R 2 = .56, p < .001), affective organizational commitment (R 2 = .41, p < .001), work engagement (R 2 = .42, p < .001), and job satisfaction (R 2 = .41, p < .001). In the presence of these three mediating mechanisms, no direct effects from authentic leadership are observed on either of the two outcome variables. However, followers' perceptions of authentic leadership had a significant total indirect effect on both their work engagement (β = .29, p < .05) and job satisfaction (β = .25, p < .05), thus supporting our sequential mediation model of authentic leadership efficacy.

Having established the mediation model structure, we followed the robust research guidelines set out by Meyer, van Witteloostuijn, and Beugelsdijk (Reference Meyer, van Witteloostuijn and Beugelsdijk2017) and proceeded to reassess our hypotheses using an alternate method – structural equation modelling. The SEM approach allowed us to covary respondents' work engagement and job satisfaction, including them simultaneously as two related outcome variables. Following Carlson and Wu (Reference Carlson and Wu2012), no control variables are included in the SEM model to determine whether or not the relations observed in the previous mediation analysis are artifacts of statistical controls (for a review, see Spector & Brannick, Reference Spector and Brannick2011). The results indicate that the six factor path model established previously fit the data well (χ2/df (503) = 1.80, p = .00, GFI = .84; CFI = .95; NFI = .90; RMSEA = .05). See supplementary Appendix B for a graphical representation of this path model and the beta coefficients. These findings substantiate the results of our serial mediation analyses and add further support for our hypotheses.

These results also corroborate the findings of Wong, Spence-Laschinger, and Cummings (Reference Wong, Spence-Laschinger and Cummings2010) that followers' personal identification and trust are the two primary mediators that function to deliver the positive outcomes of authentic leadership. We contribute to this stream of research by adding affective organizational commitment as the third major mediating mechanism. Followers' work engagement and job satisfaction are frequently touted as important direct outcomes of authentic leadership (Banks et al., Reference Banks, McCauley, Gardner and Guler2016; Hoch et al., Reference Hoch, Bommer, Dulebohn and Wu2018) – however, in the presence of the three mediators these direct relationships become non-significant. Indeed, our SEM model shows that followers' affective organizational commitment is the sole predictor of their work engagement (β = .76, p < .01) and job satisfaction (β = .70, p < .01), completely mediating the effects of both personal identification and affect-based trust.

Discussion

The present work advances our understanding of authentic leadership by modeling the mediation paths by which authentic leadership engenders positive follower outcomes. Authentic leadership positively influences followers' work engagement and job satisfaction through a sequential process of personal identification, affect-based trust, and affective organizational commitment.

The results suggest that followers who consider their supervisors to be authentic leaders experience positive work-related outcomes. In particular, we found that they were more satisfied with their jobs, more engaged at work, and more committed to the organization as a whole. These findings are congruent with recent empirical research (Giallonardo, Wong, & Iwasiw, Reference Giallonardo, Wong and Iwasiw2010; Jensen & Luthans, Reference Jensen and Luthans2006; Peus et al., Reference Peus, Wesche, Streicher, Braun and Frey2012; Walumbwa et al., Reference Walumbwa, Avolio, Gardner, Wernsing and Peterson2008; Wong, Spence-Laschinger, & Cummings, Reference Wong, Spence-Laschinger and Cummings2010) and further support the utility of authentic leadership in the business sphere. Our results also support recent contributions in the literature that position followers' personal identification with their leader and their affect-based trust as the two primary mediators of authentic leadership efficacy (see Clapp-Smith, Vogelgesang, & Avey, Reference Clapp-Smith, Vogelgesang and Avey2009; Giallonardo, Wong, & Iwasiw, Reference Giallonardo, Wong and Iwasiw2010; Wong, Spence-Laschinger, & Cummings, Reference Wong, Spence-Laschinger and Cummings2010).

We advance work in this field by adding followers' affective organizational commitment as a major mediating mechanism. Consistent with our theoretical framework, authentic leadership delivered positive employee outcomes through three sequentially mediating mechanisms: personal identification, affect-based trust, and affective organizational commitment. Affective commitment is therefore at the core of the individual-level processes that transpire between followers' experience of authentic leadership behavior and their positive work-related outcomes. Employees' affective organizational commitment connects their personal identification and affect-based trust in with their work engagement and job satisfaction. This contribution to our understanding of authentic leadership processes comes from expanding the empirical investigation past the mechanisms of the individual relationships (e.g., trust and values identification) to the level of commitment to the wider organization.

The explanation of these results is straightforward: through the authentic leadership relationship followers come to trust and identify with their leader, which makes them actually want to come to work, and thus they become more satisfied and engaged. Personal identification in the present context is the process whereby individuals come to (re)define themselves in alignment with their leader's values. The candid, relationship-oriented approach of authentic leadership facilitates and encourages this personal identification process. As followers begin to personally identify with the authentic leader, they come to embrace the leader's values and goals as their own. According to social identity theory, leaders represent the organization and the resulting value-congruence thereby translates into increased affective organizational commitment, since the leaders are espousing values that the followers hold salient.

The results also suggest that as followers come to personally identify with their authentic leaders, they subsequently develop increased affect-based trust. A portion of the effect of authentic leadership on followers' trust occurs through the process of personal identification, wherein the followers' self-concept becomes derived from and congruent with that of the authentic leader. As employees come to know and personally identify with their leader, the leader's actions also make more sense and thereby produce increased trust: employees are more willing to make themselves vulnerable to authentic leaders with transparent goals and values. The combination of followers' shared values and authentic leaders' behavioral consistency creates a partial mediation effect as both sources contribute significantly to followers' increased trust in the leader. Employees who have such positive relationships with their leaders are also more likely to attach emotionally to the work environment through social identity theory, experiencing increased affective organizational commitment. Personal identification and affect-based trust are therefore two primary interconnected mechanisms through which authentic leadership improves followers' work-related outcomes.

The pivotal role of employees' affective organizational commitment in our framework challenges the typical position of the construct as a dependent variable. Theoretical implications arise by reframing affective commitment as a key mediating mechanism rather than as a terminal outcome. Employees who become emotionally attached to their organization – who want to come to work – begin to experience positive work-related outcomes, such as increased organizational citizenship behavior, discretionary effort, resilience, and reduced turnover, absenteeism, bullying behavior. At a time when individual careers routinely span multiple organizations and scholars question whether the commitment is even desirable (cf. Klein, Molloy, & Brinsfield, Reference Klein, Molloy and Brinsfield2012), we demonstrate the true value of forming such positive emotional bonds with your workplace. Leadership research should therefore focus on ways to develop employees' affective commitment, as their emotional attachment to the organization may prove to be more important than the work itself, their remuneration, or the workplace culture. Moreover, our serial mediation model shows that positive leader-follower relationships are the key to developing employees' organizational commitment.

Practical implications

Building self-awareness and authenticity are lifetime pursuits (Erickson, Reference Erickson1995; Gardner et al., Reference Gardner, Avolio, Luthans, May and Walumbwa2005; Heidegger, Reference Heidegger, Macquarrie and Robinson1962; Sartre, Reference Sartre and Barnes1943). The present study highlights the central role of forming follower relationships characterized by shared identity and mutual trust. Developing an authentic leadership approach requires a substantial investment of leaders' two most valuable resources: energy and time. The results, however, are well worth the effort. Our findings are congruent with prior research (Banks et al., Reference Banks, McCauley, Gardner and Guler2016) and confirm that authentic leadership delivers quantifiable increases across key employee metrics, including work engagement and job satisfaction, which serve as proxies for performance. Moreover, we identify followers' affective organizational commitment as the mechanism at the heart of authentic leadership: employees who have authentic leaders tend to want to come to work.

Engaged, satisfied employees, who want to come to work because they trust and identify with their leader, build enduring organizations and create lasting shareholder value (George, Reference George2003). Managers who can foster strong emotional bonds between their employees and the organization – by developing trusting relationships and shared values – will improve their employees' performance. Organizations can therefore improve their overall productivity by recruiting and selecting managers who demonstrate authentic leadership behavior, and by offering organizational training and development that helps existing managers to cultivate an authentic approach. The first rule of business is to stay in business and those visionaries who are willing to invest in authentic leadership will ultimately surpass their myopic competitors.

Limitations

The present research has limitations. First, the data in this study are from a single high wealth country according to Grimm, Heise, Holzhausen, & Romero (Reference Grimm, Heise, Holzhausen, Romero, Bähr and Weimann2019, p. 123), which suggests that the results may not generalize to medium or low wealth countries. The sample also encompasses a range of industries, cities, and firms; although this sampling strategy gives our findings wider generalizability, it may also prevent us from capturing subtleties that could exist within regions, ethnicities, and work groups. Without testing the wider context within which leadership occurs, we cannot estimate the effects of cross-level interactions: for instance, workers in precarious occupations may employ coping strategies that actively reduce their affective organizational commitment to mitigate psychological strain. By capturing a broad selection of industries, we estimate mean effects across most business contexts, and subsequent studies may seek to narrow the scope to explore between-group differences.

Second, this research does not capture respondents' individual differences beyond simple demographic information, some of which may also alter the pattern of results. For example, respondents' cultural values, such as power distance, could attenuate or intensify the observed relations by interacting with their perceptions of authentic leadership – which are culturally embedded (Iszatt-White & Kempster, Reference Iszatt-White and Kempster2018). Since the literature now broadly accepts that culture should be measured at the individual level, rather than assigned at the country level, such hypotheses could be investigated within single-country samples (cf. Beugelsdijk, Kostova, & Roth, Reference Beugelsdijk, Kostova and Roth2017; Kirkman, Lowe, & Gibson, Reference Kirkman, Lowe and Gibson2017). These arguments may be extended to a host of other individual-level differences and future researchers could investigate moderated mediation models to study their effects on the processes that connect authentic leadership to desirable follower outcomes.

The third limitation regards the issue of causality. The present design cannot establish whether employees' affective organizational commitment leads to increased job satisfaction, or if satisfied employees only then begin to develop an emotional attachment to their organization. However, we provide sound theoretical arguments for the sequence of mediated effects, which inform the causal structure of our model and are corroborated by the data; indeed, a simple re-arrangement of the variables yields no other viable model with acceptable fit properties. Similarly, we cannot estimate the effects of employees' positive leader-directed affect on their responses (Martinko, Mackey, Moss, Harvey, McAllister, & Brees, Reference Martinko, Mackey, Moss, Harvey, McAllister and Brees2018), or what effects the present processes may have on other unexamined variables of consequence. For example, Kark, Shamir, and Chen (Reference Kark, Shamir and Chen2003) find in their investigation of transformational leadership that personal identification may also have a darker side: increasing followers' dependence on the leader, rather than their empowerment.

Future research

Future streams of authentic leadership research could explore longitudinal designs and field experiments to establish the causality of mediated effects. Business leadership training, interventions, seminars, or retreats could serve as suitable contexts for an experimental research design, where survey data is collected before and after for direct comparison. The control group can receive the same leadership training after the study has been completed so as to not disadvantage any one group of participants. The present stream of research may also benefit from a multi-level design to explore whether positive leadership forms may create a climate of affective organizational commitment comprised of multiple mutually-reinforcing actors that generates desirable work-related outcomes. Similar study designs abound in ethical leadership climate research and could be adapted to suit the present context. Future scholars may also consider what moderating variables alter the nature of relations between followers' affective organizational commitment and its various antecedents to explore under what conditions positive leadership forms produce increased commitment.

Conclusion

The present work offers significant advances to authentic leadership research and the results have meaningful implications for academics and practitioners alike. By identifying the three mediating mechanisms of authentic leadership we contextualize its operation with important organizational processes and outcomes. In particular, we extend existing research on the relational mediators of authentic leadership by connecting them to desirable follower outcomes. In doing so, we challenge traditional notions of commitment that position it as a terminal variable: instead, we demonstrate how followers' affective organizational commitment mediates authentic leadership efficacy and operates as an antecedent of positive work-related outcomes. Thus we contribute to ongoing authentic leadership research by untangling some of the complex processes at work behind the ephemeral construct.

Appendix A

Personal Identification with Leader Scale (PILS) Items

Appendix B

Structural Equation Modelling Analysis of Authentic Leadership Processes

Note. N = 281, * p < .05, ** p < .001. Model fit indices: χ2/df (503) = 1.80, p = .00, GFI = .84; CFI = .95; NFI = .90; RMSEA = .05.

Footnotes

Note. N = 281. AIC = Average Inter-item Correlation. Adapted from Kark, Shamir, and Chen (2003).

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Serial multiple mediation analysis of authentic leadership processes.Note. N = 281, * p < .05, ** p < .001. Non-significant (p > .05) mediation paths are suppressed for clarity. Dotted path indicates correlation.

Figure 1

Table 1. Correlation analysis of latent study variables

Figure 2

Table 2. Reliability and validity analysis of study scales

Figure 3

Table 3. Results of nested model comparison

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Table 4. Serial multiple mediation analysis of authentic leadership on work engagement

Figure 5

Table 5. Serial multiple mediation analysis of authentic leadership on job satisfaction