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Journal ArticleDOI

A meta-analytic review of attitudinal and dispositional predictors of organizational citizenship behavior

Dennis W. Organ, +1 more
- 01 Dec 1995 - 
- Vol. 48, Iss: 4, pp 775-802
TLDR
A quantitative review of 55 studies supports the conclusion that job attitudes are robust predictors of organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) as discussed by the authors, and the relationship between job satisfaction and OCB is stronger than that between satisfaction and in-role performance, at least among nonmanagerial and nonprofessional groups.
Abstract
A quantitative review of 55 studies supports the conclusion that job attitudes are robust predictors of organizational citizenship behavior (OCB). The relationship between job satisfaction and OCB is stronger than that between satisfaction and in-role performance, at least among nonmanagerial and nonprofessional groups. Other attitudinal measures (perceived fairness, organizational commitment, leader supportiveness) correlate with OCB at roughly the same level as satisfaction. Dispositional measures do not correlate nearly as well with OCB (with the exception of conscientiousness). The most notable moderator of these correlations appears to be the use of self- versus other-rating of OCB; self-ratings are associated with higher correlations, suggesting spurious inflation due to common method variance, and much greater variance in correlation. Differences in subject groups and work settings do not account for much variance in the relationships. Implications are noted for theory, practice, and strategies for future research on OCB.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Organizational Citizenship Behaviors: A Critical Review of the Theoretical and Empirical Literature and Suggestions for Future Research

TL;DR: The rapid growth of research on organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs) has resulted in some conceptual confusion about the nature of the construct, and made it difficult for all but the most avid readers to keep up with developments in this domain this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The job satisfaction-job performance relationship: a qualitative and quantitative review.

TL;DR: A qualitative and quantitative review of the relationship between job satisfaction and job performance is provided and an agenda for future research on the satisfaction-performance relationship is provided.
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Trust in Leadership: Meta-Analytic Findings and Implications for Research and Practice

TL;DR: Estimates of the primary relationships between trust in leadership and key outcomes, antecedents, and correlates are provided and a theoretical framework is offered to provide parsimony to the expansive literature and to clarify the different perspectives on the construct of trust in Leadership and its operation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Meaning of Employee Engagement

TL;DR: In this paper, the meaning of employee engagement is ambiguous among both academic researchers and among practitioners who use it in conversations with clients, and they show that the term is used at different times to refer to psychological states, traits and behaviors as well as their antecedents and outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Helping and Voice Extra-Role Behaviors: Evidence of Construct and Predictive Validity

TL;DR: In this article, the importance of extra-role behavior in explaining employee performance over a six-month period was demonstrated, and a field study of 597 employees demonstrated that extra role behavior can explain employee performance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Percept-Percept Inflation in Microorganizational Research: An Investigation of Prevalence and Effect

TL;DR: In this article, a study of 42,934 correlations published in 581 articles revealed general evidence that self-report methods have produced percept-percept inflation in micro-research on organizations and suggested that this effect is diminished when 1 or both covariates are demographic variables.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role Definitions and Organizational Citizenship Behavior: The Importance of the Employee's Perspective

TL;DR: A survey of 317 clerical workers demonstrated that employees differed in what they defined as in-role and extra-role behavior, that these differences were related to commitment and social cues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Individualism-collectivism as an individual difference predictor of organizational citizenship behavior

TL;DR: This article found that if an individual holds collectivistic values or norms, he/she would be more likely to perform citizenship behaviors, and this relationship was found to be robust to common method effects and to the effect of the relationship between procedural justice and OCB.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organizational citizenship behaviors and sales unit effectiveness

TL;DR: Organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs) are defined as discretionary, extra-role behaviors on the part of a salesperson that have been shown to influence managers' evaluations of performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

On traits and temperament: general and specific factors of emotional experience and their relation to the five-factor model.

TL;DR: The results for Neuroticism and Extraversion further clarify the temperamental basis of these higher order trait dimensions; whereas those obtained for Agreeableness and Conscientiousness illustrate the importance of examining personality-affect relations at the lower order level.
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