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Journal ArticleDOI

Focusing on the bright tomorrow? A longitudinal study of organizational identification and projected continuity in a corporate merger.

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TLDR
It is concluded that a key challenge in merger integration is to support high identifiers in the subordinate group in developing a projected continuity or a focus on ‘the bright tomorrow'.
Abstract
Past research provides evidence that organizational identification is a key factor predicting employees’ behaviours during mergers and acquisitions. In particular, recent studies demonstrate that members of the subordinate merger partner, in contrast to the dominant group, often find it difficult to transfer their identification to the post-merger organization. To understand this difference between dominant and subordinate groups, we examined employees’ sense of projected continuity in the future. We argue that projected continuity mediates the differential relationships between pre-merger and post-merger identification and propose that pre-merger identification relates positively to projected continuity in the dominant group but negatively in the subordinate group. As a result, the overall relationship between pre- and post-merger identification should be reduced or eliminated in the subordinate compared with the dominant group. We tested our hypotheses in a survey (N = 492) distributed in a merger of two international pharmaceutical companies at the beginning of the post-merger integration and 15 months later. Results were consistent with our assumptions of a moderated mediation effect. We conclude that a key challenge in merger integration is to support high identifiers in the subordinate group in developing a projected continuity or a focus on ‘the bright tomorrow'.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Challenge of Integration: A Review of the M&A Integration Literature

TL;DR: The integration of acquired or merging firms is a key driver of the success or failure of mergers and acquisitions (M&As) as mentioned in this paper, where integration success is a function of context, structural and communication-based interventions, which interact with collective sensemaking processes and negotiations among integration stakeholders.
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Where there is light, there is dark: A review of the detrimental outcomes of high organizational identification

TL;DR: A recent review of organizational identification literature suggests that organizational identification can lead to unethical behaviors, resistance to organizational change, lower performance, interpersonal conflict, negative emotions, and reduced well-being as discussed by the authors.
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The moderating role of transformational leadership on HR practices in M&A integration

TL;DR: In this paper, a conceptual framework that focuses on the moderating role of transformational leadership on the achievement of human integration and organizational identification in M&A integration is developed, arguing that communication, employee involvement, teamwork, and training and development have a positive effect on employee behavior and their identification with the newly formed organization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Employees’ responses to an organizational merger: Intraindividual change in organizational identification, attachment, and turnover.

TL;DR: The authors used pre-post merger data from 599 employees experiencing a major corporate merger to compare 3 conceptual models based on the logic of social identity theory (SIT) and exchange theory to explain employees’ merger responses and suggest an emergent fourth model that integrates the first and second models.
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Identity Management during Organizational Mergers: Empirical Insights and Practical Advice

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors take a social identity approach to M&As, exploring the impact of M&A activities on employees and their local communities, and highlight the pivotal role played by identity reputation and continuity, intergroup structure and processes, leadership and justice in managing employee adjustment during M&AS.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Alumni and their alma mater: A partial test of the reformulated model of organizational identification

TL;DR: In this article, self-report data from 297 alumni of an all-male religious college indicate that identification with the alma mater was associated with: (1) the hypothesized organizational antecedents of organizational distinctiveness, organizational prestige, and (absence of) intraorganizational competition, but not with interorganization competition, the hypothesized individual antecedent of satisfaction with the organization, tenure as students, and sentimentality, not with recency of attendance, number of schools attended, or the existence of a mentor, and hypothesized outcomes of making financial contributions, willingness to
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Organizational images and member identification.

TL;DR: In this paper, Bergami et al. developed a model to explain how images of one's work organization shape the strength of his or her identification with the organization and how members assess the attractiveness of these images by how well the image preserves the continuity of their self-concept, provides distinctiveness, and enhances self-esteem.
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Methods for integrating moderation and mediation: a general analytical framework using moderated path analysis.

TL;DR: A general analytical framework for combining moderation and mediation that integrates moderated regression analysis and path analysis is presented that clarifies how moderator variables influence the paths that constitute the direct, indirect, and total effects of mediated models.
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Social Identity and Self-Categorization Processes in Organizational Contexts

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss cohesion and deviance, leadership, subgroup and sociodemographic structure, and mergers and acquisitions in organizational psychology, and show how these developments can address a range of organizational phenomena.
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