“I’m a high flyer – what’s my return?” - How perceived overperformance decreases trust and job satisfaction in virtual teams

Romeike P, Nienaber A, Schewe G

Research article in edited proceedings (conference) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Employees frequently engage in social comparison processes and have a tendency to perceive theirown performance as superior compared to that of their peers. We expect this to be particularly salientin virtual teams where employees receive few cues upon which the comparison with their teammembers can be based. With reliance on social exchange theory, we propose that such ‘perceivedoverperformance' has negative effects on individual job satisfaction which are mediated by individualtrust in team. We confirm this with a sample of field-service employees (753 employees, 57 virtualteams) using structural equation modelling and hierarchical regressions. Our findings imply the needfor performance indicators that are easily communicated to and comprehended by employees tomaintain trust and satisfaction.

Details about the publication

Statusaccepted / in press (not yet published)
Release year2014
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
ConferenceAustralian and New Zealand Academy of Managament (ANZAM), Sydney, Australia, undefined

Authors from the University of Münster

Nienaber, Ann-Marie
Chair of Organization, Human Resource Management and Innovation
Romeike, Philipp Daniel
Research Training Group 1712 "Trust and Communication in a Digitized World" (GRK 1712)
Schewe, Gerhard
Chair of Organization, Human Resource Management and Innovation