Paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety
Purpose – This study expands on research related to the dark side of personality traits by examining how individual dark personality affects proactive work behaviours. Specifically, the authors consider paranoia as a dark personality trait and propose that it negatively relates to perceived psycholo...
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2021
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Online Access: | http://repo.uum.edu.my/28267/1/JSTP%2031%201%202021%20113%20135.pdf http://repo.uum.edu.my/28267/ http://doi.org/10.1108/JSTP-05-2020-0104 |
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my.uum.repo.282672021-04-14T06:12:26Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/28267/ Paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety Bani-Melhem, Shaker Mohd Shamsudin, Faridahwati Mazen Abukhait, Rawan Quratulain, Samina BF Psychology Purpose – This study expands on research related to the dark side of personality traits by examining how individual dark personality affects proactive work behaviours. Specifically, the authors consider paranoia as a dark personality trait and propose that it negatively relates to perceived psychological safety and indirectly affects front line employees’ (FLEs) willingness to report customer complaints as well as their extra-role customer service. The authors also posit that empathetic leadership is a focal, contextual factor that mitigates the impact of paranoia on perceived psychological safety and, consequently, the willingness to report customer complaints and engage in extra-role customer service behaviour. Design/methodology/approach – The model was tested on a sample of 252 FLEs using process macro (Hayes, 2017) and AMOS. Data were collected from FLEs working in different hospitality organisations using a time-lagged design; supervisor-rated employee extra-role customer service was also measured. Findings – The authors found that FLEs with a paranoid personality trait had a lesser sense of psychological safety at work, which reduced their willingness to engage in proactive work behaviours. However, this negative effect was mitigated by the presence of an empathetic leader. Originality/value – The results are important because research has yet to determine which actions managers should take to counter the negative effects of dark personalities in the workplace Emerald Publishing Limited 2021 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/28267/1/JSTP%2031%201%202021%20113%20135.pdf Bani-Melhem, Shaker and Mohd Shamsudin, Faridahwati and Mazen Abukhait, Rawan and Quratulain, Samina (2021) Paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety. Journal of Service Theory and Practice, 31 (1). pp. 113-135. ISSN 2055-6225 http://doi.org/10.1108/JSTP-05-2020-0104 doi:10.1108/JSTP-05-2020-0104 |
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BF Psychology Bani-Melhem, Shaker Mohd Shamsudin, Faridahwati Mazen Abukhait, Rawan Quratulain, Samina Paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety |
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Purpose – This study expands on research related to the dark side of personality traits by examining how individual dark personality affects proactive work behaviours. Specifically, the authors consider paranoia as a dark personality trait and propose that it negatively relates to perceived psychological safety and indirectly
affects front line employees’ (FLEs) willingness to report customer complaints as well as their extra-role customer service. The authors also posit that empathetic leadership is a focal, contextual factor that mitigates the impact of paranoia on perceived psychological safety and, consequently, the willingness to report customer
complaints and engage in extra-role customer service behaviour. Design/methodology/approach – The model was tested on a sample of 252 FLEs using process macro (Hayes, 2017) and AMOS. Data were collected from FLEs working in different hospitality organisations using a time-lagged design; supervisor-rated employee extra-role customer service was also measured. Findings – The authors found that FLEs with a paranoid personality trait had a lesser sense of psychological safety at work, which reduced their willingness to engage in proactive work behaviours. However, this negative effect was mitigated by the presence of an empathetic leader.
Originality/value – The results are important because research has yet to determine which actions managers should take to counter the negative effects of dark personalities in the workplace |
format |
Article |
author |
Bani-Melhem, Shaker Mohd Shamsudin, Faridahwati Mazen Abukhait, Rawan Quratulain, Samina |
author_facet |
Bani-Melhem, Shaker Mohd Shamsudin, Faridahwati Mazen Abukhait, Rawan Quratulain, Samina |
author_sort |
Bani-Melhem, Shaker |
title |
Paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety |
title_short |
Paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety |
title_full |
Paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety |
title_fullStr |
Paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety |
title_full_unstemmed |
Paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety |
title_sort |
paranoid personality and frontline employee’s proactive work behaviours: a moderated mediation model of empathetic leadership and perceived psychological safety |
publisher |
Emerald Publishing Limited |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
http://repo.uum.edu.my/28267/1/JSTP%2031%201%202021%20113%20135.pdf http://repo.uum.edu.my/28267/ http://doi.org/10.1108/JSTP-05-2020-0104 |
_version_ |
1698699665344561152 |
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13.160551 |