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Values congruence, organization-based self-esteem, and employee responses: Evidence from Sri Lanka

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dc.contributor.author Gardner, DG
dc.contributor.author Wickramasinghe, V
dc.contributor.author Pierce, JL
dc.date.accessioned 2023-04-04T06:30:44Z
dc.date.available 2023-04-04T06:30:44Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.citation Gardner, D. G., Wickramasinghe, V., & Pierce, J. L. (2018). Values congruence, organization-based self-esteem, and employee responses: Evidence from Sri Lanka. International Journal of Cross Cultural Management, 18(3), 349–372. https://doi.org/10.1177/1470595818814053 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1470-5958 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://dl.lib.uom.lk/handle/123/20854
dc.description.abstract Expatriate managers are often advised to adapt their leadership styles and organizational cultures to the culture of the country in which they operate. This advice appears to be reasonable, but it has rarely been empirically tested. In this study, we examine the degree to which congruence of organization and individual cultural values affect employees. We collected data from business managers and executives in Sri Lanka, a country that has not been well studied by international management scholars. We hypothesized that personally embraced values that are consistent with broader cultural values would have relationships with self-esteem. Further, because people are also motivated to verify and enhance their levels of self-esteem in culturally consistent ways, we hypothesized that self-esteem at work would mediate relationships of values with prosocial motivation and intent to maintain membership in the organization. We found that culturally consistent, self-transcendence personal values did relate uniquely to organization-based self-esteem (OBSE). In addition, OBSE mediated the relationships between self-transcendence values, and work-based prosocial motivation and intent to stay. Moderated mediation analyses revealed that strong values fit weakened the mediating effect of OBSE on self-transcendence—outcomes and conservation—outcome relationships, contrary to our hypotheses. It appears that the advice to modify organizational culture to fit local culture should be qualified by also recommending that such changes are not conflict with the organization’s existing, successful culture. Our study also sheds some light on the cultural values of Sri Lanka. This is the first study to explicitly examine these relationships within a work context as well as one of few studies to examine personal values in Sri Lanka. en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher SAGE Publications en_US
dc.subject Culture en_US
dc.subject self-enhancement en_US
dc.subject self-esteem en_US
dc.subject self-verification en_US
dc.subject Sri Lanka en_US
dc.subject values en_US
dc.subject values fit en_US
dc.title Values congruence, organization-based self-esteem, and employee responses: Evidence from Sri Lanka en_US
dc.type Article-Full-text en_US
dc.identifier.year 2018 en_US
dc.identifier.journal International Journal of Cross Cultural Management en_US
dc.identifier.issue 3 en_US
dc.identifier.volume 18 en_US
dc.identifier.database SAGE Journals en_US
dc.identifier.pgnos 349-372 en_US
dc.identifier.doi doi.org/10.1177/1470595818814053 en_US


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