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Leader Benefits: Exploring how L eaders Benefit from LMX

Leader Benefits: Exploring how L eaders Benefit from LMX. Jeffrey Muldoon Dissertation Proposal Defense Louisiana State University. Overview. Leader Member Exchange --Social Exchange Statement of the Problem Hypotheses & Model Proposed Methods Contributions. Terms.

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Leader Benefits: Exploring how L eaders Benefit from LMX

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  1. Leader Benefits: Exploring how Leaders Benefit from LMX Jeffrey Muldoon Dissertation Proposal Defense Louisiana State University

  2. Overview • Leader Member Exchange --Social Exchange • Statement of the Problem • Hypotheses & Model • Proposed Methods • Contributions

  3. Terms • LMX - social exchange relationship between a subordinate and his or her supervisor (Liden et al., 1997; Erdogan & Liden, 2002) • Social exchange - the “general expectation of some future return, [although] its exact nature is definitely not stipulated in advance” (Blau, 1964, p. 93)

  4. Statement of the Problem • Scholars assume, but have not yet empirically demonstrated, supervisors gain personal benefits from LMX relationships (Erdogan & Liden, 2002; van Brekuelen et al., 2006; Wilson et al., 2010). • Understanding how those benefits are acquired, such as behaviors and how moderators influence those behaviors

  5. Hypotheses • Hypothesis 1: Supervisor-rated LMX is positively related to subordinate-rated social support. • Hypothesis 2: The positive relationship between supervisor-rated LMX and subordinate-rated social support is moderated by the managerial span of control. The relationship will be strongest when span of control is smaller.

  6. Hypotheses • Hypothesis 3: The positive relationship between supervisor-rated LMX and subordinate-rated social support is moderated by the supervisor-rated LLX. Such that the relationship will be stronger when LLX is higher (Blau, 1964; Homans, 1961; Graen & Scandura, 1987; Wilson et al., 2010).

  7. Hypotheses • Hypothesis 4: Subordinate-rated social support partially mediates the relationship between supervisor-rated LMX and the supervisor-rated performance of organizational citizenship behaviors directed to the supervisor (OCBIs) (Emerson, 1981; Foa & Foa, 1976, 1980).

  8. Hypotheses • Hypothesis 5: Subordinate-rated social support will mediate the relationship between supervisor-rated LMX and supervisor-rated OCBs. The first step of this relationship will be moderated by (a) supervisor-rated span of control and (b) supervisor-rated LLX.

  9. Hypotheses • Hypothesis 6: Supervisor-rated organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs) directed towards supervisors are positively related to the supervisor-rated level of satisfaction with their subordinate. • Hypothesis 7: Supervisor-rated organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs) directed towards supervisors are positively related to the supervisor-rated level of managerial self-efficacy (MSE).

  10. Hypotheses • Hypothesis 8: Supervisor-rated organizational citizenship behaviors (OCBs) directed towards supervisors are positively related to the supervisor-rated level of organizational-based self-esteem (OBSE) (Lawler, 2001; Homans, 1950; Weiner, 1985, 1986).

  11. Model How Supervisors Accrue Benefits in LMX Key: SR = Supervisor Rated EE = Employee Rated Moderators: Span of Control (SR) LLX (SR) Supervisor Social Support (EE) Subordinate Organizational Citizenship Behaviors (SR) LMX (From the supervisor’s perspective) (SR) Supervisor Benefits • Job Satisfaction with Subordinate (SR) • Managerial Self-Efficacy (SR) • Organizational-Based Self-Esteem (SR)

  12. Proposed Methods Sample • The sample will consist of full-time working adults from multiple organizations and their immediate supervisors. Procedure: • Sample Supervisor at Time 1, collect LMX, LLX, span of control and gain contact information • Sample Subordinate at Time 2 for social support • Sample Supervisor at Time 2 for Subordinate OCBs, MSE, OBSE, and satisfaction

  13. Measures • Leader Member Exchange and LLX (Bernerth et al., 2007-adopted)—supervisor rated • Span of Control (Hill & Hoskisson, 1987)—supervisor rated • Social Support (Abbey et al., 1985)—employee rated • OCBs (Rupp & Cropanzano, 2002)—supervisor rated • OBSE (Pierce et al., 1989)—supervisor rated • MSE (Robertson & Sadri, 1993)—supervisor rated • Subordinate Satisfaction (Spector, 1985)—supervisor rated

  14. Data Analysis • Tests of Model Fit and Construct Distinctiveness • Confirmatory factor analyses • Standardized factor loadings above .50 • Reliability coefficients above .70 (Cronbach, 1951; Raykov, 1997) • AVEs above .50 (Fornell & Larcker, 1981) • Tests of Hypotheses • Path Analysis • Mediation analyses with bootstrapping • Preacher, Rucker, and Hayes (2007)

  15. Thank you! Questions? Comments? Concerns?

  16. Why Social Support? • Blau, 1964—social support as a means of creating a cohesive, stable relationship • Foa & Foa, 1976, 1980—on the importance of resource types • Graen & Scandura, 1987—discretionary resources • Halbesleben & Buckley, 2004—cost

  17. Why LLX & Span of Control? • Barnard, 1938—cooperation through dyads • Blau, 1964—social structures • Emerson, 1972a,b—exchange networks and nodes

  18. Why OCBs? • Similar resources • Emerson & path dependence • Successful exchange value

  19. Why Satisfaction, OBSE, & MSE? • Homans, 1961—propositions in that people look for whether their actions will lead to positive outcomes • Lawler, 2001 & Homans, 1950—these positive outcomes could be affective or cognitive • Predictors of other variables

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