Abstract
A leader’s expressed humility has a favorable influence on subordinates’ job satisfaction, creativity, and performance. However, we know little about how humility affects one’s same-level coworkers. Shifting focus away from leader’s humility, we suggest that coworker humility can also produce positive effects but has a relationship-specific component. Some coworker relationships are characterized by greater expression of humility than others. Specifically, we hypothesize that when a coworker expresses a uniquely high degree of humility to another coworker (i.e., relationship-specific humility), the latter coworker experiences a uniquely high level of psychological safety (i.e., relationship-specific psychological safety), which in turn leads that coworker to perform better (i.e., relationship-specific performance). Pilot Study 1 (N = 155, in 32 teams, yielding 823 relationship-specific ratings) showed that humility has a substantial relationshipspecific variance component, even in unacquainted teams. Pilot Study 2 (N = 180, in 39 teams, yielding 854 relationship-specific ratings) built on these results in a sample of moderately acquainted teams and showed that relationship-specific humility is associated with relationship-specific perceptions of performance. The Main Study (N = 133, in 32 well-acquainted work teams, yielding 555 relationship-specific ratings) tested our full model. It demonstrated that the association between relationship-specific humility and relationshipspecific performance is mediated by relationship-specific psychological safety.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 809-825 |
| Number of pages | 17 |
| Journal | Journal of Applied Psychology |
| Volume | 108 |
| Issue number | 5 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 13 Oct 2022 |
Keywords
- dyads
- humility
- performance
- psychological safety
- social relations modeling
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- Applied Psychology