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When the meaning of work has disappeared: Experimental evidence on employees' performance and emotions

When the meaning of work has disappeared: Experimental evidence on employees' performance and emotions
When the meaning of work has disappeared: Experimental evidence on employees' performance and emotions
This experiment tests for a causal relationship between the meaning of work and employees' motivation to perform well. The study builds on an existing employer-employee relationship, adding realism to the ongoing research of task meaning. Owing to an unexpected project cancelation, we are able to study how varying the information provided about the meaning of previously conducted work-without the use of deception, but still maintaining a high level of control-affects subsequent performance. We observe a strong decline in exerted effort when we inform workers about the meaninglessness of a job already done. Our data also suggests that providing a supplemental alternative meaning perfectly compensates for this negative performance effect. Individual characteristics such as reciprocal inclinations and trust prompt different reactions. The data also show that the meaning of work affects workers' emotions, but we cannot establish a clear relationship between emotional responses and performance.
Field experiment, Meaning of work, Real-effort task, Reciprocity, Worker motivation
0025-1909
1696-1707
Chadi, Adrian
9b86c34e-9340-465f-a4c0-492202a0958a
Jeworrek, Sabrina
6150cfbc-07c7-40e3-8860-b7ce1825b0cb
Mertins, Vanessa
ca253dea-0b74-4282-b50b-639680a06b48
Chadi, Adrian
9b86c34e-9340-465f-a4c0-492202a0958a
Jeworrek, Sabrina
6150cfbc-07c7-40e3-8860-b7ce1825b0cb
Mertins, Vanessa
ca253dea-0b74-4282-b50b-639680a06b48

Chadi, Adrian, Jeworrek, Sabrina and Mertins, Vanessa (2017) When the meaning of work has disappeared: Experimental evidence on employees' performance and emotions. Management Science, 63 (6), 1696-1707. (doi:10.1287/mnsc.2016.2426).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This experiment tests for a causal relationship between the meaning of work and employees' motivation to perform well. The study builds on an existing employer-employee relationship, adding realism to the ongoing research of task meaning. Owing to an unexpected project cancelation, we are able to study how varying the information provided about the meaning of previously conducted work-without the use of deception, but still maintaining a high level of control-affects subsequent performance. We observe a strong decline in exerted effort when we inform workers about the meaninglessness of a job already done. Our data also suggests that providing a supplemental alternative meaning perfectly compensates for this negative performance effect. Individual characteristics such as reciprocal inclinations and trust prompt different reactions. The data also show that the meaning of work affects workers' emotions, but we cannot establish a clear relationship between emotional responses and performance.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 5 May 2016
Published date: January 2017
Keywords: Field experiment, Meaning of work, Real-effort task, Reciprocity, Worker motivation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496039
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496039
ISSN: 0025-1909
PURE UUID: c8763ae8-161e-44f1-bc55-6e0fa405563f
ORCID for Adrian Chadi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2008-0653

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 Dec 2024 17:34
Last modified: 17 Dec 2024 03:11

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Contributors

Author: Adrian Chadi ORCID iD
Author: Sabrina Jeworrek
Author: Vanessa Mertins

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