Ways Managers Interpret and Act on Common Workplace Events: Implications For the Entrepreneurial Executive
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-2009
Publication Title
The Entrepreneurial Executive
ISSN
1939-4667
Abstract
Entrepreneurial executives actively seek opportunities for their companies. Their efforts to identify these opportunities and commercially exploit them can be greatly enhanced by subordinates that constructively collaborate with their coworkers to actively seek information that leads to opportunity recognition and exploitation. This study assesses the effect of the Need for Closure (NFC) on the degree credit union managers rely on their own experiences and coworkers of equal hierarchical rank in interpreting common workplace events. The patterns of behavior they exhibited in interpreting and acting on these events should also be reflective of how these individuals would pursue entrepreneurial activities. Respondents were classified into two equal size groups based on their NFC (Webster & Kruglanski, 1994; Kruglanski, Webster & Klem, 1993) scale scores. The high and low NFC group’s scores on the Event Management Questionnaire (Smith, Peterson & Schwartz, 2002) were then compared as to the effect their own experiences and coworkers of equal hierarchical rank had on managing workplace events. The results supported the hypothesis that NFC would be negatively related to the reliance on coworkers, but did not support the hypothesis that NFC would be positively related to reliance on the managers’ prior experience. Post Hoc analysis revealed that the relationship between NFC and reliance on coworkers was only significant in the case of female respondents.
Recommended Citation
Leaptrott, John, J. Michael McDonald.
2009.
"Ways Managers Interpret and Act on Common Workplace Events: Implications For the Entrepreneurial Executive."
The Entrepreneurial Executive, 14 (1): 81-93: Academy of Entrepreneurship.
source: https://www.abacademies.org/journals/entrepreneurial-executive-home.html
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/management-facpubs/136
Copyright
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.