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Wednesday 19 September 2012

Organizational identification among global virtual team members: The role of individualism–collectivism and uncertainty avoidance

 

Journal cover: Cross Cultural Management: An International Journal

Cross Cultural Management: An International Journal

ISSN: 1352-7606
Online from: 1994
Subject Area: International Business
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EarlyCite Article
Organizational identification among global virtual team members: The role of individualism–collectivism and uncertainty avoidance


Document Information:
Title:Organizational identification among global virtual team members: The role of individualism–collectivism and uncertainty avoidance
Author(s):Debmalya Mukherjee, (The University of Akron), Susan Hanlon, (The University of Akron), Ben L Kedia, (The University of Memphis), Prashant Srivastava, (The University of Akron)
Citation:Debmalya Mukherjee, Susan Hanlon, Ben L Kedia, Prashant Srivastava, (2012) "Organizational identification among global virtual team members: The role of individualism–collectivism and uncertainty avoidance", Cross Cultural Management: An International Journal, Vol. 19 Iss: 4
Article type:Research paper
Publisher:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Abstract:Purpose - Organizational identification refers to a perception of "oneness" with an organization. This article provides a model of organizational identification for virtual team workers and examines the role of cultural dimensions in a virtual setting. Specifically, it poses individualism–collectivism and uncertainty avoidance as potential situational contingencies that may affect the determinants of an organizational identification relationship in a virtual work setting.
Design/methodology/approach - The proposed research framework delineates how cultural dimensions relate to virtual work–associated individual (interpersonal trust, need for affiliation) and environmental (spatial and cultural dispersion, ICT-enabled communication) factors and organizational identification. Several testable propositions emerge.
Findings - This study provides a foundation for empirical studies that examine the linkages among organizational identification, virtual work, and environment-related factors and cultural variables.
Practical implications - This study has particular implications for managing virtual teams, as well as specific suggestions for a typology of virtual team members. The typology supports a consideration of expected levels of organizational identification, depending on virtual team member types.
Originality/value - Scholars have devoted very little attention to exploring what factors drive or impede organizational identification in cross-cultural virtual teams. This analysis attempts to fill that void by linking the immediate determinants and the contingency role of cultural variables or organizational identification in the context of virtual work.

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