Making Things Happen Through Challenging Goals: Leader Proactivity, Trust, and Business-Unit Performance

Building on decades of research on the proactivity of individual performers, this study integrates research on goal setting and trust in leadership to examine manager proactivity and business unit sales performance in one of the largest sales organizations in the United States. Results of a moderate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied psychology 2013-05, Vol.98 (3), p.540-549
Hauptverfasser: Crossley, Craig D., Cooper, Cecily D., Wernsing, Tara S.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Building on decades of research on the proactivity of individual performers, this study integrates research on goal setting and trust in leadership to examine manager proactivity and business unit sales performance in one of the largest sales organizations in the United States. Results of a moderated-mediation model suggest that proactive senior managers establish more challenging goals for their business units (N = 50), which in turn are associated with higher sales performance. We further found that employees' trust in the manager is a critical contingency variable that facilitates the relationship between challenging sales goals and subsequent sales performance. This research contributes to growing literatures on trust in leadership and proactivity by studying their joint effects at a district-unit level of analysis while identifying district managers' tendency to set challenging goals as a process variable that helps translate their proactivity into the collective performance of their units.
ISSN:0021-9010
1939-1854
DOI:10.1037/a0031807