The Too-Much-of-a-Good-Thing Effect in Management

被引:722
|
作者
Pierce, Jason R. [1 ]
Aguinis, Herman [1 ]
机构
[1] Indiana Univ, Kelley Sch Business, Dept Management & Entrepreneurship, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA
关键词
management theory; scientific progress; epistemology; meta-theory; WORK CONTEXT SATISFACTIONS; JOB CHARACTERISTICS MODEL; SELF-EFFICACY; CURVILINEAR RELATIONSHIPS; ORGANIZATIONAL GROWTH; CITIZENSHIP BEHAVIOR; INITIATING STRUCTURE; EMPLOYEE GRIEVANCES; DECISION LATITUDE; RANGE RESTRICTION;
D O I
10.1177/0149206311410060
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
A growing body of empirical evidence in the management literature suggests that antecedent variables widely accepted as leading to desirable consequences actually lead to negative outcomes. These increasingly pervasive and often countertheoretical findings permeate levels of analysis (i.e., from micro to macro) and management subfields (e.g., organizational behavior, strategic management). Although seemingly unrelated, the authors contend that this body of empirical research can be accounted for by a meta-theoretical principle they call the too-much-of-a-good-thing effect (TMGT effect). The authors posit that, due to the TMGT effect, all seemingly monotonic positive relations reach context-specific inflection points after which the relations turn asymptotic and often negative, resulting in an overall pattern of curvilinearity. They illustrate how the TMGT effect provides a meta-theoretical explanation for a host of seemingly puzzling results in key areas of organizational behavior (e.g., leadership, personality), human resource management (e.g., job design, personnel selection), entrepreneurship (e. g., new venture planning, firm growth rate), and strategic management (e.g., diversification, organizational slack). Finally, the authors discuss implications of the TMGT effect for theory development, theory testing, and management practice.
引用
收藏
页码:313 / 338
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Is Frequent Service-Learning a Too-Much-of-a-Good-Thing Effect?
    Sabbaghi, Omid
    Cavanagh, Gerald F.
    Hipskind, J. Timothy
    [J]. BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL ETHICS JOURNAL, 2019, 38 (01) : 79 - 110
  • [2] TOO-MUCH-OF-A-GOOD-THING EFFECT OF CONSENT SILENCE ON VOICE IN CYBERBULLYING
    Rad, Dana
    Rad, Gavril
    [J]. EDU WORLD 2018 - 8TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE, 2019, 67 : 186 - 193
  • [3] Curvilinear relationships in person-environment fit research: Is there evidence for a too-much-of-a-good-thing effect?
    Vleugels, Wouter
    Harrison, Huw Flatau
    [J]. JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 96 (03) : 669 - 677
  • [4] Too-much-of-a-good-thing? Is employee engagement always constructive and disengagement always destructive?
    Davis, Amanda S.
    Van der Heijden, Beatrice I. J. M.
    [J]. MANAGEMENT DECISION, 2024, 62 (06) : 1950 - 1976
  • [5] The too-much-of-a-good-thing effect of new ventures' opportunity development on innovation strategy under the Chinese context
    Yin, Miaomiao
    Zhou, Bingyu
    [J]. CROSS CULTURAL & STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT, 2021, 28 (02) : 286 - 308
  • [6] The ABC for Studying the Too-Much-of-a-Good-Thing Effect: A Competitive Mediation Framework Linking Antecedents, Benefits, and Costs
    Busse, Christian
    Mahlendorf, Matthias D.
    Bode, Christoph
    [J]. ORGANIZATIONAL RESEARCH METHODS, 2016, 19 (01) : 131 - 153
  • [7] Leader honesty/humility and subordinate organizational citizenship behavior: a case of too-much-of-a-good-thing?
    Ete, Ziya
    Sosik, John J.
    Cheong, Minyoung
    Chun, Jae Uk
    Zhu, Weichun
    Arenas, Fil J.
    Scherer, Joel A.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MANAGERIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 35 (05) : 391 - 404
  • [8] Too much of a good thing
    Walker, M
    [J]. EUROPEAN CHEMICAL NEWS, 1998, : 24 - 24
  • [9] Too much of a good thing?
    [J]. PC World (San Francisco, CA), 1998, 16 (02):
  • [10] Too much of a good thing?
    McDonald, JC
    [J]. RADIATION PROTECTION DOSIMETRY, 2002, 98 (03) : 267 - 268