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Dive into the research topics where Kristie M. Rogers is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristie M. Rogers.


Organization Science | 2011

Identity in Organizations: Exploring Cross-Level Dynamics

Blake E. Ashforth; Kristie M. Rogers; Kevin G. Corley

Most research on organization-based identities focuses on a single level of analysis, typically the individual, group, or organization. As a spur to more cross-level identity research, we offer speculative discussions on two issues concerning nested identities. First, regarding the processes through which identities become linked across levels, we explore how identities at one level of analysis enable and constrain identities at other levels. We argue that, for a collective identity, intrasubjective understanding (“I think”) fosters intersubjective understanding (“we think”) through interaction, which in turn fosters generic understanding---a sense of the collective that transcends individuals (“it is”). Second, regarding the content of linked identities, we suggest that identities are relatively isomorphic across levels because organizational goals require some internal coherence. However, for various intended and unintended reasons, isomorphism is often impeded across levels, and identities tend to become somewhat differentiated.


Organization Science | 2014

Ambivalence in Organizations: A Multilevel Approach

Blake E. Ashforth; Kristie M. Rogers; Michael G. Pratt; Camille Pradies

The experience of simultaneously positive and negative orientations toward a person, goal, task, idea, and such appears to be quite common in organizations, but it is poorly understood. We develop a multilevel perspective on ambivalence in organizations that demonstrates how this phenomenon is integral to certain cognitive and emotional processes and important outcomes. Specifically, we discuss the organizational triggers of ambivalence and the cognitive and emotional mechanisms through which ambivalence diffuses between the individual and collective levels of analysis. We offer an integrative framework of major responses to highly intense ambivalence avoidance, domination, compromise, and holism that is applicable to actors at the individual and collective levels. The positive and negative outcomes associated with each response, and the conditions under which each is most effective, are explored. Although ambivalence is uncomfortable for actors, it has the potential to foster growth in the actor as well as highly adaptive and effective behavior.


Journal of Management | 2017

Respect in Organizations: Feeling Valued as “We” and “Me”:

Kristie M. Rogers; Blake E. Ashforth

Research suggests that organizational members highly prize respect but rarely report adequately receiving it. However, there is a lack of theory in organizational behavior regarding what respect actually is and why members prize it. We argue that there are two distinct types of respect: generalized respect is the sense that “we” are all valued in this organization, and particularized respect is the sense that the organization values “me” for particular attributes, behaviors, and achievements. We build a theoretical model of respect, positing antecedents of generalized respect from the sender’s perspective (prestige of social category, climate for generalized respect) and proposed criteria for the evaluation of particularized respect (role, organizational member, and character prototypicality), which is then enacted by the sender and perceived by the receiver. We also articulate how these two types of respect fulfill the receiver’s needs for belonging and status, which facilitates the self-related outcomes of organization-based self-esteem, organizational and role identification, and psychological safety. Finally, we consider generalized and personalized respect jointly and present four combinations of the two types of respect. We argue that the discrepancy between organizational members’ desired and received respect is partially attributable to the challenge of simultaneously enacting or receiving respect for both the “we” and the “me.”


Administrative Science Quarterly | 2017

Seeing More than Orange: Organizational Respect and Positive Identity Transformation in a Prison Context:

Kristie M. Rogers; Kevin G. Corley; Blake E. Ashforth

This paper develops grounded theory on how receiving respect at work enables individuals to engage in positive identity transformation and the resulting personal and work-related outcomes. A company that employs inmates at a state prison to perform professional business-to-business marketing services provided a unique context for data collection. Our data indicate that inmates experienced respect in two distinct ways, generalized and particularized, which initiated an identity decoupling process that allowed them to distinguish between their inmate identity and their desired future selves and to construct transitional identities that facilitated positive change. The social context of the organization provided opportunities for personal and social identities to be claimed, respected, and granted, producing social validation and enabling individuals to feel secure in their transitional identities. We find that security in personal identities produces primarily performance-related outcomes, whereas security in the company identity produces primarily well-being-related outcomes. Further, these two types of security together foster an integration of seemingly incompatible identities—”identity holism”—as employees progress toward becoming their desired selves. Our work suggests that organizations can play a generative role in improving the lives of their members through respect-based processes.


Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies | 2018

Quitting the Boss? The Role of Manager Influence Tactics and Employee Emotional Engagement in Voluntary Turnover:

Christopher S. Reina; Kristie M. Rogers; Suzanne J. Peterson; Kris Byron; Peter W. Hom

Employees commonly cite their managers’ behavior as the primary reason for quitting their jobs. We sought to extend turnover research by investigating whether two commonly used influence tactics by managers affect their employees’ voluntary turnover and whether employees’ emotional engagement and job satisfaction mediate this relationship. We tested our hypotheses using survey data collected at two time points from a sample of financial services directors and objective lagged turnover data. Using multilevel path modeling, we found that managers’ use of pressure and inspirational appeals had opposite effects on employee voluntary turnover and that employees’ emotional engagement was a significant and unique mediating mechanism even when job satisfaction, the traditional attitudinal predictor of turnover, was also included in the path model. Our findings contribute to turnover research by demonstrating a relationship between specific managerial behaviors and employee turnover and shed light on a key mediating mechanism that explains these effects.


Academy of Management Review | 2016

“I Identify with Her,” “I Identify with Him”: Unpacking the Dynamics of Personal Identification in Organizations

Blake E. Ashforth; Beth S. Schinoff; Kristie M. Rogers


Archive | 2012

Is the employee-organization relationship misspecified? The centrality of tribes in experiencing the organization

Blake E. Ashforth; Kristie M. Rogers


Employee Responsibilities and Rights Journal | 2011

The Interface of Work to Family Conflict and Racioethnic Identification: An Analysis of Hispanic Business Professionals

Robert G. DelCampo; Kristie M. Rogers; Andrew T. Hinrichs


Journal of Managerial Issues | 2010

Psychological Contract Breach, Perceived Discrimination, and Ethnic Identification in Hispanic Business Professionals

Robert G. DelCampo; Kristie M. Rogers; Kathryn J. L. Jacobson


Journal of Organizational Behavior Education | 2010

A Mockumentary as a Mock-Experience: Using 'The Office' to Solidify Understanding of Organizational Behavior Topics

Kristie M. Rogers; Robert G. DelCampo; Harry J. Van Buren

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Belle Rose Ragins

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Keimei Sugiyama

Case Western Reserve University

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