The I and We of Team Identification: A Multilevel Study of Exhaustion and (In)congruence Among Individuals and Teams in Team Identification
Group & Organization Management, 2022•journals.sagepub.com
The social identity approach to stress proposes that the beneficial effects of social
identification develop through individual and group processes, but few studies have
addressed both levels simultaneously. Using a multilevel person–environment fit framework,
we investigate the group-level relationship between team identification (TI) and exhaustion,
the individual-level relationship for people within a group, and the cross-level moderation
effect to test whether individual-level exhaustion depends on the level of (in) congruence in …
identification develop through individual and group processes, but few studies have
addressed both levels simultaneously. Using a multilevel person–environment fit framework,
we investigate the group-level relationship between team identification (TI) and exhaustion,
the individual-level relationship for people within a group, and the cross-level moderation
effect to test whether individual-level exhaustion depends on the level of (in) congruence in …
The social identity approach to stress proposes that the beneficial effects of social identification develop through individual and group processes, but few studies have addressed both levels simultaneously. Using a multilevel person–environment fit framework, we investigate the group-level relationship between team identification (TI) and exhaustion, the individual-level relationship for people within a group, and the cross-level moderation effect to test whether individual-level exhaustion depends on the level of (in)congruence in TI between individuals and their group as a whole. We test our hypotheses in a sample of 525 employees from 82 teams. Multilevel polynomial regression analysis revealed a negative linear relationship between individual-level identification and exhaustion. Surprisingly, the relation between group-level identification and exhaustion was curvilinear, indicating that group-level identification was more beneficial at low and high levels compared with medium levels. As predicted, the cross-level moderation of the individual-level relationship by group-level identification was also significant, showing that as individuals became more incongruent in a positive direction (i.e., they identified more strongly than the average team member), they reported less exhaustion, but only if the group-level identification was average or high. These results emphasize the benefits of analyzing TI in a multilevel framework, with both theoretical and practical implications.
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