It has been argued that the social and informational cues within the work environment need to be investigated to better understand and identify a nomological network underlying the psychological contract construct. This study is one of the first to investigate how employees may use social and informational messages and cues in the work environment to formulate and place meaning behind their employee employer exchange relationship. We present a model that examines specific dimensions of employees’ psychological climates that may serve as a basis for understanding their contract with their organization. Three hundred and seventy employees from a variety of organizational settings completed measures of their climate (role characteristics, job characteristics, workgroup and social environment, leader behaviors, and organizational and subsystem attributes) as well as their perceptions of their psychological contract. The model and proposed relationships were tested through a series of hierarchical regression analyses. Results revealed that role characteristics were associated with the workload and clarity components of the contract while job characteristics were related to the work variety, work importance, and autonomy contract factors. Workgroup and social environment dimensions were related to the contract components of social interaction and work conditions and leader behaviors were associated with the feedback contract factor. Finally, organizational and subsystem attributes were linked to the compensation, benefits, security, advancement, development opportunities, fairness, and interpersonal factors of an employee’s psychological contract. Study contributions and limitations as well as directions for future research are discussed.
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28 October 2003
This article was originally published in
Mid-American Journal of Business
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October 28 2003
The Meaning Behind the Message: Climate Perceptions and the Psychological Contract Available to Purchase
Matthew A. Liao‐Troth
Matthew A. Liao‐Troth
Western Washington University
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1935-522X
Print ISSN: 0895-1772
© MCB UP Limited
2003
Mid-American Journal of Business (2003) 18 (2): 23–32.
Citation
Kickul J, Liao‐Troth MA (2003), "The Meaning Behind the Message: Climate Perceptions and the Psychological Contract". Mid-American Journal of Business, Vol. 18 No. 2 pp. 23–32, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/19355181200300009
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