Content area

Abstract

Purpose

Most work–life research focuses on the spillover of the nuclear family to the workplace, offering little insight into how other family relationships and friendships can spill over to affect employees’ organizational attachment. Past research has also overlooked the role of relationship quality and the mechanisms underlying these life-to-work spillover effects. Addressing these shortcomings, we integrate the systemic model of community attachment with job embeddedness theory to develop a model of community relational embeddedness and then use this model to examine how nonwork relationships connect people to their workplaces.

Design/Methodology/Approach

We used survey data from a national sample of 2025 accounting professionals and tested mediation hypotheses using structural equation modeling.

Findings

Employees’ relationships with friends and family predicted their attachment to their communities, which in turn predicted their workplace turnover intentions. Supporting our theoretical model, bonds with friends and family predicted moving intentions, and community fit and sacrifice mediated these effects. Community fit and sacrifice also predicted work turnover intentions indirectly through moving intentions. Tests also revealed that, surprisingly, friendships had a stronger impact on community attachment than family.

Implications

Employees are connected to their organizations through an array of close community relationships that extend beyond the nuclear family (i.e., spouse, children). Organizations can enhance employees’ workplace attachment by recognizing the role of friends and offering work–life programs that use a broad conceptualization of family (e.g., adult siblings, parents).

Originality/Value

Our study illustrates the importance of community relationships to workplace attachment, and the need to incorporate relational quality, nonnuclear family, and friendships in future research.

Details

Title
Friends and Family: The Role of Relationships in Community and Workplace Attachment
Author
Gonzalez, Jorge A 1 ; Belle Rose Ragins 2 ; Ehrhardt, Kyle 3 ; Singh, Romila 2 

 Department of Management, Robert C. Vackar College of Business & Entrepreneurship, University of Texas – Rio Grande Valley, Edinburg, TX, USA 
 Department of Management, Lubar School of Business, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, USA 
 Department of Management, Business School, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, CO, USA 
Pages
89-104
Publication year
2018
Publication date
Feb 2018
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
08893268
e-ISSN
1573-353X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1992793602
Copyright
Journal of Business and Psychology is a copyright of Springer, (2016). All Rights Reserved.