Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
886767 Journal of Vocational Behavior 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Organizational commitment, trust, and identification are all organization-targeted attitudes.•They represent three types of psychological attachment to an organization.•This study examined the incremental validity of the three variables.•The outcome variables include job attitudes, withdrawal, and performance.•Results provide modest support for their incremental validity.

Organizational commitment (OC), organizational trust (OT), and organizational identification (OI) are three types of psychological attachment to an organization. Each of these three variables captures an organization-targeted attitude toward an employment relationship, but it is unclear whether they have incremental validity over each other. To address this question, this study examined the incremental validity of each variable in predicting job involvement, job satisfaction, turnover intentions, and non-self-report measures of task performance and citizenship behavior. It also examined whether perceived organizational support and psychological contract breach, two other organization-targeted attitudinal variables, were related to OC, OT, and OI when the latter were considered jointly. Meta-analytical evidence suggests that OC, OT, and OI have incremental validity over and above one another in their relationships with some, but not all, of the above correlates. This highlights the need for future research to distinguish these three types of psychological attachment to an organization.

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