The impact of help seeking on individual task performance: the moderating effect of help seekers' logics of action.

Dvora Geller, Peter A Bamberger
Author Information
  1. Dvora Geller: School of Business Administration, College of Management, Rishon LeZion, Israel.

Abstract

Drawing from achievement-goal theory and the social psychological literature on help seeking, we propose that it is the variance in the logic underpinning employees' help seeking that explains divergent findings regarding the relationship between help seeking and task performance. Using a sample of 110 newly hired customer contact employees, a prospective study design, and archival performance data, we found no evidence of a hypothesized main effect of help seeking on performance. However, we did find that the help seeking-performance relationship was conditioned by the degree to which help seekers endorse 2 alternative help-seeking logics (autonomous vs. dependent logic) such that the level of help seeking is more strongly related to performance among those either more strongly endorsing an autonomous help-seeking logic or more weakly endorsing a dependent help-seeking logic.

MeSH Term

Achievement
Adult
Employment
Female
Goals
Helping Behavior
Humans
Male
Personal Autonomy
Prospective Studies
Psychological Theory
Task Performance and Analysis
Thinking
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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