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The moderating effects of status and trust on the performance of age-diverse work groups

Cara-Lynn Scheuer (Department of Management and Decision Sciences, Coastal Carolina University, Conway, South Carolina, USA)
Catherine Loughlin (Sobey School of Business, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, Canada)

Evidence-based HRM

ISSN: 2049-3983

Article publication date: 2 May 2018

Issue publication date: 19 March 2019

625

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to help organizations capitalize on the potential advantages of age diversity by offering insight into two new moderators in the age diversity, work group performance relationship – status congruity and cognition-based trust.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors surveyed 197 employees and 56 supervisors across 59 work groups to test for the moderating effects of status congruity and cognition-based trust on the age diversity, work group performance relationship.

Findings

The results demonstrated, on the one hand, that under conditions of status congruity (i.e. when there were high levels of perceived status legitimacy and veridicality) and/or when perceptions of cognition-based trust were high within the group, the relationship between age diversity and work group performance was positive. On the other hand, under conditions of status incongruity and/or low levels of cognition-based trust, this relationship was negative.

Research limitations/implications

The findings contribute to the literature by being the first to provide empirical evidence for the theorized effects of status on the performance of age-diverse work groups and also by demonstrating the effects of cognition-based trust in a new context – age-diverse work groups.

Practical implications

Arising from the study’s findings are several strategies, which are expected to help organizations enhance perceptions of status congruity and/or trust and ultimately the performance of their age-diverse work groups.

Originality/value

The paper is the first to empirically demonstrate the moderating effects of status congruity and cognition-based trust on the age diversity, work group performance relationship. The study also establishes important distinctions between the effects of objective status differences vs status perceptions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge the David Sobey, Centre for Innovation in Retailing and Services at Saint Mary’s University (Canada) for funding this research and Allegra Network LLC, George Nixon, David Williamson III, and Mike Dye, for helping to facilitate the data collection. The authors would also like to thank Dr Dianne P. Ford (Memorial University) and Dr Eddy Ng (Dalhousie University) for their helpful feedback on earlier stages of this research.

Citation

Scheuer, C.-L. and Loughlin, C. (2019), "The moderating effects of status and trust on the performance of age-diverse work groups", Evidence-based HRM, Vol. 7 No. 1, pp. 56-74. https://doi.org/10.1108/EBHRM-01-2018-0008

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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