TY - JOUR
T1 - Creative Performance Pressure as a Double-Edged Sword for Creativity: The Role of Appraisals And Resources
AU - Liu, Fangzhou
AU - Li, P.
AU - Taris, T.W.
AU - Peeters, M.C.W.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors express thanks to HRM Associate Editor Brad Harris and the two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments and the developmental review process.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Human Resource Management published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
PY - 2022/11/1
Y1 - 2022/11/1
N2 - Creativity, or the generation of novel and useful ideas or products, is widely viewed as the cornerstone of organizational innovation and success. However, high pressure to be creative may have mixed implications for employee creativity. In this article, we first systematically conceptualize the nature of the concept of creative performance pressure. Next, building on transactional stress theory, we investigate (a) how creative performance pressure influences employee creativity through different appraisals (i.e., challenge and hindrance) and (b) the moderating role of a job and personal resource (i.e., servant leadership and promotion focus) in the stressor appraisal process. In Study 1, we developed a creative performance pressure scale and assessed its psychometric properties across two samples (N = 181 for Sample 1; N = 253 for Sample 2). In addition, using multi-wave, multi-source data (Study 2), we tested our hypotheses in a Chinese sample (N = 206). The results demonstrated that creative performance pressure can have both positive and negative effects on employee creativity through challenge and hindrance appraisals, respectively. Servant leadership moderated the effect of creative performance pressure on challenge and hindrance appraisals, by transmitting the beneficial and detrimental effects of creative performance pressure to creativity, respectively. Similarly, promotion focus moderated the relationship between creative performance pressure and hindrance appraisal. We discuss future research directions and offer several practical implications for both organizational leaders and human resource (HR) practitioners.
AB - Creativity, or the generation of novel and useful ideas or products, is widely viewed as the cornerstone of organizational innovation and success. However, high pressure to be creative may have mixed implications for employee creativity. In this article, we first systematically conceptualize the nature of the concept of creative performance pressure. Next, building on transactional stress theory, we investigate (a) how creative performance pressure influences employee creativity through different appraisals (i.e., challenge and hindrance) and (b) the moderating role of a job and personal resource (i.e., servant leadership and promotion focus) in the stressor appraisal process. In Study 1, we developed a creative performance pressure scale and assessed its psychometric properties across two samples (N = 181 for Sample 1; N = 253 for Sample 2). In addition, using multi-wave, multi-source data (Study 2), we tested our hypotheses in a Chinese sample (N = 206). The results demonstrated that creative performance pressure can have both positive and negative effects on employee creativity through challenge and hindrance appraisals, respectively. Servant leadership moderated the effect of creative performance pressure on challenge and hindrance appraisals, by transmitting the beneficial and detrimental effects of creative performance pressure to creativity, respectively. Similarly, promotion focus moderated the relationship between creative performance pressure and hindrance appraisal. We discuss future research directions and offer several practical implications for both organizational leaders and human resource (HR) practitioners.
KW - challenge appraisal
KW - creative performance pressure
KW - creativity
KW - hindrance appraisal
KW - promotion focus
KW - servant leadership
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85128301854&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/hrm.22116
DO - 10.1002/hrm.22116
M3 - Article
SN - 0090-4848
VL - 61
SP - 663
EP - 679
JO - Human Resource Management
JF - Human Resource Management
IS - 6
ER -