Personality factors in the organizational role preferences of middle managers

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Authors
Sweney, Arthur B.
Fiechtner, Leslie A.
Advisors
Issue Date
1974
Type
Article
Keywords
Psychology , Personality traits , Organizational culture
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Citation
Sweney, A.B., Fiechtner, L.A. (1974). Personality Factors in the Organizational Role Preferences of Middle Managers. The Journal of Multivariate Experimental Personality and Clinical Psychology, 1(2), 108-117. https://doi.org/10.62704/10057/17306
Abstract

Organizational roles differ conceptually from personality traits but are very likely influenced by some of the same environmental and social pressures. This study of 185 active middle managers was directed at determining whether meaningful factors could be found which would affect both realms. The results showed that six of the seven factors extracted affected both realms. Only intelligence seems to appear in the personality area alone. The other factors were identified as over socialization, expressive anxiety, conservative idealism, competitive naivete, extroversion, and confrontive suspicion. Authoritarianism and equalitarian load in an opposite direction on the confrontive suspicion factor. The other roles were more complexly determined.

Table of Contents
Description
Publisher
Western Institute of Multivariate Experimental Psychology
Journal
Book Title
Series
Journal of Multivariate Experimental Personality and Clinical Psychology
v.1 no.2
PubMed ID
ISSN
0149-9688
EISSN