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Working Paper No. 1010

Person-Organization Fit and Incentives: <br>A Causal Test

Working Paper
Reference
Andersson, Ola, Marieke Huysentruyt, Topi Miettinen and Ute Stephan (2014). “Person-Organization Fit and Incentives:
A Causal Test
”. IFN Working Paper No. 1010. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).

Authors
Ola Andersson, Marieke Huysentruyt, Topi Miettinen, Ute Stephan

We investigate the effects of organizational culture and personal value orientations on performance under individual and team contest incentives. We develop a model of regard for others and in-group favoritism predicting interaction effects between organizational culture and personal values in the contest games. The predictions are tested in a computerized lab experiment with exogenous control of both organizational culture and incentives.

In line with our theoretical model we find that prosocial (proself) orientated subjects exert more (less) effort in team contests in the primed prosocial organizational culture condition, relative to the neutrally primed baseline condition. Further, when the prosocial organizational culture is combined with individual contest incentives, prosocial subjects no longer outperform their proself counterparts.

These findings provide a first, affirmative, causal test of person-organization fit theory. They also suggest the importance of a 'triple-fit' between personal preferences, organizational culture and incentive mechanisms for prosocially orientated individuals.