Research addressing the microfoundations of knowledge sharing is emergent and growing, but there is still a lack of studies analyzing the trait of narcissism. This lack of studies appears relevant for middle-management figures, who increasingly play a strategic role in transferring knowledge, especially within professional organizations. This paper aims to study how three dimensions of narcissism, namely leadership/authority, grandiose exhibitionism, and entitlement/exploitativeness, impact the knowledge-sharing behavior of middle managers within organizations. A community of 115 Italian doctors who held middle management positions (head of ward unit) was investigated. The results indicate that leadership/authority and grandiose exhibitionism are negatively related to the propensity to share knowledge. In contrast, entitlement/exploitativeness has a positive relationship with the knowledge-sharing propensity. The study offers necessary evidence both for scholars and organizations.

The impact of middle managers narcissism on knowledge sharing propensity

Simona Leonelli
Primo
;
Federica Morandi
Secondo
;
Fausto Di Vincenzo
Ultimo
2024-01-01

Abstract

Research addressing the microfoundations of knowledge sharing is emergent and growing, but there is still a lack of studies analyzing the trait of narcissism. This lack of studies appears relevant for middle-management figures, who increasingly play a strategic role in transferring knowledge, especially within professional organizations. This paper aims to study how three dimensions of narcissism, namely leadership/authority, grandiose exhibitionism, and entitlement/exploitativeness, impact the knowledge-sharing behavior of middle managers within organizations. A community of 115 Italian doctors who held middle management positions (head of ward unit) was investigated. The results indicate that leadership/authority and grandiose exhibitionism are negatively related to the propensity to share knowledge. In contrast, entitlement/exploitativeness has a positive relationship with the knowledge-sharing propensity. The study offers necessary evidence both for scholars and organizations.
2024
Proceedings IFKAD
978-88-96687-17-8
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11564/838391
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