California, Farzam, Farzam Steve, etc.

The Effects of Group Conflict and Work Stress on Employee Performance

Abstract

This study investigates the positive and negative effects of group conflict and work stress. It uses a multilevel analysis to examine the effects of task-related conflict and relationship conflict on two different types of work stress, namely, challenge-related stress and hindrance-related stress. Furthermore, the study analyzes the effects these types of stress have on hotel employees’ job performance and job satisfaction. The results of hierarchical linear modeling from a survey of 265 employees and their managers in fifty Chinese hotels reveal that (1) team task conflict was positively associated with challenge-related stress, which in turn, was positively associated with job performance and satisfaction; and (2) team relationship conflict was positively associated with hindrance-related stress, which in turn, was negatively associated with job performance and satisfaction. We also found that work stress mediates the cross-level relationship between group conflict and the individual outcomes relating to performance and satisfaction. The key implication of the findings is that work-related conflict and stress are not always necessarily bad for organizational outcomes. Instead, task-related conflict and the resulting stress may improve employees’ sense of accomplishment when the task is complete. By the same token, relationship-based conflict and stress generally lead to negative outcomes for the employee and organization.

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