When grandiose meets vulnerable: narcissism and well-being in the organizational context |
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Authors: | Nina Wirtz Thomas Rigotti |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Work-, Organizational, and Business Psychology, Johannes Gutenberg - Universit?t , Mainz, Germany nina_wirtz@hotmail.comhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1082-3142;3. Department of Work-, Organizational, and Business Psychology, Johannes Gutenberg - Universit?t, Mainz, and Leibniz-Insitute for Resilience Research , Germany https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9189-0018 |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT Objective In this article, we explore the implications of vulnerable narcissism in an organizational context, particularly with regard to work-related well-being and leader–follower interactions. We tested whether employees’ vulnerable narcissism affects their work engagement and emotional exhaustion. Furthermore, we examined whether leaders’ grandiose narcissism impacts such as working relationships. We used job demands-resources theory in order to derive our hypotheses at the intra- and inter-individual level. Method: Multi-level analyses in a sample of 235 followers in 71 teams confirmed some of our hypotheses. Results: We demonstrate that vulnerable narcissism is positively related to followers’ emotional exhaustion and negatively related to work engagement. Moreover, leaders’ grandiose narcissism exacerbates the negative relationship between followers’ vulnerable narcissism and their work engagement. Conclusions: Our results indicate that the various facets of narcissism play an important role in an organizational context and suggest that vulnerable narcissism in particular, which has been largely neglected in previous research, is an important determinant of work-related well-being. Further, we form a holistic understanding of the leadership process by emphasizing the interaction between leaders’ and followers’ personalities, adding to the leadership literature by integrating leader and follower characteristics. |
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Keywords: | Leadership followership narcissism well-being |
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