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    De Stobbeleir, Katleen (3)
    Ashford, Susan (2)Anseel, Frederik (1)Buyens, Dirk (1)Crommelinck, Michiel (1)De Beuckelaer, Alain (1)de Luque, Mary Sully (1)Sijbom, R.B.L. (1)Wellman, Ned (1)Wollan, Melody (1)Subject
    Feedback-Seeking Behavior (3)
    Feedback (2)People Management & Leadership (2)View MoreDate Issued2018 (2)2010 (1)Knowledge Domain/IndustryPeople Management & Leadership (3)Publication TypeVlerick strategic journal article (2)Conference Presentation (1)

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    Self-regulation of creativity at work: The role of feedback-seeking behavior in creative performance

    De Stobbeleir, Katleen; Ashford, Susan; Buyens, Dirk (2010)
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    Two roads to effectiveness: CEO feedback seeking, vision articulation, and firm performance

    Ashford, Susan; Wellman, Ned; de Luque, Mary Sully; De Stobbeleir, Katleen; Wollan, Melody (John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2018)
    Humble leadership is attracting increased scholarly attention, but little is known about its effects when used in conjunction with less humble leadership behaviors that rely on a perception of the leader as confident and charismatic. This study contrasts the effects on top management team (TMT) potency and organizational performance of a more humble (feedback seeking) and a less humble (vision) CEO leader behavior. We hypothesize that CEO feedback seeking increases TMT potency and firm performance by communicating to TMT members that the organization values their input and encouraging their own feedback seeking, whereas CEO vision articulation influences these outcomes by fostering greater clarity about the firm's direction, and an enhanced ability to coordinate efforts within the TMT. CEOs who have not developed a vision can achieve a similar positive impact on TMT potency and firm performance by seeking feedback. In a sample of CEOs and TMT members from 65 firms, both CEO feedback seeking and vision articulation exhibit positive direct relationships with firm performance. However, only feedback seeking displays an indirect effect on performance via TMT potency. Finally, CEO feedback seeking has its strongest effects on firm performance and TMT potency for CEOs who are not seen as having a vision.
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    Why seeking feedback from diverse sources may not be sufficient for stimulating creativity: The role of performance dynamism and creative time pressure

    Sijbom, R.B.L.; Anseel, Frederik; Crommelinck, Michiel; De Beuckelaer, Alain; De Stobbeleir, Katleen (John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2018)
    We explore how the impact of seeking feedback from different sources (i.e., feedback source variety) on employee creativity is shaped by perceptions of the work environment. Specifically, we argue that two contextual factors, namely, performance dynamism (Study 1) and creative time pressure (Study 2), moderate the relationship between feedback source variety and creativity such that under conditions of high performance dynamism and low creative time pressure, individuals benefit from diverse feedback information. In Study 1 (N = 1,031), the results showed that under conditions of high performance dynamism, the relationship between feedback source variety and self-reported creativity was nonlinear, with employee creativity exponentially increasing as a function of feedback source variety. Similarly, in Study 2 (N = 181), we found that under conditions of low creative time pressure, the relationship between feedback source variety and employee creativity was nonlinear, with supervisor-rated creative performance exponentially increasing at higher levels of feedback source variety. Such results highlight that the relationship between feedback source variety and creative performance is affected by the perceptions of the work environment in which feedback is sought.
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