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Publication date: 21 October 2024

Jiamin Li, Zhicheng Xu, Maolin Ye and Meilan Nong

Although coworkers’ workplace interpersonal capitalization occurs every day in the workplace, we know little about how it affects employees’ well-being or why and when this impact…

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Abstract

Purpose

Although coworkers’ workplace interpersonal capitalization occurs every day in the workplace, we know little about how it affects employees’ well-being or why and when this impact occurs. To address these questions, we theorized and tested a model that links coworkers’ capitalization to well-being outcomes via perceived relatedness and anxiety and the boundary condition of learning goal orientation.

Design/methodology/approach

Time-lagged survey data were collected (N = 304) from a range of organizations in mainland China. Path modeling was used to examine the hypotheses.

Findings

The results indicated that coworkers’ capitalization drives an employee to experience either relatedness or anxiety, depending on the employee’s learning goal orientation. Furthermore, responses to relatedness and anxiety trigger autonomous motivation and psychological detachment, respectively.

Originality/value

This study contributes to the capitalization literature by comprehensively explaining the negative and positive effects of coworkers’ capitalization on employees’ well-being.

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