News

To thine own self be true?: Facades of conformity, values incongruence, and the magnifying impact of leader integrity

Published: 20 November 2015

Authors: Burnett, M., Dumas, T., Hewlin, P.

PublicationAcademy of Management

Abstract
When employees feel that their values do not match the organization's values, they often respond by pretending to fit in. We examine how leader integrity influences the tendency to create facades of conformity, proposing that employees will actually fake more when leaders are principled. In a laboratory experiment (Study 1), undergraduate students whose values ostensibly differed from their discussion group members and the university administration created more facades when they perceived the discussion group leader as having high integrity. A two-wave survey of employed adults (Study 2), replicated the moderation effect and also revealed negative effects of facade creation on work engagement. In both studies, our results indicate that, ironically, when leader integrity is high, the tendency to create facades of conformity in response to low values congruence is magnified. Additionally, our findings shed light on the notion that positive attributes in leaders may not always result in positive responses from followers. The results from our study also show that facades of conformity may serve as a partial explanatory mechanism in the relationship between values congruence and employee engagement.

Read full article: Academy of Management, November 3, 2015

Back to top