Abstract
Previous initiatives to increase employee well-being and performance were limited to training and coaching. Recent studies have sought to examine the benefits of taking a strength-based approach to employee well-being and performance. Employees who perceive their organisation to be in support of their strengths often feel more committed toward the organisation itself (organisational identity) and the work roles they hold within the organisation (work identity). When this is not the case, employees may begin to experience feelings of fraudulence or inadequacy in their role (imposter phenomenon). This study aimed to investigate the mediating effects of organisational identity and work identity on perceived organisational support for strength use (POSSU) and the imposter phenomenon, using tenure as a moderator for middle career stage and late career stage employees. The study sample (n = 284) completed the Strength Use and Deficit Correction (SUDCO) questionnaire, Organisational Identification questionnaire, the Tilburg Scale for Work Identity Commitment and Reconsideration of Commitment (TWIS-CRC), and the Clance Imposter Phenomenon Scale (CIPS). This study was quantitative in nature and the Multivariate Analysis of Variance (MANOVA) showed that there were differences between groups, though these differences were minor. The path analysis indicated that organisational identity and work identity fully mediate the relationship between POSSU and the imposter phenomenon...
M.Com. (Industrial Psychology)