When passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams

Extant research on passion is replete with individual-level studies. Although team-level studies have emerged, these empirical studies have adopted a static approach. We pivot from the predominant static focus on passion by examining passion convergence, or the dynamic pattern of increasing similari...

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Main Authors: Uy, Marilyn A., Jacob, Gabriel Henry, Gielnik, Michael M., Frese, Michael, Antonio, Tony, Wonohadidjojo, Daniel Martomanggolo, Christina
Other Authors: Nanyang Business School
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159529
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1595292023-05-19T07:31:16Z When passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams Uy, Marilyn A. Jacob, Gabriel Henry Gielnik, Michael M. Frese, Michael Antonio, Tony Wonohadidjojo, Daniel Martomanggolo Christina Nanyang Business School Asian Pastoral Institute Business::Management Passion Convergence Team Progress Extant research on passion is replete with individual-level studies. Although team-level studies have emerged, these empirical studies have adopted a static approach. We pivot from the predominant static focus on passion by examining passion convergence, or the dynamic pattern of increasing similarity in passion among members of a team. Drawing on multilevel theory of emergence in teams and using the novel consensus emergence model approach, we theorize the phenomenon of passion convergence and focus on how within-team experiences of progress and setback shape passion convergence. We also analyze the impact of passion convergence on team performance. Data from 314 individuals nested in 82 new venture teams indicate that experiencing team progress facilitated passion convergence, whereas experiencing team setbacks did not have a significant impact on passion convergence. Results also suggest that teams with members converging on a high level of passion positively predicted team performance. We discuss the theoretical and practical significance of our study. 2022-06-24T07:44:47Z 2022-06-24T07:44:47Z 2021 Journal Article Uy, M. A., Jacob, G. H., Gielnik, M. M., Frese, M., Antonio, T., Wonohadidjojo, D. M. & Christina (2021). When passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams. Journal of Applied Psychology, 106(6), 902-920. https://dx.doi.org/10.1037/apl0000812 0021-9010 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159529 10.1037/apl0000812 32718154 2-s2.0-85088840523 6 106 902 920 en Journal of Applied Psychology © 2020 American Psychological Association. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Business::Management
Passion Convergence
Team Progress
spellingShingle Business::Management
Passion Convergence
Team Progress
Uy, Marilyn A.
Jacob, Gabriel Henry
Gielnik, Michael M.
Frese, Michael
Antonio, Tony
Wonohadidjojo, Daniel Martomanggolo
Christina
When passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams
description Extant research on passion is replete with individual-level studies. Although team-level studies have emerged, these empirical studies have adopted a static approach. We pivot from the predominant static focus on passion by examining passion convergence, or the dynamic pattern of increasing similarity in passion among members of a team. Drawing on multilevel theory of emergence in teams and using the novel consensus emergence model approach, we theorize the phenomenon of passion convergence and focus on how within-team experiences of progress and setback shape passion convergence. We also analyze the impact of passion convergence on team performance. Data from 314 individuals nested in 82 new venture teams indicate that experiencing team progress facilitated passion convergence, whereas experiencing team setbacks did not have a significant impact on passion convergence. Results also suggest that teams with members converging on a high level of passion positively predicted team performance. We discuss the theoretical and practical significance of our study.
author2 Nanyang Business School
author_facet Nanyang Business School
Uy, Marilyn A.
Jacob, Gabriel Henry
Gielnik, Michael M.
Frese, Michael
Antonio, Tony
Wonohadidjojo, Daniel Martomanggolo
Christina
format Article
author Uy, Marilyn A.
Jacob, Gabriel Henry
Gielnik, Michael M.
Frese, Michael
Antonio, Tony
Wonohadidjojo, Daniel Martomanggolo
Christina
author_sort Uy, Marilyn A.
title When passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams
title_short When passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams
title_full When passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams
title_fullStr When passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams
title_full_unstemmed When passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams
title_sort when passions collide: passion convergence in entrepreneurial teams
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159529
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