Purpose– The COVID-19 pandemic has contributed to making workers more uncompromising with respect to issues such as quality of workplace relations and work-life balance. Hence, motivation and leadership style assume a key relevance for keeping the workforce engaged. We hypothesize that individuals may exhibit different preferences for motivational drivers and for leadership style, and that thesetwosetsofpreferencesmightbecorrelatedwitheachotherandwithemployees’ personality traits. Design/methodology/approach– Here, we empirically investigate the relationship between leadership style and motivation, by also hypothesizing the possible contribution of personality traits. An online survey was developed and distributed to 150 employees or interns/trainees to collect measures related to their preference for leadership, their motivational drivers, as well as their personality traits. The data were analyzed by means of mediation and moderation analyses to disentangle the three-level relationship existing between these constructs. Findings–Ourresultssuggestthatindeedthereexistsarelationshipbetweenpreferencesforleadershipstyle and motivational drivers. Furthermore, one of these relationships appears to be critically mediated by specific personality traits. Originality/value– This work is the first, to our knowledge, empirically testing the existence of a three-level relationship between leadership preferences, motivation and personality traits of employees and to contribute to disentangle their reciprocal influences.

Calluso, Cinzia; Devetag, Maria Giovanna. (2025). The impact of leadership preferences and personality traits on employees’ motivation. EVIDENCE-BASED HRM, (ISSN: 2049-3991), 13:1, 17-34. Doi: 10.1108/EBHRM-01-2023-0023.

The impact of leadership preferences and personality traits on employees’ motivation

Cinzia Calluso
Project Administration
;
Maria Giovanna Devetag
Writing – Review & Editing
2025

Abstract

Purpose– The COVID-19 pandemic has contributed to making workers more uncompromising with respect to issues such as quality of workplace relations and work-life balance. Hence, motivation and leadership style assume a key relevance for keeping the workforce engaged. We hypothesize that individuals may exhibit different preferences for motivational drivers and for leadership style, and that thesetwosetsofpreferencesmightbecorrelatedwitheachotherandwithemployees’ personality traits. Design/methodology/approach– Here, we empirically investigate the relationship between leadership style and motivation, by also hypothesizing the possible contribution of personality traits. An online survey was developed and distributed to 150 employees or interns/trainees to collect measures related to their preference for leadership, their motivational drivers, as well as their personality traits. The data were analyzed by means of mediation and moderation analyses to disentangle the three-level relationship existing between these constructs. Findings–Ourresultssuggestthatindeedthereexistsarelationshipbetweenpreferencesforleadershipstyle and motivational drivers. Furthermore, one of these relationships appears to be critically mediated by specific personality traits. Originality/value– This work is the first, to our knowledge, empirically testing the existence of a three-level relationship between leadership preferences, motivation and personality traits of employees and to contribute to disentangle their reciprocal influences.
2025
Democratic leadership, Authoritarian leadership, Internal motivation, Personality traits, HRM, Organization
Calluso, Cinzia; Devetag, Maria Giovanna. (2025). The impact of leadership preferences and personality traits on employees’ motivation. EVIDENCE-BASED HRM, (ISSN: 2049-3991), 13:1, 17-34. Doi: 10.1108/EBHRM-01-2023-0023.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11385/237978
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