2017
DOI: 10.1002/jcop.21939
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Volunteer motivation: A field study examining why some do more, while others do less

Abstract: In nonprofit organizations, motivating volunteers for particular activities is challenging because they can take place in unstructured environments. Therefore, members are disengaged despite their initial commitment to the cause. An important opportunity in the literature is to examine motivation from the perspective of the volunteer; and, more specifically, to test for the differential impact that self‐efficacy, collective efficacy, and perceived organizational support have on three motivational outcomes: eff… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 62 publications
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“…Furthermore, commitment positively relates to firefighters' engagement in extra work. Finally, similar to past research (Cady et al 2018), perceived organizational support has a positive association with extra-role behavior. These results indicate that some aspects of a stewardship-oriented work and organizational context influence individual workers' performance.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 87%
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“…Furthermore, commitment positively relates to firefighters' engagement in extra work. Finally, similar to past research (Cady et al 2018), perceived organizational support has a positive association with extra-role behavior. These results indicate that some aspects of a stewardship-oriented work and organizational context influence individual workers' performance.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Research on volunteering confirms these assumptions. Accordingly, volunteers who perceive organizational support are more satisfied, more likely to remain in the volunteer organization (Walker et al 2016), and spend more effort in accomplishing tasks (Cady et al 2018). Consequently, we expect organizational support to moderate the relationship between PSM and extra-role behavior and hypothesize the following:…”
Section: Perceived Organizational Supportmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Three out of nine papers addressed all the dimensions of IC: human, relational and structural/organizational (Mohd Noor et al, 2015;Benevene et al, 2018;Bontis et al, 2018). One out of nine papers only addressed the human dimension (Cady et al, 2018), whereas three papers addressed the relational dimension (Misener and Doherty, 2013;Wemmer et al, 2016;Álvarez-González et al, 2017), and one paper addressed both human and structural/organizational capital (Zhu et al, 2016). Finally, one paper took into account dimensions related to the types of knowledge tackled in the IC framework but reorganized them in the knowledge-centricity construct (Vakharia et al, 2018).…”
Section: Study Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While four studies used a scale on organizational performance or effectiveness, measuring how it was perceived by the NPOs' members by means of validated or ad hoc Likert scales (Mohd Noor et al, 2015;Wemmer et al, 2016;Zhu et al, 2016;Álvarez-González et al, 2017) or structured interviews (Misener and Doherty, 2013;Benevene et al, 2018), others relied on objective measures of performance. Among the objective measures selected, a number of activities, members, and beneficiaries were used as performance measures in two studies (Álvarez-González et al, 2017;Cady et al, 2018), as well as financial performance (Bontis et al, 2018;Vakharia et al, 2018). Furthermore, one study considered mission-based as well as financial performance (Bontis et al, 2018).…”
Section: Study Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%