The Road to Melting: How Different Work Orientation Shape Organizational Cohesion
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Traditional cohesion research focuses on leadership style and institutional design, but it is difficult to explain the 'abnormal reversal' of employee motivation and behavior. This study breaks through the 'structure-function' paradigm. It constructs a dynamic model of 'motivation-mission-environment' based on Self-Determination Theory (SDT). It systematically reveals the asymmetric mechanism by which Work Orientation (job-career-calling) affects Organizational Cohesion through Mission Valence. We further explored the moderating role of Organizational Climate. Through three progressive studies (N=191 tracking questionnaire, N=399 scenario experiment, N=971 cross-level field study), Study 1 found that: (1) job orientation significantly weakened organizational cohesion (β=-0.158, p=0.018), while career orientation (β=0.137, p=0.019) and calling orientation (β=0.373, p<0.001) strengthened organizational cohesion, with calling orientation as the most important. (2) Mission Valence plays a fully mediating role in the triple relationship (calling orientation ab=0.265 > career orientation ab=0.054 > life-seeking orientation ab=-0.053) and that both main and mediating effects are attenuated by the organizational climate; (3) Scenario experiments (4 × 2 between-subjects design) showed that high organizational climate significantly enhanced cohesion across all orientations (F=555.154, p<0.001, η²=0.589) and attenuated motivational differences (interaction effect F=7.506, p<0.001); and that Mission Valence was most significantly suppressed for calling orientation in low organizational climate (Md =-0.577, p = 0.004). Cross-level analyses further revealed that the destructive nature of job orientation at the organizational level (β=-0.890, p<0.001) outweighed the constructive nature of calling orientation (β=0.656, p=0.002), and career orientation was no longer influential at the organizational level. This study is the first to integrate the interaction between individual motivational differences and organizational environment to provide a dynamic explanation of the cohesion formation mechanism and to provide a scientific basis for the construction of a 'motivation-environment' fit strategy. The findings challenge the traditional 'one-size-fits-all' intervention assumption, expand the cross-level applicability of SDT, and provide theoretical support for human resource management in the public sector. In the future, we can deepen the study of motivation-cohesion dynamics by combining multi-industry samples and tracking design.