Abstract:
Organizations plan changes to mitigate problems, and to capitalize upon available opportunities
in the market for sustainable development. Practically, it is necessary to bring these
transformational changes from time to time to maintain the status quo in the market. In this
study, a transformational change in terms of compliance regulations was studied in the
commercial banks of Pakistan. To contribute towards the organizational change theory this
research analysed how cognitive appraisal in terms of coping potential and person-organization
goal fitness impacts change recipients’ behavioural responses over the passage of time. The
research aims to study how workplace factors: transformational leadership, organizational
identification, overall justice judgments, organizational trust, participation in change, and
perceived organizational social support create an indirect effect on the behavioural responses
of employees: change acceptance, change resistance, change proactiveness, and change
disengagement via cognitive appraisal. This study employed hypothetical deductive research
approach, in three waves of data collection with a final sample size of 184 (Sample size, Time
1=552, Time 2=252, and Time 3=184). The data were compiled in three waves to consider the
development of cognitive appraisal process and the reflection of mature behaviours of
employees the transformational change at hand. Data were collected through survey
questionnaires from employees working in commercial banks of Pakistan. Hypotheses were
tested through multiple regression analyses and mediation procedures in PROCESS Macro.
Overall, the findings suggested that cognitive appraisal theory plays an critical role in
characterizing the change recipients’ behavioural response circumplex with the maturity of
change. It is found that P-O fit, and coping potential with change has a direct relationship with
change recipients’ behavioural response circumplex. P-O fit (as primary cognitive appraisal)
mediates the connection between organizational identification, and transformational leadership
(factors that helps to decrease the psychological distance of change recipients and the
transformational change at hand) with change recipients’ behavioural response circumplex. P O fit (as primary cognitive appraisal) mediates the relationship of organizational trust, and
overall justice judgments (factors that helps to retain confidence on management about change
implementation) with change recipients’ behavioural response circumplex. Coping potential
with change (as secondary appraisal) mediates the relationship of perceived organizational
social support, and participation in change (factors that helps to maintain a control over change)
with change recipients’ behavioural response circumplex. This study provided empirical evidence to the practitioners about the process formation of
change recipients’ behavioural responses towards transformational changes. These behaviours
towards change emerged after the test of time through cognitive appraisal mechanism.
Therefore, change agents can understand that these are the actual responses towards change
rather a pre-dispositional behaviour towards any change. It would be helpful for change agents
to foresee and rely on the potential long-term benefits of change from employees’ perspective.
This research also sheds light on the degree of activation of behaviours, so managers should
ponder upon the implicit and explicit nature of responses as well. Overall, this study unfolded
a new perspective in change management studies through investigating behaviours,
differentiated by their innate degree of activation, and valence.