A Contingency Framework for the Performance Consequences of Team Boundary Management: A Meta-analysis of 30 Years of Research

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2025Author:
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Leicht-Deobald, U., Backmann, J., de Vries, T. A., Weiss, M., Hohmann, S., Walter, F., van der Vegt, G. S., Hoegl, M., A Contingency Framework for the Performance Consequences of Team Boundary Management: A Meta-analysis of 30 Years of Research, Journal of Management, 5, 2, 2025, 704 - 747Download Item:
Abstract:
Research suggests that teams can greatly enhance their performance through boundary manage-
ment, which comprises activities that establish, maintain, and regulate linkages with the sur-
rounding environment. However, such performance gains do not materialize equally in all
instances, and some teams struggle to benefit from boundary management. Integrating insights
from social network and team-level resource allocation theories, we develop a contingency
framework that considers the internal organization of a team’s boundary management (i.e.,
the carrier, target, and type of such activities) as a key moderating factor that accounts for
the varying effects. To test this framework, we use a meta-analytic approach that synthesizes
>30 years of empirical research (i.e., 85 primary studies covering 10,848 teams). Our results
show a positive main effect of team boundary management on team performance. Crucially,
these performance benefits are more pronounced when the target of boundary management is
extraorganizational rather than inside the home organization and when the type of boundary
management activities is boundary spanning (e.g., coordination, representation, or information
search) rather than boundary strengthening (e.g., buffering, guarding, or sentry activities).
Moreover, boundary management is more effective when executed by formal team leaders
rather than team members, and our results tentatively suggest that this may reflect differences
in effectiveness between leaders and members in boundary strengthening, rather than boundary
spanning. Overall, our findings advance theory on team boundary management by clarifying pre-
viously ambiguous findings and illustrating how teams can design their boundary management
activities to be most effective.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Swiss National Science Foundation
P400PS_180717
Other
1031501
Other
016.Veni.195.257
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/leichtduDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Leicht-Deobald, Ulrich
Sponsor:
Swiss National Science FoundationOther
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Type of material:
Journal ArticleSeries/Report no:
Journal of Management5
2
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Full text availableSubject:
Meta-analysis, Team effectiveness, Team performance, Team boundary work, Team boundary management, Team boundary spanningSubject (TCD):
Digital Engagement , Identities in Transformation , Inclusive Society , Human Resource Management , Innovation , International Business , Leadership , Organisation design, development, theory, behaviourDOI:
https://doi.org/10.1177/01492063231206107ISSN:
0149-2063Metadata
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