Driven by social comparisions
Driven by social comparisions
6 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
Drawing on theoretical insights from research on social comparison processes, this article explores how managers can use performance feedback to sustain employees' motivation and performance in organizations. Using a field experiment at a Japanese bank, we investigate the effects of valence (positive versus negative), type (direct versus indirect), and timing of feedback (one-shot versus persistent) on employee productivity. Our results show that direct negative feedback (e.g., an employee learns her performance falls in the bottom of her group) leads to improvements in employees' performance, while direct positive feedback does not significantly impact performance. Furthermore, indirect negative feedback (i.e., the employee learns she is not in the bottom of her group) worsens productivity while indirect positive feedback (i.e., the employee learns she is not in the top of her group) does not affect it. Finally, both persistently positive and persistently negative feedback lead to improvements in employees' performance. Together, our findings offer insight into the role of performance feedback in motivating productivity in repetitive tasks.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Francesca Gino
Advice for Working Moms (HBR W
Advice for Working Moms (HBR Working Parents Series)
Aklinizi Celdirmeyin
Behavioral operations
Behavioral operations
Do manager's heuristics affect
Do manager's heuristics affect R&D performance volatility?
Do we listen to advice just be
Do we listen to advice just because we paid for it?
Effects of task difficulty on
Effects of task difficulty on use of advice