当时间不是金钱:为什么美国人可能在谈判桌上吃亏

When Time is Not Money: Why Americans May Lose Out at the Negotiation Table

Academy of Management Discoveries · 2016
被引 17
ABS 3

中文导读

研究发现美国人比黎巴嫩人更倾向于认为时间紧迫,这种时间感知差异导致美国人在谈判中表现更差,揭示了文化如何影响谈判结果。

Abstract

Although previous research has linked hyperbolic discounting, an economic model of impatience, to negative outcomes such as smoking, problem drinking, lowered academic achievement, and ineffective career search decisions, there is little research that addresses how impatience may impact performance at the bargaining table and whether Americans have a disadvantage in negotiations as compared to other cultural groups as a result. Using the subjective line task, we replicate previous research showing that subjective time perceptions underpin hyperbolic discounting (Study 1a, n = 101) and are related to estimations and perceptions of durations in a timed experiment and impatience in recalled negotiations (Study 1b, n = 202). Further, in a study of negotiation (Study 2, n = 132), Americans viewed time as relatively more condensed and achieved lower negotiation outcomes as compared to Lebanese participants, and moreover, subjective time perceptions mediated the relationship between culture and negotiation outcomes. This research has significant consequences for real-world negotiations, as cultural differences in time perception can be used as an exploitable weakness and may hinder negotiation outcomes.

谈判文化差异时间感知社会心理学