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能力一般但人脉广:领导者利用员工社交网络作为棱镜做出授权决策

Not very competent but connected: Leaders’ use of employee social networks as prisms to make delegation decisions.

Journal of Applied Psychology · 2021
被引 13
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

研究发现,当员工能力信息模糊时,管理者会依据员工在单位友谊网络中的中心位置和与自己的共同小团体成员身份,推断其声誉并更愿意授权,但这一效应在员工能力明确时消失。

Abstract

Delegation is a critical tool for busy managers. Early delegation research suggests that managers are reluctant to delegate beyond a few highly competent employees or those with whom they have a strong relationship. Extending this line of research, we integrate signaling theory with a view of social networks as "prisms," to demonstrate the relevance of employees' network ties in the work unit for delegation. Signaling theory argues that when direct data about employee competence are mixed or ambiguous, decision makers will look for more indirect signals with which to make inferences about quality and reputation. One such signal is suggested by the networks as "prisms" perspective, which argues that network ties can operate as reputational signals in the absence of more direct quality data. Combining these insights and data from a field study and two follow-up laboratory studies, we find that in situations of moderate employee competence, managers will draw positive reputational inferences and be more willing to delegate to employees when such employees are more central in the friendship network of the work unit as well as when they share common memberships in friendship cliques with the managers. These network ties, however, do not matter for delegation decisions when there are direct data to indicate that employees are highly competent or clearly poor performers. Our lab studies elucidate the mediating role of perceived reputation. Implications for theory and practice are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

管理学组织行为学社会网络领导力人力资源管理