Building Trust through Knowledge Sharing: Implications for Incentive System Design

Katlijn Haesebrouck, Alexandra G. H. L. Van den Abbeele, Michael G. Williamson
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

Abstract We examine whether knowledge sharing can enhance the efficacy of implicit, trust-based incentives. Using a stark laboratory experiment, we find support for theory suggesting that individuals believe that their knowledge is an important part of their identity, making it costly to share, but facilitating greater trust that recipients of this knowledge will reciprocate with future rewards. Utilizing participants with substantial work experience, results from additional scenario-based experiments demonstrate practical implications of this theory. Collectively, the results from our experiments show that individuals help others less when the help conveys personal knowledge relative to when it does not absent the prospect of rewards, but more when they can expect future rewards (i.e., with implicit incentives). Importantly, knowledge sharing increases the efficacy of implicit incentives more when they are determined by the help recipient relative to someone else (e.g., a supervisor). Collectively, we contribute to a better understanding of incentive systems designed to promote knowledge sharing in practice.
通过知识共享建立信任:激励制度设计的启示
摘要本文研究了知识共享是否能提高基于信任的隐性激励的有效性。通过一项严格的实验室实验,我们发现了对理论的支持,即个人认为他们的知识是他们身份的重要组成部分,这使得分享成本高昂,但却促进了更大的信任,即这些知识的接受者将在未来获得回报。利用具有丰富工作经验的参与者,其他基于场景的实验结果证明了该理论的实际意义。总的来说,我们的实验结果表明,当帮助传达个人知识时,相对于不缺乏奖励前景时,个人会更少地帮助他人,但当他们期待未来的奖励时(即有隐性激励),他们会更多地帮助他人。重要的是,当隐性激励是由接受帮助的人而不是其他人(例如,主管)决定时,知识共享更能提高隐性激励的效力。总的来说,我们有助于更好地理解旨在促进实践中的知识共享的激励制度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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