The downside of decision delegation: When transferring decision responsibility incurs interpersonal costs

IF 3.4 2区 管理学 Q2 MANAGEMENT
Hayley Blunden , Mary Steffel
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

When facing decisions, managers and employees often seek coworker support. They may ask for advice, retaining decision responsibility, or delegate, transferring decision responsibility. Prior work shows that people who seek decision support via delegation expect to avoid the burdens of decision responsibility, like regret and blame. But might these anticipated benefits sometimes come at an interpersonal cost? Drawing from fairness theory, we hypothesize and find that decision support providers often respond to delegators (versus advice seekers) with reduced willingness to help them with future decisions or hire them, perceiving those seeking to offload decision responsibility as less fair. This interpersonal penalization is attenuated when the potential for perceived unfairness is reduced: when decision responsibility transfer is perceived as less likely to make the support provider worse off (when the decision involves allocating desirable outcomes to others) or more legitimate (when the decision lies within the scope of the helper’s role).

决策授权的弊端:决策责任的转移会产生人际成本
当面临决策时,管理者和员工通常会寻求同事的支持。他们可以征求意见,保留决策责任,或者委托,转移决策责任。先前的研究表明,通过授权寻求决策支持的人希望避免决策责任的负担,如后悔和责备。但这些预期的好处有时会以人际关系为代价吗?根据公平理论,我们假设并发现决策支持提供者对委托者(相对于建议寻求者)的回应往往是减少帮助他们未来决策或雇用他们的意愿,认为那些寻求卸下决策责任的人不太公平。当感知到不公平的可能性降低时,这种人际惩罚就会减弱:当决策责任转移被认为不太可能使支持提供者变得更糟时(当决策涉及到将理想的结果分配给他人时)或更合理时(当决策在帮助者的角色范围内时)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes publishes fundamental research in organizational behavior, organizational psychology, and human cognition, judgment, and decision-making. The journal features articles that present original empirical research, theory development, meta-analysis, and methodological advancements relevant to the substantive domains served by the journal. Topics covered by the journal include perception, cognition, judgment, attitudes, emotion, well-being, motivation, choice, and performance. We are interested in articles that investigate these topics as they pertain to individuals, dyads, groups, and other social collectives. For each topic, we place a premium on articles that make fundamental and substantial contributions to understanding psychological processes relevant to human attitudes, cognitions, and behavior in organizations. In order to be considered for publication in OBHDP a manuscript has to include the following: 1.Demonstrate an interesting behavioral/psychological phenomenon 2.Make a significant theoretical and empirical contribution to the existing literature 3.Identify and test the underlying psychological mechanism for the newly discovered behavioral/psychological phenomenon 4.Have practical implications in organizational context
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