Tags
Administration
Benefits
Communication
Communication Programs
Compensation
Conflict & Dispute Resolution
Developing & Coaching Others
Employee Satisfaction/Engagement
Executive Coaching
HR Metrics & Measurement
HR Outsourcing
HRIS/ERP
Human Resources Management
Internal Corporate Communications
Labor Relations
Labor Trends
Leadership
Leadership Training & Development
Leading Others
Legal
Management
Motivating
Motivation
Organizational Development
Pay Strategies
Performance Management
Present Trends
Recognition
Retention
Staffing
Staffing and Recruitment
Structure & Organization
Talent
The HR Practitioner
Training
Training and Development
Trends
U.S. Based Legal Issues
Vision, Values & Mission
Work-Life Programs & Employee Assistance Programs - EAP
Workforce Acquisition
Workforce Management
Workforce Planning
Workplace Regulations
corporate learning
employee engagement
interpersonal communications
leadership competencies
leadership development
legislation
News
Onboarding Best Practices
Good Guy = Bad Manager :: Bad Guy = Good Manager. Is it a Myth?
Five Interview Tips for Winning Your First $100K+ Job
Base Pay Increases Remain Steady in 2007, Mercer Survey Finds
Online Overload: The Perfect Candidates Are Out There - If You Can Find Them
Cartus Global Survey Shows Trend to Shorter-Term International Relocation Assignments
New Survey Indicates Majority Plan to Postpone Retirement
What do You Mean My Company’s A Stepping Stone?
Rewards, Vacation and Perks Are Passé; Canadians Care Most About Cash
Do’s and Don’ts of Offshoring
Error: No such template "/hrDesign/network_profileHeader"!
Blogs / Send feedback
Help us to understand what's happening?
Reason
It's a fake news story
It's misleading, offensive or inappropriate
It should not be published here
It is spam
Your comment
More information
Security Code
A Benefit of Organizational Misconduct: Others in Group May Work Harder, Johns Hopkins Study Says
Created by
Press Releases
Content
Misconduct within an organization is generally seen as a predicament at best, a catastrophe at worst. But a new study shows that such misconduct, or “deviance,” can prove beneficial by causing “non-deviant” members of the group to work harder.
Baltimore, MD (PRWEB) May 21, 2016
Misconduct within an organization is generally seen as a predicament at best, a catastrophe at worst. But a new study by a Johns Hopkins University business professor shows that such misconduct, or “deviance,” can prove beneficial by causing “non-deviant” members of the group to work harder in order to alleviate their own discomfort with the organization’s tarnished image.
“The silver lining of organizational deviance may be the efforts of the uninvolved,” says lead researcher Brian Gunia, an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School in Baltimore, Maryland.
The urge to increase effort in the wake of group deviance is particularly strong among non-deviants who identify closely with their organizations and thus may perceive “an internal identity threat” because of the misconduct, he adds.
The paper by Gunia and co-author Sun Young Kim of the IÉSEG School of Management in France, “The behavioral benefits of other people’s deviance,” was recently published in the online edition of Group Processes & Intergroup Relations. As the authors note, previous research primarily examined organizational misbehavior’s impact on only the deviant members; this new paper is among the first to consider the effect on the non-deviants, particularly looking at their exertion of effort during such a crisis.
“The effects of misconduct extend far beyond the deviants,” Gunia says.
In three separate studies with about 200 participants from around the United States, the researchers confirmed their main theory that non-deviant members work harder after witnessing deviance. The extra effort that follows a failure, however, is confined to those who identify highly with the organization; non-deviants whose identities are not so closely tied to the organization tend not to sense a threat to their identities, and so they are less inclined to exert increased effort, according to the study.
The fictionalized examples of deviance posed to the study participants were of moderate severity ? that is, not serious enough to jeopardize a group’s existence. Yet the results across the board revealed the value of group identification, highlighting a previously unrecognized advantage for both a group and its members: The non-deviants’ enhanced effort accrues to the organization’s benefit while providing a coping mechanism and a potential boost in reputation for the members themselves, Gunia says.
“The whole group benefits from increased effort, but individual members and their standing within the organization may improve as well,” he adds.
In pointing out the ironic benefits of organizational deviance, the authors are quick to note that encouraging misconduct would be “patently unwise.” Yet they add that “deviance does happen with unfortunate frequency, and organizational leaders need to know how to respond.”
The study suggests that leaders could respond by highlighting the similarities between the deviants and the non-deviants, which, “while uncomfortable,” could trigger in the latter group a feeling of association with the crisis and cause them to work harder. For example, leaders might say something like “Any of us could have fallen into this trap.”
The researchers advise against blaming a few “bad apples,” as this appears to isolate and dismiss the problem, sidestepping any assignment of responsibility to the organization’s overall structure and leadership.
Gunia and Kim indicate that their study suggests various future research topics. For example, would an instance of severe deviance also prompt increased effort, or would it cause the non-deviants to just leave? Additionally, would anyone work harder when a majority of the organization is involved in misconduct?
Copyright © 1999-2025 by
HR.com - Maximizing Human Potential
. All rights reserved.