Nice guys can finish first and so can their teams!
Ever thought the other guy was a loser for giving his all for the team even if others weren't pulling their weight? A new study, published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, says that person can influence a group to become more efficient in achieving its goals by making cooperative, collective behaviour seem acceptable and appropriate, and thereby encouraging others to act similarly.
The study, authored by a professor at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto and his collaborator at Northwestern University, calls such individuals "consistent contributors" – people who contribute all the time, regardless of others' choices.
The findings challenge assumptions made by many game and rational choice theorists that people should cooperate very little in situations with a known end-point when there are short-term incentives to act selfishly.
"It was generally accepted that the unconditional 'always-cooperate' strategy was a dumb strategy," says Mark Weber, an assistant professor of organizational behaviour at Rotman who co-authored the paper with J. Keith Murnighan of the Kellogg School of Management. "The prevailing wisdom in some scholarly circles is that consistent contributors shouldn't exist, that if they do they're "suckers", and that people will exploit them."
"But our study found consistently cooperative actors even in places you might least expect them, and when they're there they seem to set a tone and shape how their fellow group members understand situations," says Prof. Weber. "Their clear, consistent behavior elicits cooperation, and once you get a few people cooperating with each other, they seem to enjoy cooperating. Groups become more productive, more economically efficient and, anecdotally, people enjoy being a part of them more as a result."
The paper re-analyzed data from two previous experiments by experimental economists and presented findings from two additional experiments. Participants were given endowments they could keep for themselves or contribute to the group, benefiting everyone. Taken together, the experiments found consistent cooperators commonly emerged, benefited from rather than suffered from their risky actions, and members of their groups cooperated more often than those in groups containing more "rational" actors.
"When you join a new group you have a strategic choice to make – are you going to be a consistent contributor or risk being in a group without one?" says Weber. "Our findings should remind people that they can have a big effect on the groups with which they interact."
Source: University of Toronto, Rotman School of Management
Related
- Studies show that nice guys finish first in business worldTue, 17 Mar 2009, 12:15:18 EDT
- Winning record, team longevity, prime-time games influence NFL TV ratingsWed, 4 Aug 2010, 11:42:52 EDT
- Aviation-based team training may influence clinicians' safety behaviorsMon, 21 Dec 2009, 17:58:45 EST
- Enterprising school management leads to more effective schoolsWed, 11 Mar 2009, 10:12:16 EDT
- Researchers find similarities in brain activity for both habits and goalsWed, 23 Mar 2011, 14:06:57 EDT
Other sources
- Nice guys can finish first and so can their teamsfrom PhysorgTue, 10 Mar 2009, 21:21:24 EDT
- Nice guys can finish first and so can their teams!from Science BlogTue, 10 Mar 2009, 15:49:46 EDT
- Nice guys -- and their teams -- can finish first, researcher saysfrom PhysorgTue, 10 Mar 2009, 15:42:16 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox! It's free!Learn more about
Check out our next project, Biology.Net
Popular science news articles
- Squid ink from Jurassic period identical to modern squid ink, U.Va. study shows
- New study examines relationship between social status and wound healing in wild baboons
- Modern dog breeds genetically disconnected from ancient ancestors
- Strategy discovered to activate genes that suppress tumors and inhibit cancer
- Origami-inspired design method merges engineering, art
- Good news for nanomedicine: Quantum dots appear safe in pioneering study on primates
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain
- Using graphene, scientists develop a less toxic way to rust-proof steel
- 1,000 years of climate data confirms Australia's warming
- OMG! Texting ups truthfulness, new iPhone study suggests
- Pacific islands may become refuge for corals in a warming climate, study finds
- Good news for nanomedicine: Quantum dots appear safe in pioneering study on primates
- In metallic glasses, researchers find a few new atomic structures
- New graphene-based material could revolutionize electronics industry
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain
- Modern dog breeds genetically disconnected from ancient ancestors
- New study examines relationship between social status and wound healing in wild baboons
- Squid ink from Jurassic period identical to modern squid ink, U.Va. study shows
- Cell network security holes revealed, with an app to test your carrier
- University of Leicester study finds low agreeableness linked to a preference for aggressive dogs
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain
- Modern dog breeds genetically disconnected from ancient ancestors
- Google goes cancer: Researchers use search engine algorithm to find cancer biomarkers
- USF study: Common fungicide wreaks havoc on freshwater ecosystems
- New study examines relationship between social status and wound healing in wild baboons
- Italian merchants funded England's discovery of North America
- New graphene-based material could revolutionize electronics industry
- Babies' brains benefit from music lessons, researchers find
- Happiness model developed by MU researcher could help people go from good to great
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain