Team building and hidden costs of control
Team building and hidden costs of control
In a laboratory experiment, we investigate the interaction of two prominent firm strategies to increase worker effort: team building and control. We compare a team-building treatment where subjects initially play a coordination game to gain common experience (CE) with an autarky treatment where subjects individually perform a task (NCE). In both treatments, subjects then play two-player control games where agents provide costly effort and principals can control to secure a minimum effort. CE agents always outperform NCE agents. Conditional on control, however, CE agents’ effort is crowded out more strongly, with the effect being most pronounced for agents who successfully coordinated in the team-building exercise. Differential reactions to control perceived as excessive is one explanation for our findings.
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Riener, Gerhard
8e8e27a6-4931-4e70-b223-688f3fd616c1
Wiederhold, Simon
1ffd1db6-bd18-4932-a5df-5f65d2f42f6d
1 March 2016
Riener, Gerhard
8e8e27a6-4931-4e70-b223-688f3fd616c1
Wiederhold, Simon
1ffd1db6-bd18-4932-a5df-5f65d2f42f6d
Riener, Gerhard and Wiederhold, Simon
(2016)
Team building and hidden costs of control.
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 123, .
(doi:10.1016/j.jebo.2015.12.008).
Abstract
In a laboratory experiment, we investigate the interaction of two prominent firm strategies to increase worker effort: team building and control. We compare a team-building treatment where subjects initially play a coordination game to gain common experience (CE) with an autarky treatment where subjects individually perform a task (NCE). In both treatments, subjects then play two-player control games where agents provide costly effort and principals can control to secure a minimum effort. CE agents always outperform NCE agents. Conditional on control, however, CE agents’ effort is crowded out more strongly, with the effect being most pronounced for agents who successfully coordinated in the team-building exercise. Differential reactions to control perceived as excessive is one explanation for our findings.
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 December 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 February 2016
Published date: 1 March 2016
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 479591
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479591
ISSN: 0167-2681
PURE UUID: b5d1db14-3955-44be-89e0-9809eb4e19ac
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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:39
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18
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Author:
Gerhard Riener
Author:
Simon Wiederhold
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