Responding to inconsistent performance feedback on multiple goals: the contingency role of decision maker's status in introducing changes
Responding to inconsistent performance feedback on multiple goals: the contingency role of decision maker's status in introducing changes
We advance performance feedback theory by showing how decision makers respond to inconsistent performance feedback on multiple goals, and how status shapes these responses for introducing behavioral changes. We argue that inconsistent performance feedback on primary and secondary goals decrease decision makers' propensity to initiate changes, while their high status operates both as a critical asset that motivates solution search for fixing a performance shortfall on a primary goal and as a resource buffer against self-enhancement beliefs when addressing inconsistent feedback on multiple goals. We test our arguments using a dataset of 107,791 Airbnb properties and find support for our hypotheses. We discuss the contributions of our findings to the performance feedback theory.
Kostopoulos, Konstantinos
2ed61e33-e1b9-49c5-bbce-40fe4f8002a8
Syrigos, Evangelos
b1c15e33-35b2-4c6a-ba96-02938a9b5174
Kuusela, Pasi
e4a2e432-080d-42f3-b2b2-1b477a21dc9c
3 February 2023
Kostopoulos, Konstantinos
2ed61e33-e1b9-49c5-bbce-40fe4f8002a8
Syrigos, Evangelos
b1c15e33-35b2-4c6a-ba96-02938a9b5174
Kuusela, Pasi
e4a2e432-080d-42f3-b2b2-1b477a21dc9c
Kostopoulos, Konstantinos, Syrigos, Evangelos and Kuusela, Pasi
(2023)
Responding to inconsistent performance feedback on multiple goals: the contingency role of decision maker's status in introducing changes.
Long Range Planning, 56 (1), [102269].
(doi:10.1016/j.lrp.2022.102269).
Abstract
We advance performance feedback theory by showing how decision makers respond to inconsistent performance feedback on multiple goals, and how status shapes these responses for introducing behavioral changes. We argue that inconsistent performance feedback on primary and secondary goals decrease decision makers' propensity to initiate changes, while their high status operates both as a critical asset that motivates solution search for fixing a performance shortfall on a primary goal and as a resource buffer against self-enhancement beliefs when addressing inconsistent feedback on multiple goals. We test our arguments using a dataset of 107,791 Airbnb properties and find support for our hypotheses. We discuss the contributions of our findings to the performance feedback theory.
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 October 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 October 2022
Published date: 3 February 2023
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 496386
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496386
ISSN: 0024-6301
PURE UUID: a8708191-290d-4280-9e70-dc1e4c53bb8b
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Date deposited: 12 Dec 2024 18:16
Last modified: 12 Dec 2024 18:16
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Contributors
Author:
Konstantinos Kostopoulos
Author:
Evangelos Syrigos
Author:
Pasi Kuusela
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