Bold or reckless? The impact of workplace risk-taking on attributions and expected outcomes
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Susan Fisk, Kent State University; Jon Overton, Kent State University
Version: View help for Version V1
Version Title: View help for Version Title 1.30.20
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Project Citation:
Fisk, Susan, and Overton, Jon. Bold or reckless? The impact of workplace risk-taking on attributions and expected outcomes. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2020-01-30. https://doi.org/10.3886/E117404V1
Project Description
Summary:
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Risk-takers are rhetorically extolled
in America, but does this veneration ignore the downsides of failure? We test
competing perspectives on how workplace risk-takers are perceived by examining cultural attitudes about individuals who
successfully take, unsuccessful take, and avoid risks at work. The results of
two experiments show that, in comparison to risk-avoidance, expected workplace
outcomes are enhanced by successful risk-taking and that failure does
not appear to significantly harm expected workplace outcomes for risk-takers. While one experiment
finds that failed risk-takers are seen as more likely to be downsized (because
they are viewed as more foolish), we also find failed risk-takers are perceived
as more likely to be hired and promoted. Mediation analyses reveal this is
primarily because risk-taking—regardless of outcome—considerably increases
perceptions of agency and decreases perceptions of indecisiveness, and these
attributions predict positive workplace outcomes. We also find the results to be remarkably similar across
varying participant characteristics (namely, gender, race, education level,
work experience, income, and age), which suggests that there is a broad
cultural consensus in the U.S. about the value of risk-taking. In sum, we find
evidence that observers generally make more positive attributions about
risk-takers than about risk-avoiders, even when risk-takers fail.
Funding Sources:
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National Science Foundation (1302558)
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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Experimental social-psychology;
Risk-taking;
Cultural beliefs;
Work
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