Search
Close this search box.

Employees motivated by bad news as well, research finds

The consequence was that these participants earned about 30 per cent less than what they would have earned by being fully transparent in the experiment. One might expect that our ‘managers’ would have improved at establishing transparency by round 10, but they did not. In fact, they got worse.
useful

Bad news is better than no news at all when it comes to motivating staff, according to new research. Comment from Dr Brandes and Donja Darai, authors of The Value and Motivating Mechanism of Transparency in Organisations, published in the European Economic Review. The study found that withholding important information from staff could mean the difference between a motivated workforce and an unmotivated one – irrespective of whether it was good or bad news for workers. many managers underestimate the motivational power of bad news.

If you look at the many online reports on employee complaints about a lack of transparency in their organisations, it is clear that many managers decide to partly withhold information from their employees, opting to keep them in the dark,” said Dr Brandes. “However, our research shows that doing this is more detrimental to their staff’s effort and motivation than previously assumed.”

In the paper The Value and Motivating Mechanism of Transparency in Organizations, published in the European Economic Review, Dr Brandes and Donja Darai, of the University of Zurich, designed a new version of the so-called ‘dictator’ game to study the effect of information sharing on motivation.

It involved two people with the aim being for participant B to motivate participant A to transfer as much money as possible to participant B. A was paid £5 or £10, but didn’t know which, and then had to decide whether to transfer the money or not. B, who knew how much A had been given, could spend £1 to send a message to A as to whether they had £5 or £10. So effectively they could spend £1 to give their partner the bad news they had received £5.

Dr Brandes added: “We had participants play the same game up to 10 times, each time with a new partner. We designed the communication from B to mirror managers’ opportunity cost of communication in the real world.”

Across these 10 rounds of play, Brandes and Darai found that when A didn’t know if they had £5 or £10, the amount they transferred was 48 per cent lower than when they had been given the bad news that they had been given £5 and not £10. At first glance, this is a surprising finding: even in the absence of information sharing, participant A can be sure to have at least £5, so how could the sharing of bad news increase the motivation to transfer more money?

Dr Brandes said: “We think that information sharing helps participant B to shape A’s perspective of their relationship: after all, a person who is willing to spend money on information sharing is likely to be a nicer person than a person who does not spend the money. And ample research in economics and psychology shows that people are willing to share more with those who they perceive to be nice.”

Support for this was found in a different version of the game where A knew if they had £5 or £10, irrespective of B sending a message. But transferred amounts were still 40 per cent lower when B had not sent a personal message stating again how much money A had received – even though A already knew.

Such knowledge about the motivating mechanism behind the value of transparency is of great relevance for managers. Especially as the study shows that even if the news has already spread around the company employees would still be motivated just by being contacted and told personally.

Dr Brandes said: “Our data provides clear evidence that people are not only motivated by money. Instead, informing them about relevant developments in the work environment – even if it has already started to spread within the organisation – can also boost work performance.

Managers often have access to relevant information before employees, and can decide whether to share or withhold this information. Unfortunately many managers go for the latter, which demotivates their staff. In the study 50 per cent in the role of participant B decided to disclose their information too restrictively.

The consequence was that these participants earned about 30 per cent less than what they would have earned by being fully transparent in the experiment. One might expect that our ‘managers’ would have improved at establishing transparency by round 10, but they did not. In fact, they got worse.

The researchers attribute this lack of learning to another parallel between the real-world and their experiment: a manager who does not share information cannot observe how hard employees would have worked after information sharing. This makes it extremely hard to gauge the cost of not being transparent.

Dr Brandes added: “In response, these managers incorrectly believed that information disclosure was ineffective as a motivational tool and stopped sharing their information. Real-world managers should take note: it is not uncommon for uninformed employees to eventually even leave the firm, so sometimes bad news is better than no news at all.”

Read more

Latest News

Read More

The Carer’s Leave Act: Building caregiving into employee benefits

18 April 2024

Newsletter

Receive the latest HR news and strategic content

Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

Moulton CollegeSalary: £30,203 to £34,022 pa

University of Warwick – Human Resources – Shared ServicesSalary: £23,144 to £25,138 per annum, pro rata

University of Plymouth – HR OperationsSalary: £33,966 to £37,099 per annum – Grade 6

The Head of HR Operations role has been created to harmonise and support the delivery of exceptional HR practices throughout the organisation.From Azets UK –

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE