Monday, December 26, 2022

People with disagreeable personalities (selfish, combative, and manipulative) do not have an advantage in pursuing power at work

By Cameron Anderson, Daron L. Sharps, Christopher J. Soto and Oliver P. John

"Does being disagreeable—that is, behaving in aggressive, selfish, and manipulative ways—help people attain power? This question has long captivated philosophers, scholars, and laypeople alike, and yet prior empirical findings have been inconclusive. In the current research, we conducted two preregistered prospective longitudinal studies in which we measured participants’ disagreeableness prior to entering the labor market and then assessed the power they attained in the context of their work organization ∼14 y later when their professional careers had unfolded. Both studies found disagreeable individuals did not attain higher power as opposed to extraverted individuals who did gain higher power in their organizations. Furthermore, the null relationship between disagreeableness and power was not moderated by individual differences, such as gender or ethnicity, or by contextual variables, such as organizational culture. What can account for this null relationship? A close examination of behavior patterns in the workplace found that disagreeable individuals engaged in two distinct patterns of behavior that offset each other’s effects on power attainment: They engaged in more dominant-aggressive behavior, which positively predicted attaining higher power, but also engaged in less communal and generous behavior, which predicted attaining less power. These two effects, when combined, appeared to cancel each other out and led to a null correlation between disagreeableness and power."

Related post:

Do you have to be selfish to make more money? 

    -Selfish people earn less money than generous people

    -"Want to be happy and successful? Try compassion."  

    -"Practicing compassion — recognizing someone else is suffering and wanting to help relieve that         suffering — just might be as important for health as exercise or a healthful diet, some scientists             believe. 

    -includes comparisons of Adam Smith and the Dalai Lama

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