Study DID NOT include Donald Trump
University
of California - Berkeley Haas School of Business
The evidence is in: Nice guys and gals don't finish last, and being a selfish jerk doesn't get you ahead.
That's
the clear conclusion from research that tracked disagreeable people from
college or graduate school to where they landed in their careers about 14 years
later.
"I
was surprised by the consistency of the findings. No matter the individual or
the context, disagreeableness did not give people an advantage in the
competition for power -- even in more cutthroat, 'dog-eat-dog' organizational
cultures," said Berkeley Haas Prof. Cameron Anderson, who co-authored the
study with Berkeley Psychology Prof. Oliver P. John, doctoral student Daron L.
Sharps, and Assoc. Prof. Christopher J. Soto of Colby College.
The
researchers conducted two studies of people who had completed personality
assessments as undergraduates or MBA students at three universities. They
surveyed the same people more than a decade later, asking about their power and
rank in their workplaces, as well as the culture of their organizations.
They
also asked their co-workers to rate the study participants' rank and workplace
behavior. Across the board, they found those with selfish, deceitful, and
aggressive personality traits were not more likely to have attained power than
those who were generous, trustworthy, and generally nice.
That's
not to say that jerks don't reach positions of power. It's just that they
didn't get ahead faster than others, and being a jerk simply didn't help,
Anderson said. That's because any power boost they get from being intimidating is
offset by their poor interpersonal relationships, the researchers found. In
contrast, the researchers found that extroverts were the most likely to have
advanced in their organizations, based on their sociability, energy, and
assertiveness -- backing up prior research.
"The
bad news here is that organizations do place disagreeable individuals in charge
just as often as agreeable people," Anderson said. "In other words,
they allow jerks to gain power at the same rate as anyone else, even though
jerks in power can do serious damage to the organization."
The
age-old question of whether being aggressively Machiavellian helps people get
ahead has long interested Anderson, who studies social status. It's a critical
question for managers, because ample research has shown that jerks in positions
of power are abusive, prioritize their own self-interest, create corrupt
cultures, and ultimately cause their organizations to fail. They also serve as
toxic role models for society at large.
For
example, people who read former-Apple CEO Steve Jobs' biography might think,
"Maybe if I become an even bigger asshole I'll be successful like
Steve," the authors note in their paper. "My advice to managers would
be to pay attention to agreeableness as an important qualification for
positions of power and leadership," Anderson said. "Prior research is
clear: agreeable people in power produce better outcomes."
While
there's clearly no shortage of jerks in power, there's been little empirical
research to settle the question of whether being disagreeable actually helped
them get there, or is simply incidental to their success. Anderson and his
co-authors set out to create a research design that would clear up the debate.
What
defines a jerk? The participants had all completed the Big Five Inventory
(BFI), an assessment based on general consensus among psychologists of the five
fundamental personality dimensions: openness to experience, conscientiousness,
extraversion, neuroticism, and agreeableness.
It was developed by Anderson's
co-author John, who directs the Berkeley Personality Lab. In addition, some of
the participants also completed a second personality assessment, the NEO
Personality Inventory-Revised (NEO PI-R).
"Disagreeableness
is a relatively stable aspect of personality that involves the tendency to
behave in quarrelsome, cold, callous, and selfish ways," the researchers
explained. ." ..Disagreeable people tend to be hostile and abusive to
others, deceive and manipulate others for their own gain, and ignore others' concerns
or welfare."
In
the first study, which involved 457 participants, the researchers found no
relationship between power and disagreeableness, no matter whether the person
had scored high or low on those traits. That was true regardless of gender,
race or ethnicity, industry, or the cultural norms in the organization.
The
second study went deeper, looking at the four main ways people attain power:
through dominant-aggressive behavior, or using fear and intimidation; political
behavior, or building alliances with influential people; communal behavior, or
helping others; and competent behavior, or being good at one's job.
They also
asked the subjects' co-workers to rate their place in the hierarchy, as well as
their workplace behavior (interestingly, the co-workers' ratings largely
matched the subjects' self-assessments).
This
allowed the researchers to better understand why disagreeable people do not get
ahead faster than others. Even though jerks tend to engage in dominant
behavior, their lack of communal behavior cancels out any advantage their
aggressiveness gives them, they concluded.
Anderson
noted that the findings don't directly speak to whether disagreeableness helps
or hurts people attain power in the realm of electoral politics, where the
power dynamics are different than in organizations. But there are some likely
parallels. "Having a strong set of alliances is generally important to
power in all areas of life," he said. "Disagreeable politicians might
have more difficulty maintaining necessary alliances because of their toxic
behavior."