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Friendlier
Workers More Productive
Excerpt
By
Cheyenne
Hopkins, Reuters Health
It may seem more professional to stay impersonal at work, but
in fact friendlier employees are more productive, according to
researchers at the University of Michigan.
A comparison of the American work
ethic to approaches in other countries shows that keeping an emotional
distance may not be the most effective way to get the job done,
said Jeffrey Sanchez-Burks, a psychologist who led the study.
Friendly workers pay attention
to indirect meanings, work well with other cultures and are perceived
as trustworthy, Sanchez-Burks said.
An impersonal style blinds workers
from noticing differences in style. They often fail to notice
nonverbal communication, Sanchez-Burks said.
Writing in the August issue of
the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Sanchez-Burks
said he traded notes with colleagues at the University of Michigan,
Seoul National University in Korea and the International Business
University in Nanjing, China.
Sanchez-Burks ran several experiments,
having students and employees in Fortune 500 firms act out work
scenarios.
"An impersonal style tends to restrict
the bandwidth of information a person attends to in the workplace,"
he said.
"What is literally said will be
followed closely but information about the context in which the
information is conveyed -- information often critical for task
success and productivity -- is lost," he added.
"This type of miscommunication,
like ships passing in the night, is further exacerbated in diverse
organizations (domestically and internationally) because rarely
are people with other cultural backgrounds as impersonal as mainstream
Americans."
ROOTED IN PROTESTANT BELIEFS
This impersonal attitude at work
is rooted in Protestant beliefs of putting emotion aside at the
office, Sanchez-Burks said in a telephone interview this week.
The American style of keeping things
impersonal at the workplace is virtually confined to the United
States, he said.
Workers in South Korea, Japan and
India and especially Latin American countries place high importance
on personal relationships at work, he said.
Sanchez-Burks said Latin Americans
become friends with people they are doing business with first
and then move onto the work while Americans work first and then
become friends.
Sanchez-Burks does not argue that
Americans are completely impersonal. In social settings, the researchers
found Americans to be highly friendly.
The challenge is transferring that
behavior into the workplace.
"For a very long time, (this impersonal
work ethic) has been seen as essential to the success of Western
business organizations. So it's difficult to accept that staying
on task may actually be a barrier to productivity in today's global
environment," Sanchez-Burks said.
Reference
Source 89
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