Are Referrals More Productive or More Likeable? Social Networks and the Evaluation of Merit

Scholars and practitioners agree that referrals provide firms with better workers. Economists and sociologists debate whether the underlying mechanism behind such relations is a better match between workers and firms or an advantage conferred by social relations. Building on insights from network th...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American behavioral scientist (Beverly Hills) 2014-02, Vol.58 (2), p.288-308
Hauptverfasser: Shwed, Uri, Kalev, Alexandra
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Kalev, Alexandra
description Scholars and practitioners agree that referrals provide firms with better workers. Economists and sociologists debate whether the underlying mechanism behind such relations is a better match between workers and firms or an advantage conferred by social relations. Building on insights from network theory and cognitive psychology, we offer a new approach to the debate, arguing that network relations can also create evaluative bias. We reexamine the connection between social ties and workers’ performance using unique data on the actual productivity of sales employees and their evaluations in a large global firm. Results suggest that the preexistence of ties between an incoming employee and insiders in the firm creates an evaluative advantage—an advantage that is unrelated to workers’ concrete performance. We discuss the implications of these results for a relational approach to social stratification, organizations and work, as well as social networks.
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subjects Bias
Cognition
Cognitive psychology
Economists
Employees
Human performance
Intellectuals
Interpersonal relations
Networks
Productivity
Psychology
Referral
Referrals
Sales
Sales Workers
Social Networks
Social privilege
Social relations
Social Stratification
Social Workers
Sociologists
Sociology
Studies
Work organization
Workers
title Are Referrals More Productive or More Likeable? Social Networks and the Evaluation of Merit
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