Épisodes

  • Power, with Dr. Huisi (Jessica) Li
    Oct 17 2024

    Have you ever wondered how feeling powerless can impact your behavior? It turns out that although we more often study those with high power—or those we think have high power, such as leaders—there’s a lot we do know about the effects of low power. In particular, a growing body of research suggests caution is warranted: powerlessness changes people’s behaviors in a variety of undesirable ways, such as telling self-promotional lies, competing covertly, justifying a flawed organizational system, and failing to leverage one’s BATNA in negotiations. However, relative power and status differences are ever-present, so it’s important that we learn how to manage and mitigate these downsides of low power. Listen to this episode for some fascinating and thought-provoking recent work on the realities we are likely to face in experiencing and being a part of situations that involve power differences between people, and how you can more effectively manage yourself in these situations.

    Dr. Jessica Li bio:

    Huisi (Jessica) Li is an Assistant Professor of Management and Organization at the University of Washington. Li’s research on the corruptive and undesirable effects of lacking power complements established findings on the corruptive nature of power itself. She also examines how power and status hierarchies impact team performance, especially within diverse and dynamic teams. Li employs diverse methodologies, including field surveys, experiments, archival data, and qualitative methods. Her work has been published in top journals, including Organization Science, Journal of Applied Psychology, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Research in Organizational Behavior. She has collaborated with organizations like the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Darden, etc. She serves on the editorial boards of Organization Science and Management and Organization Review and as a rep-at-large for the Conflict Management Division of the Academy of Management.

    Articles referenced in the episode:

    • Zhong, Y & Li, H. (2023) Do Lower-Power Individuals Really Compete Less? An investigation of Covert Competition. Organization Science. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2023.1684
    • Li, H., Wang, X., Williams, M, Chen., Y.-R., & Brockner, J. (2023) My Boss is Younger, Less Educated, and Shorter Tenured: When and Why Status (In)congruence Influences Promotion System Justification. Journal of Applied Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1037/apl0001086
    • Li, H., Chen, Y.-R., & Hildreth, J. A (2022). Powerlessness also Corrupts: Lower Power Increases Self-Promotional Lying. Organization Science. ttps://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2022.1630

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    31 min
  • Trust, with Dr. Peter Kim
    Mar 4 2024

    Have you ever wondered how trust really works? Why do we trust others, and why do they trust us? It turns out that trust involves judgments of both competence and integrity, each of which matter a lot for how we’re trusted, and how—and if!—we’re forgiven if we break that trust. Dr. Kim offers four guiding lessons of wisdom for managing trust. In his words: first, start with the premise that most of us want to be good. Second, recognize the complexity of truth—take time to exchange stories and take the time to really listen. Third, recognize the upside of intent—it can be easier to maintain and repair trust when others believe our intentions are good. Fourth, building off a memorable case study from the book, recognize the need to walk through the doors: the time needs to be ripe for real reconciliation to happen. In this episode, Dr. Peter Kim from the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California teaches us all about trust, reviewing decades of his own and others’ work to help us see how we can reap the benefits of trust, even though it can take hard work and unlearning ingrained habits and assumptions. Dr. Kim provides research-based insights and helpful practical tips for how we can get the most out of trust—for ourselves and others—in our lives.

    Dr. Peter Kim bio:

    Dr. Peter Kim is a Professor of Management and Organization at the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California. Dr. Kim’s research focuses on the dynamics of social misperception and its implications for negotiations, work groups, and dispute resolution. His research has been published in numerous scholarly journals, received ten national and international awards, and been featured by the New York Times, Washington Post, and National Public Radio. He serves as a Senior Editor for Organization Science journal, as an Associate Editor for the Journal of Trust Research, and on the editorial boards of the Academy of Management Review and Negotiation and Conflict Management Research. He is a past Associate Editor for the Academy of Management Review and past Chair of the Academy of Management’s Conflict Management Division. He has also just completed his first mass-market book called, How Trust Works: The Science of How Relationships are Built, Broken, and Repaired. It is available from most bookstores.

    Books referenced in the episode:

    • Kim, P. H. (2024). How Trust Works: The Science of How Relationships are Built, Broken, and Repaired. New York: MacMillan.


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    40 min
  • Leadership, with author and leader Paul Fayad
    Nov 12 2023

    What does a rowboat have to do with leadership? It turns out to be a powerful metaphor to understand both positive leadership and our own contributions—and potential areas for self-development—for the organization. In this episode, author, film producer, humanitarian, serial entrepreneur, former and current CEO, lifelong learner, and constant questioner Paul Fayad teaches us how to recognize the role of positive leadership and how to use it in organizations, to focus on the rowers and the work that they accomplish in order to increase productivity and lower turnover in organizations, and to understand that personalities are stable and that changing personalities that are not a good fit with our organizations is not where our focus should be. Instead, it should be on recognizing and rewarding positive behaviors in our rowers and on moving ourselves in most cases from sitters to rowers. Based on his real-world application over many decades of the science of leadership and behaviors to his own work in industry, Paul Fayad provides tested personal and professional insights and helpful practical tips for how we can recognize and use these principles in our daily lives.


    Fayad, P., & Lam, C., F. (2023). Shaping a Winning Team: A Leader's Guide to Hiring, Assessing, and Developing the People You Need to Succeed. New York: Amplify Publishing Group.


    Paul Fayad Bio

    Paul has owned, operated, and run multiple companies throughout his 40 years in business. Paul has consulted with multiple organizations nationwide to establish leadership programs based on positive leadership skills. He has lectured at universities and college business schools in the United States, Canada, and Hong Kong. Paul has been invited as a national speaker and has written numerous articles in trade journals and e-books. Paul recently co-authored the book Shaping a Winning Team: A leader’s guide to Hiring, Assessing and Developing the People You Need to Succeed. Recently Paul produced the Documentary Helambu, How One School Changed Everything, which was a winner of the London Film Festival and finalist at the Banff and Vancouver Film Festivals.

    He co-founded and is active with the East Side Youth Sports Foundation, dedicated to helping disadvantaged children in Detroit participate in sports and literacy programs. He is active with the Tsering’s Fund in Nepal, providing young girls and orphans who would otherwise face human trafficking the opportunity for education through scholarships. Paul is involved with Friends to Mankind and the Dhyan Vimal Institute based in Canada and Malaysia, providing coursework in leadership and self-development. Paul has worked with Habitat for Humanity locally and internationally.

    Links to entities referenced in the episode:

    https://positiveleader.com/

    https://elmlearning.com/

    https://esysf.com/

    https://www.tseringsfund.org/

    https://www.dhyanvimalinstitute.com/

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    1 h et 3 min
  • Part II: Psychology of Hierarchy, with Dr. Nicholas Hays
    Oct 6 2023

    Dr. Nicholas Hays is a faculty member at the Broad College of Business at Michigan State University. This episode focused on his research on the psychology of hierarchy. He discussed how different hierarchies influence individuals' experiences and group processes.

    Articles referenced in the episode:

    Bendersky, C., & Hays, N. A. (2012). Status conflict in groups. Organization Science, 23(2), 323-340. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.1110.0734

    Hays, N. A., & Bendersky, C. (2015). Not all inequality is created equal: Effects of status versus power hierarchies on competition for upward mobility. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 108(6), 867-882. https://doi.org/10.1037/pspi0000017

    Hays, N. A., Li, H., Yang, X., Oh, J. K., Yu, A., Chen, Y.-R., Hollenbeck, J. R., & Jamieson, B. B. (2021). A tale of two hierarchies: Interactive effects of power differentiation and status differentiation on team performance. Organization Science, 33(6), 2085-2105. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2021.1540

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    15 min
  • Part I: Psychology of Hierarchy, with Dr. Nicholas Hays
    Oct 6 2023

    Dr. Nicholas Hays is a faculty member at the Broad College of Business at Michigan State University. This episode focused on his research on the psychology of hierarchy. He discussed how different hierarchies influence individuals' experiences and group processes.

    Articles referenced in the episode:

    Bendersky, C., & Hays, N. A. (2012). Status conflict in groups. Organization Science, 23(2), 323-340. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.1110.0734

    Hays, N. A., & Bendersky, C. (2015). Not all inequality is created equal: Effects of status versus power hierarchies on competition for upward mobility. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 108(6), 867-882. https://doi.org/10.1037/pspi0000017

    Hays, N. A., Li, H., Yang, X., Oh, J. K., Yu, A., Chen, Y.-R., Hollenbeck, J. R., & Jamieson, B. B. (2021). A tale of two hierarchies: Interactive effects of power differentiation and status differentiation on team performance. Organization Science, 33(6), 2085-2105. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2021.1540

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    14 min
  • Part II: Interventions for Gender Bias, with Dr. Corinne Bendersky
    May 16 2023

    Corinne Bendersky is a Professor and Area Chair of Management and Organizations at UCLA Anderson School of Management. She is an expert in workplace conflict, status, justice, and diversity and inclusion in teams and organizations.

    In recent projects, Dr. Bendersky has developed interventions to reduce the gender bias experienced by women who work in extremely male-dominated professions, such as the U.S. fire service. Her interventions have also been used to reduce the endorsement of sexist supervisors.

    Articles referenced in the episode:

    • Danbold, F., & Bendersky, C. (2020). Balancing professional prototypes increases the valuation of women in male-dominated professions. Organization Science, 31(1), 119–140. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2019.1288
    • Danbold, F., & Bendersky, C. (2023). Perceived misalignment of professional prototypes reduces subordinates’ endorsement of sexist supervisors. Journal of Applied Psychology, 108(4), 676–685. https://doi.org/10.1037/apl0001038
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    10 min
  • Part I: Interventions for Gender Bias, with Dr. Corinne Bendersky
    May 16 2023

    Corinne Bendersky is a Professor and Area Chair of Management and Organizations at UCLA Anderson School of Management. She is an expert in workplace conflict, status, justice, and diversity and inclusion in teams and organizations.

    In recent projects, Dr. Bendersky has developed interventions to reduce the gender bias experienced by women who work in extremely male-dominated professions, such as the U.S. fire service. Her interventions have also been used to reduce the endorsement of sexist supervisors.

    Articles referenced in the episode:

    • Danbold, F., & Bendersky, C. (2020). Balancing professional prototypes increases the valuation of women in male-dominated professions. Organization Science, 31(1), 119–140. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2019.1288
    • Danbold, F., & Bendersky, C. (2023). Perceived misalignment of professional prototypes reduces subordinates’ endorsement of sexist supervisors. Journal of Applied Psychology, 108(4), 676–685. https://doi.org/10.1037/apl0001038
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    14 min
  • Part II: The Theory of Ethical Accounting, with Dr. Peter Kim
    Dec 23 2022

    Have you ever wondered if you’re being fair and consistent when you evaluate your own actions versus the actions of others from an ethical standpoint? It turns out that we’re often not, but this inconsistency isn’t necessarily because we’re trying to be self-serving. Instead, there are fundamental differences in our access to information related to ourselves versus others, such as the reasons underlying a certain behavior, or calculations of the behavior’s potential costs and benefits. These informational differences can create cognitive distortions in how we address four core questions – regarding the unethicality, liability, insolvency, and incompensability of behavior – and can help explain why we sometimes seem like ethical hypocrites. In this episode, Dr. Peter Kim from the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California teaches us how to recognize, understand, and respond most effectively to these four questions and how they influence our behaviors, our sense of morality, and our judgments of ourselves and others. Dr. Kim provides research-based insights and helpful practical tips for how we can recognize and use these important principles of ethical accounting in our daily lives.

    Dr. Peter Kim bio:

    Dr. Peter Kim is a Professor of Management and Organization at the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California. Dr. Kim’s research focuses on the dynamics of social misperception and its implications for negotiations, work groups, and dispute resolution. His research has been published in numerous scholarly journals, received ten national and international awards, and been featured by the New York Times, Washington Post, and National Public Radio. He serves as a Senior Editor for Organization Science journal, as an Associate Editor for the Journal of Trust Research, and on the editorial boards of the Academy of Management Review and Negotiation and Conflict Management Research. He is a past Associate Editor for the Academy of Management Review and past Chair of the Academy of Management’s Conflict Management Division. He has also just completed his first mass-market book that will be published by MacMillan on August 15, 2023 called, “How Trust Works: The Science of How Relationships are Built, Broken, and Repaired.” It is already available for pre-order from most bookstores.

    Articles referenced in the episode:

    • Kim, P. H., Wiltermuth, S. S., & Newman, D. T. (2021). A theory of ethical accounting and its implications for hypocrisy in organizations. Academy of Management Review, 46(1), 172-191. https://doi.org/10.5465/amr.2018.0161
    • Kim, P. H., Ployhart, R. E., & Gibson, C. B. (2018). Editors’ comments: Is organizational behavior overtheorized?. Academy of Management Review, 43(4), 541-545. https://doi.org/10.5465/amr.2018.0233
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    18 min