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Jelly, jelly so fine

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Narcissists make poor leaders

“I’m embarrassed by all of us, I’ve never seen a worse Congress in my whole political life.’’
Maine Senator Olympia Snowe
I read an interesting article today in Science Daily today that one should ponder when considering our current political leadership. Narcissists look like good leaders but they really aren't.
"Our research shows that the opposite seems to be true," says Barbora Nevicka, a PhD candidate in organizational psychology, describing a new study she undertook with University of Amsterdam colleagues Femke Ten Velden, Annebel De Hoogh, and Annelies Van Vianen. The study found that the narcissists' preoccupation with their own brilliance inhibits a crucial element of successful group decision-making and performance: the free and creative exchange of information and ideas. The findings will be published in an upcoming issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
...The study recruited 150 participants and divided them into groups of three. One person was randomly assigned to be the group's leader; all were told they could contribute advice, but that the leader was responsible for making the decision. Then they undertook a group task: choosing a job candidate. Of 45 items of information about the candidate, some were given to all three, and some to only one of the participants.
The experiment was designed so that using only the information all three were privy to, the group would opt for a lesser candidate. Sharing all the information, including what each possessed exclusively, would lead to the best choice. Afterwards, the participants completed questionnaires. The leaders' questions measured narcissism; the others assessed the leaders' authority and effectiveness. All checked off the items among the 45 that they knew -- indicating how much the group had shared -- and rated how well they'd exchanged information. Experimenters tallied the number of shared items, noted the objective quality of the decision, and analyzed these data in relation to the leader's narcissism.
As expected, the group members rated the most narcissistic leaders as most effective. But they were wrong. In fact, the groups led by the greatest egotists chose the worse candidate for the job. Says Nevicka, "The narcissistic leaders had a very negative effect on their performance. They inhibited the communication because of self-centeredness and authoritarianism."
Narcissism can sometimes be useful in a leader, says Nevicka. In a crisis, for instance, people feel that a strong, dominant person will take control and do the right thing, "and that may reduce uncertainty and diminish stress."
But in the everyday life of an organization, "communication -- sharing of information, perspectives, and knowledge -- is essential to making good decisions. In brainstorming groups, project teams, government committees, each person brings something new. That's the benefit of teams. That's what creates a good outcome." Good leaders facilitate communication by asking questions and summarizing the conversation -- something narcissists are too self-involved to do.
Nevicka says the research has implications beyond the workplace -- for instance, in politics. "Narcissists are very convincing. They do tend to be picked as leaders. There's the danger: that people can be so wrong based on how others project themselves. You have to ask: Are the competencies they project valid, or are they merely in the eyes of the beholder?"

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey Robert and Heronites,
Deli guy here in Prague Czech Republic. Six hour stroll around old Prague and Jewish Quarter. Unbelievable sights and very few English speakers to be found my wife and I are drowning in a culture both foreign and familiar. Mcdonalds, Burger king,Kfc. Kinda surreal. Reading the blast from afar is kinda cool.
Peace y'all. Deli guy***

Anonymous said...

"Narcissists make poor leaders", seems like common sense. "pride comes before the fall", and all that. Ronald Reagan is hailed for "restoring pride" in America.As if we needed that.America currently ranks among the bottom ranks scholastically, math,reading,science,etc. But we rank number one in student's self-confidence and outlook. What the world calls "yankee spirit". It's a bit of an interesting correlary when you think of how the market runs on confidence.We have a "free" market mentality, always focused on some "promised" land that is purported to be "our" destiny."Our" meaning the ruling class. Whether its ad campaigns or political campaigns, the goal is to keep us distracted from the present. It's always the carrot in front of our nose(or actually, the flag), to keep us from thinking about the carrot being inserted from behind. What George Carlin referred to as "customer service".Its interesting that the scientists expected a poor leader to be chosen. Same old song and dance.
-Whomever

Anonymous said...

"Narcissists make poor leaders" I guess could also go by the title of your latest Bastabit, "Building A Better Asshole".