4.6 Article

COMMUNICATION MISCALIBRATION: THE PRICE LEADERS PAY FOR NOT SHARING ENOUGH

Journal

ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
Volume 66, Issue 4, Pages 1102-1122

Publisher

ACAD MANAGEMENT
DOI: 10.5465/amj.2021.0245

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Leaders are more likely to be criticized for under-communicating than for over-communicating, even though under-communication is more heavily penalized. Under-communicating leaders are viewed as less qualified for a leadership role because they are seen as lacking empathy.
Leaders may be seen by their followers as miscalibrating the quantity of their communication-sharing too much or too little. We propose that leaders are more likely to be seen as under-communicating than over-communicating, even though under -communication is more heavily penalized. In Study 1a, we examine 2,717 qualitative comments from archived leadership assessments and find that leaders are nearly 10 times as likely to be criticized for under-communicating than for over-communicating. In Study 1b, we obtain further evidence of this bias using a representative sample of U.S. adults. In Study 2, we manipulate communication (mis)calibration, showing that leaders who under-communicate are viewed as less qualified for a leadership role because they are viewed as less empathic. In Study 3, we use separate measures of employee percep-tions of their manager's communication as well as their preferences. When there is a lack of congruence between perceived and preferred communication, employees judge their leaders as lacking empathy and, in turn, leadership ability.

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