Research Suggests Business Leaders Should Rethink How They Treat Team Members

If a leader treats team members too differently from each other, performance suffers

Written byNorth Carolina State University andNewswise
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Newswise — New findings from an international team of researchers suggest business leaders who oversee teams need to find a middle ground in how they treat team members–or risk hurting team performance. Specifically, the researchers found that treating some team members much better than others can adversely affect performance–as can treating all team members the same way.

“Existing research has generally shown that leaders treating team members differently, depending on factors such as how competent they believe each member is, can result in productive teams,” says Bradley Kirkman, co-author of a paper on the work, General Hugh Shelton Distinguished Professor of Leadership and head of the Department of Management, Innovation and Entrepreneurship in North Carolina State University’s Poole College of Management. “In fact, previous research points to a linear relationship between treating team members differently and team performance. But we didn’t find that to be true.

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