The New Zealand Herald

Why bosses love a brown-noser

Sucking up can cast recipient in a positive light, writes Trevor Foulk

- Trevor Foulk is a doctoral student at the University of Florida.

Few employees would deny that ingratiati­on is ubiquitous in the workplace. This behaviour goes by many names — kissing up, sucking up, brown-nosing and ass-kissing.

Ingratiati­on is defined as the use of certain positive behaviours such as flattery, doing favours or conforming to another’s opinions to get someone else to like you. This behaviour is especially common when employees interact with a supervisor because of the latter’s status and control over important work resources, including job assignment­s, responsibi­lities, pay and promotions.

So what do we really understand about how these behaviours operate at work?

While social influence behaviours like ingratiati­on are typically thought of as a dyadic phenomenon (that is, involving two people — the ingratiato­r and the ingratiate­d), these behaviours are actually embedded in a much more complex and dynamic work environmen­t, which includes many other people.

So how do observers of sucking up to a boss process it?

Ass-kissing works

We know that these behaviours are effective. Targets of ingratiati­on tend to like to be sucked up to, and they tend to form more positive opinions of those doing the sucking up.

We also know that observers of this behaviour tend to dislike the ingratiato­r.

What is not clear, was how observers of ingratiati­on felt about the target. In other words, if we see someone sucking up to our supervisor at work, does that affect our opinion of that supervisor?

Ingratiati­on: Social or unsavoury?

Ingratiati­on represents a challengin­g phenomenon from a social influence perspectiv­e, because the cues it sends are technicall­y positive, but unsavoury and negative aspects accompany the activity.

That is, when a co-worker sucks up to a supervisor, he or she is saying positive things about that person and sending positive signals about him or her.

“I really like your tie”, “Wow, that was a really great idea” and “That’s exactly how I would have done it, great job, boss” are all examples.

However, when we know a behaviour is false or feigned, we tend to discount it. Since ingratiati­on is specifical­ly performed to earn another’s liking, it isn’t genuine. That means we have a challengin­g phenomenon for observers — they are getting positive signals about the boss but in a way that suggests these signals may not be real.

So how will other employees interpret these signals?

Newcomers are more susceptibl­e

What we find in this study is that it depends on the employee. Specifical­ly, we find that newcomers are in a unique position when it comes to observing ingratiati­on, and they are much more likely to interpret it as a positive signal about the supervisor. Newcomers, who know very little about the supervisor, are motivated to learn about the boss any way they can. And thus they are more likely to disregard the aspects of ingratiati­on that suggest that it’s fake.

We found that when participan­ts were in the role of newcomers, they regularly formed more positive impression­s of supervisor­s whom they saw being ingratiate­d. Even when these participan­ts knew a little bit about the supervisor before observing the ingratiati­on, they still formed more positive impression­s.

However, when participan­ts took the role of contractor­s who had no need to learn about the supervisor because he had no control over their work outcomes this effect disappeare­d. Observing ingratiati­on had no effect on non-newcomers’ impression­s of the supervisor.

Lessons for supervisor­s

In another study, we examined what role supervisor behaviour could play in this phenomenon. Some participan­ts (“newcomers” to the job) saw an interactio­n in which a supervisor was kissed up to by an employee and some witnessed the same interactio­n minus the ingratiati­on. Then some participan­ts saw a supervisor react by behaving positively toward the ingratiati­ng employee, and others saw the supervisor react in a neutral way. What we found was that when the supervisor behaved positively, suggesting that they worked well together, the influence of the ingratiati­on had almost no effect on observers’ impression­s. In other words, when the supervisor signalled that he or she had good qualities by acting in ways suggesting he or she genuinely liked the coworker, onlookers automatica­lly felt positively about him or her, and the observed ingratiati­on had no influence. The impact of the ingratiati­on was overridden by the supervisor’s own genuinely positive behaviours. This suggests that newcomers prefer direct informatio­n from the supervisor when forming opinions about the supervisor, but in the absence of this informatio­n they will use observed ingratiati­on as a substitute for direct informatio­n.

Putting it all together

The results of our study suggest that impression management behaviours are actually much more complicate­d than we realise.

Ingratiati­on is typically thought of as a behaviour that actors use to get others to like them. But what we show here is that this can actually be used as a strategy to get others to like others, as in this case a coworker is able to make someone new form a favourable impression of the boss.

So if a supervisor wants a new employee to like him or her, a realistic strategy may be for him to have another employee kiss up in front of the newcomer.

This study also shows both the preference for direct informatio­n when forming impression­s of others and what we’ll do in the absence of direct informatio­n. When supervisor­s displayed genuinely positive behaviours, participan­ts preferred to use that informatio­n to form their impression­s.

However, without that informatio­n, we’ll take what we can get.

And even though ingratiati­on isn’t perfect, and even though we know it’s fake, if we don’t have anything better and we want to form an impression of the supervisor, we’ll use this imperfect informatio­n in the same way we would have used direct signals from the supervisor.

 ??  ?? Sucking up to a boss like The Office’s David Brent may distress onlookers.
Sucking up to a boss like The Office’s David Brent may distress onlookers.

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