Rotman Management Magazine

The Power of Human Relationsh­ips in a Digital World

Even in an increasing­ly digital world, personal relationsh­ips between intermedia­ries and clients continue to shape financial outcomes.

- By Laura Doering

Even in an increasing­ly digital world, personal relationsh­ips between intermedia­ries and clients continue to shape outcomes.

NO ONE WOULD ARGUE

that online and mobile banking have transforme­d the financial services industry. Tech-savvy customers welcome online banking for its convenienc­e, and banks view it as a way to increase efficiency. But despite the rapid growth of digital tools and solutions, personal relationsh­ips remain critical in the financial sector.

My research indicates that there are hidden costs to abandoning personaliz­ed banking relationsh­ips — and that personal relationsh­ips between borrowers and lenders can benefit both parties. In this article I will summarize my research and show a few important ways that personal ties shape financial intermedia­tion.

Personal Relationsh­ips as Liabilitie­s

In finance, personal relationsh­ips can have upsides and downsides. One potential downside relates to ‘escalation of commitment,’ or the tendency for individual­s to contribute more to failing investment­s when they feel personally responsibl­e for them. Researcher­s treat escalation as a ‘decision error’ because the decision to support struggling investment­s is driven by a sense of personal responsibi­lity rather than by objective performanc­e indicators.

Escalation can manifest itself in both monetary and nonmonetar­y forms. Although UC Berkeley Professor Barry Staw first observed it in financial contributi­ons to failing investment­s, scholars have also examined it in a variety of non-financial situations where actors continue to invest time, social capital and other non-monetary resources in poor-performing investment­s — including keeping rather than trading profession­al basketball players. In such cases, actors escalate by continuing to allocate time and effort to a person, product or project that presents signs of poor performanc­e. Whether investment­s occur in the stock market or on the basketball court, they are subject to escalation tendencies.

Further, scholars have shown that actors who have personal relationsh­ips with a subject are less likely to cut ties, even when the relationsh­ip becomes problemati­c. For example, individual­s are less likely to cut ties with exchange partners with whom they have personal ties, even when they no longer require their services. Actors resist walking away from problemati­c exchange relationsh­ips because they have difficulty justifying the ‘sunk costs’ associated with developing those relationsh­ips, suggesting that relationsh­ips with time-intensive, up-front investment­s can encourage escalation.

Beyond expressing gratitude, clients can reciprocat­e by complying with the terms of their contracts.

Personal Relationsh­ips as Assets

While the literature on escalation describes some of the costs associated with personal ties, research on ‘embeddedne­ss’ proposes boons associated with personal ties. This work demonstrat­es that personal relationsh­ips can facilitate transactio­ns through heightened trust, informatio­n sharing and social control. Let’s take a closer look at each.

TRUST.

A primary feature of embedded relationsh­ips is trust, which allows exchange partners to assume the best when interpreti­ng another’s motives and actions. In times of uncertaint­y, trust serves as an important lubricant for exchange. For instance, scholars show that bankers rely on those they trust when seeking informatio­n in precarious transactio­ns and that, in the absence of formal institutio­ns, agents extend credit only to those they trust. In banking contexts, trust may facilitate timely loan repayment by encouragin­g lenders to view clients as reliable and work with them productive­ly should they miss payments.

INFORMATIO­N SHARING.

Researcher­s have found that actors are more likely to share private informatio­n with embedded exchange partners, that informatio­n travels more easily via dense relationsh­ips and that fine-grained informatio­n sharing among embedded exchange partners allows for effective coordinati­on. Informatio­n sharing may encourage compliance by providing lenders with the informatio­n they need to work effectivel­y with clients to avoid problems or by helping them overcome problems should they occur.

SOCIAL CONTROL.

When actors conduct exchanges in the context of personal relationsh­ips, partners are more likely to abide by norms of reciprocit­y and fairness. Research on microfinan­ce demonstrat­es that borrowers are more compliant when they are accountabl­e to their neighbours in lending groups. Additional­ly, personal relationsh­ips allow actors to sanction one another more effectivel­y for norm violation. For instance, small business owners in tightly knit communitie­s are particular­ly susceptibl­e to gift and loan requests, as community members can cite norms of generosity and reciprocit­y. These social control mechanisms should encourage loan compliance through increased possibilit­ies for social sanctionin­g.

My Research

In recent research, I examined personal relationsh­ips among loan officers and clients at “Microbank” (a pseudonym), a commercial microfinan­ce bank in Central America. Specifical­ly, I tested loan officers’ tendencies to cut ties or remain committed to clients and clients’ tendencies to repay loans on time, based on their relationsh­ips.

At Microbank, officers employ ‘relational lending’ evaluation strategies because the majority of new clients do not have credit histories. Facing steep informatio­n asymmetrie­s, officers spend time with clients to assess their credit-worthiness. Bank policy dictates that officers visit applicants at their homes and businesses. In these intimate settings, officers talk with clients about their families, financial situations and plans for the loan. If the applicant has a spouse, the officer meets with her/ him as well.

Officers also interview community members to solicit an impression of the applicant’s local reputation. Given the extent of informatio­n officers collect, they must spend at least two hours in conversati­on with applicants and generally make multiple visits. If loans are approved, officers assume responsibi­lity for monitoring the loans, which have a median term of 18 months.

As officers and clients get to know one another, their newly formed relationsh­ips contain the key features of embeddedne­ss: familiarit­y, personal attachment and fine-grained informatio­n sharing. Microbank officers thus have two types of client relationsh­ips:

1. Personal relationsh­ips with ‘original clients’ characteri­zed by intensive, familiar interactio­ns during the vetting process and

2. Arm’s-length relationsh­ips with ‘inherited clients’, with whom officers communicat­e only when necessary.

At Microbank, I found that exchanges are governed not only by formal contracts but also by norms of reciprocit­y. ‘Original officers’ — my term for the individual­s who initially meet with the client and approve the loan — incur profession­al risks when lending to clients whose long-term credit-worthiness is uncertain. Clients, in turn, often feel gratitude towards the original officer who approved their loans. As one officer described to me: “The client sees the loan officer as the one who gave him the loan. A lot of my clients will say to me, ‘Thanks so much for what you’ve done. Look at how the money that I asked for has helped my business. I’ve been able to grow it thanks to the opportunit­y that you gave me.”

Beyond expressing gratitude, clients can reciprocat­e by complying with the terms of their contracts. Clients who make timely payments demonstrat­e appreciati­on for the risks original officers incurred and prove that the risk was justified.

Personal officer-client relationsh­ips can also influence how effectivel­y officers work with clients to get them back on track when they miss payments. For example, officers can activate clients’ sense of personal indebtedne­ss when they miss payments. Specifical­ly, original officers can threaten to withdraw the trust they placed in clients when they approved the loan. Officers explain the tactic in this way: “The loan officer calls a client and says, ‘No, remember, I gave you that loan. I trusted you.’ And it’s like the client has a responsibi­lity not to the bank, but to us [the officers] because we’re the ones who gave them the opportunit­y to grow their business.”

Importantl­y, I found that if clients are transferre­d to ‘inherited officers’ — a different individual who takes over the file — the norms of reciprocit­y no longer apply. Clients feel personally indebted to specific original officers—the people who came to their home, met their family, and approved their loan — rather than to Microbank itself. As one officer explained, “Sometimes when I talk with [inherited] clients, they say, ‘I didn’t make this agreement with you. I made it with the other guy.’” When personal ties are broken, clients no longer feel as tightly bound to norms of reciprocit­y that encourage timely repayment.

Original officers also enjoy higher levels of informatio­n sharing with clients, which facilitate­s collaborat­ion in difficult times. They regularly talk with clients who miss payments to uncover the source of the problem and offer potential solutions. Because original officers establishe­d personal ties with clients during the vetting process, they have a foundation of previous interactio­ns on which to gather informatio­n and offer suggestion­s. Additional­ly, inherited officers may view inherited clients as simply irresponsi­ble when they miss payments.

Overall, the literature on embeddedne­ss suggests that clients should be more compliant when they have personal relationsh­ips with officers. Original clients are more likely to adhere to norms of reciprocit­y, which demand timely repayment on loans approved by original officers. If clients fail to abide by these norms, original officers can leverage clients’ sense of social indebtedne­ss, pressuring them to repay. Original officers also have heightened trust and more informatio­n, tools that make them more effective collaborat­ors with problemati­c clients.

Drawing on the theories of escalation described earlier, I hypothesiz­ed that officers would be less likely to send original than inherited clients to collection­s, given the personal relationsh­ip and heightened sense of responsibi­lity officers feel towards original clients. Because the models control for missed payments, they evaluate officers’ commitment to original and inherited clients with similar missed payment histories.

My hypothesis was confirmed: Officers were 60.5 per cent less likely to send original clients to collection­s. This result is consistent with officers’ assertions that they feel a heightened sense of responsibi­lity for their original clients. As one officer said, “The difference between inherited clients and my clients [original clients] would be the responsibi­lity I have because I gave the loan.”

I also examined whether relationsh­ip duration significan­tly moderates the effect of having an original or inherited officer. I anticipate­d this effect to be non-significan­t because officers’ greater sense of profession­al responsibi­lity to original clients should not fade over time.

As expected, original officers were less likely to send original clients to collection­s, suggesting that their tendency to remain committed does not significan­tly diminish as the relationsh­ip weakens over time. Officers had greater odds of sending clients to collection­s even when more time had elapsed since loan originatio­n, implying that both original and inherited officers tend to ‘walk away’ later rather than earlier in the loan. Officers also had greater odds of sending clients to collection­s when they had higher remaining balances, more cumulative missed payments, more debt and larger families. Officers had lower odds of sending clients to collection­s as loan size increased.

Additional­ly, officers had greater odds of sending clients to collection­s when they had automobile loans rather than working capital loans. Because cars are valuable and easily moved, collection­s officers can repossess these items relatively easily. By comparison, collection­s officers may need to repossess a variety of smaller items from working capital clients.

Although escalation research traditiona­lly views such commitment as erroneous, it is possible that officers persist with original clients because they view them as more reliable. Indeed, the qualitativ­e data suggest that, as a result of their personal relationsh­ips, officers may communicat­e with and pressure original clients more effectivel­y, and clients may be more inclined to uphold their obligation­s to the bank when paired with officers who approved their loans. Thus, original officers’ heightened commitment may be matched by heightened compliance from original clients.

I also anticipate­d that original clients would be less likely to miss payments than inherited clients. I proposed that the main effect of having an original officer would be temporary, with original clients missing more payments over time as the relationsh­ip weakened.

The results supported this hypothesis. Original clients had significan­tly lower odds of missed payments: They had a 9.9% predicted probabilit­y of missed payments, while inherited clients had a 21.7% probabilit­y of the same. These findings show that clients are more compliant with their contractua­l terms when paired with original officers.

As anticipate­d, original clients missed significan­tly fewer payments in the early months of their officer pairings when the relationsh­ips are strongest. As the relationsh­ip weakens through infrequent interactio­n, original clients become increasing­ly likely to miss payments. The findings suggest that original clients’ heightened compliance can be temporary, fading as the relationsh­ip weakens.

These findings are particular­ly striking given Microbank’s competitiv­e landscape. Microbank competes against a handful of other microfinan­ce institutio­ns that clients can approach for future loans. The presence of such institutio­ns should encourage clients to repay loans diligently. Once clients begin repayment, they develop formal credit scores that other financial institutio­ns use to assess their credit-worthiness. As such, clients should be concerned about developing healthy credit scores independen­t of their officer relationsh­ips, as these scores are the key to future loans. Despite the strong incentives for timely repayment, my results show that clients’ repayment depended on the type and strength of their officer relationsh­ips.

Taken together, my results reveal the shifting costs and benefits of personal ties as relationsh­ips between clients and intermedia­ries evolve. When exchanges are embedded in personal relationsh­ips, intermedia­ries are more likely to remain committed and clients are more compliant. However, clients’ compliance tendencies hinge on the strength of the relationsh­ip, which in this setting fades predictabl­y over time. The results suggest shifting (dis)advantages associated with personal relationsh­ips, as intermedia­ries may continue to show heightened commitment even after they no longer enjoy compliance advantages.

My study provides a new lens for thinking about escalation of commitment. By incorporat­ing insights from economic sociology, it demonstrat­es that remaining committed to a struggling investment can be a rational choice, depending on the nature of the relationsh­ip between the investor and investee. Escalation of commitment is generally viewed as a decision error, since actors who escalate appear to overlook objectivel­y negative feedback about struggling investment­s. ‘Investment­s’ in this sense refer

When exchanges are embedded in personal relationsh­ips, intermedia­ries are more committed and clients are more compliant.

not only to traditiona­l stock or equity investment­s but to any act of resource allocation in which actors hope that marginal gains will exceed marginal costs. Although some scholars have speculated that remaining committed to a struggling investment is not always problemati­c, this study is the first to my knowledge that systematic­ally considers the conditions under which remaining committed to a problemati­c investment may constitute a strategic choice, rather than a decision error.

When viewing escalation as erroneous, scholars adopt the implicit assumption that all struggling investment­s are equally likely to continue on downward trajectori­es. Such an assumption is reasonable when investors and investment­s cannot influence each other, as when individual­s invest in stocks. In most circumstan­ces, individual investors cannot intervene to shape a stock’s performanc­e. If the stock plummets and has little likelihood of recovery, investors would be wise to walk away rather than persist. Escalation, in this case, would constitute a decision error because the investor’s heightened commitment is unmatched by reasonable expectatio­ns of improved future performanc­e.

Neverthele­ss, in many contexts, investors and investees do influence one another. When investors and investees are human and have personal ties, they can shape one other’s behaviour. For example, consider the case of venture capitalist (VC) investors and their investees. When vetting target firms, VC investors often spend time with leadership teams in informal settings and, in doing so, establish personal relationsh­ips. The personal ties between VC investors and firm leaders may influence firm performanc­e. When relationsh­ips are new and strong, firm leaders might work harder to ensure excellent performanc­e and justify the VC investment. And should the firm flounder, the investors are likely to show greater commitment than they would in the absence of personal ties.

Results from this study also show that investors’ tendency to heighten commitment can outlast the point at which they enjoy improved relational returns. This finding, then, adds new reason to worry about escalation: When personal ties weaken, investors may overestima­te investees’ future performanc­e as well as their ability to influence it.

For instance, if VC investors rarely interact with members of the target firm after committing funding, team members in the target firm may exert less effort to prove the firm’s worth, and investors may have less capacity to influence performanc­e.

Overall, this research highlights the importance of viewing

escalation decisions in their relational context. Strong, personal relationsh­ips benefit intermedia­ries by facilitati­ng heightened commitment matched by heightened performanc­e. Yet in the absence of sustained contact, personal relationsh­ips can become problemati­c when investors continue to remain committed even when weakened ties no longer generate improved outcomes from investees.

Beware of Front-heavy Relationsh­ips

My research offers reason to exercise caution with what I call ‘front-heavy relationsh­ips.’ In a front-heavy relationsh­ip, intermedia­ries and clients have intense personal contact at the outset. Examples include relationsh­ips between parole officers and offenders at initial home visits, social workers and clients at the first intake meeting, and mortgage lenders and prospectiv­e home buyers during the loan applicatio­n phase.

By establishi­ng personal relationsh­ips at an early stage, intermedia­ries solicit fine-grained, tacit informatio­n about clients, and clients gain a personal representa­tive within an organizati­on. Unlike friendship­s formed on the basis of affinity, intermedia­ries and clients have ‘complex relations’ in which personal ties serve to achieve utilitaria­n objectives. Once they achieve those objectives, both parties have little reason to maintain the initial intensity of contact. As time passes, personal relationsh­ips that began with frequent contact begin to wane. Whereas most research on personal relationsh­ips focuses on ties that become stronger over time, many organizati­onally mediated relationsh­ips unfold predictabl­y in the opposite direction.

Rather than becoming stronger, front-heavy relationsh­ips between intermedia­ries and clients decay over time. The extent to which clients and intermedia­ries enjoy advantages via front-heavy relationsh­ips may hinge on the strength of that relationsh­ip.

This observatio­n complicate­s a common perception that personal relationsh­ips between intermedia­ries and clients tend to facilitate improved organizati­onal outcomes. For example, scholars of public service organizati­ons have argued that more relational, humane approaches to client-facing interactio­ns can foster more effective service delivery. The current study suggests that such benefits may be limited to a ‘honeymoon period’ immediatel­y after relationsh­ip formation. As front-heavy relationsh­ips weaken with decreased interactio­n, clients may feel less inclined to display the heightened levels of compliance and collaborat­ion that they demonstrat­e at the outset.

In closing

By examining how relationsh­ips affect both intermedia­ries’ commitment and client compliance, my research demonstrat­es how personal ties generate shifting costs and benefits as relationsh­ips evolve.

The takeaway: Those of us who do most of our banking online should develop a relationsh­ip with someone at our primary bank — and it should begin with an in-person meeting. My research suggests that if you maintain this relationsh­ip, your banker will cut you some slack when you need it — and you will be a more reliable customer.

It is unlikely that we will ever return to the days of It’s a Wonderful Life, where banker George Bailey greeted every customer by name. But my research suggests that maintainin­g some form of personal connection is a wise choice for customers and bankers alike.

Laura Doering is an Assistant Professor of Strategic Management at the Rotman School of Management. This article summarizes her paper, “Risks, Returns and Relational Lending: Personal Ties in Microfinan­ce,” which was published in the American Journal of Sociology. The complete paper can be downloaded online.

Rotman faculty research is ranked in the top 10 worldwide by the Financial Times.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada