Getting to Excess: Psychological Entitlement and Negotiation Attitudes

被引:27
|
作者
Neville, Lukas [1 ]
Fisk, Glenda M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manitoba, Asper Sch Business, 412 Drake Ctr,181 Freedman Crescent, Winnipeg, MB R3T 5V4, Canada
[2] Queens Univ, Employment Relat, 227 Robert Sutherland Hall,138 Union St, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
关键词
Negotiation; Psychological entitlement; Personality; Individual differences; NARCISSISTIC PERSONALITY-INVENTORY; UNETHICAL BARGAINING TACTICS; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; ABUSIVE SUPERVISION; DECISION-MAKING; POLITICAL SKILL; SELF-EFFICACY; FACTOR MODEL; OUTCOMES; GRANDIOSE;
D O I
10.1007/s10869-018-9557-6
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
In this paper, we extend the literature on psychological entitlement to the domain of negotiation. Psychological entitlement describes a tendency to demand excessive and unearned rewards. For negotiators, entitlement is associated not only with individually beneficial attitudes, like aspirations, first offer intentions and self-efficacy, but also with contentious and unethical approaches to bargaining. As such, we argue that entitlement in negotiation may function as a social trap: The functional negotiation attitudes it engenders are likely to result in personally favourable outcomes for the entitled negotiator, reinforcing and exacerbating those attitudes. But these advantages are simultaneously accompanied by a suite of dysfunctional attitudes (unethicality, a zero-sum mindset and a contentious style) that lead the entitled to seek advantage at others' cost. In three cross-sectional studies of recalled, hypothetical and planned future negotiations (n=615), we show both the functional and dysfunctional consequences of entitlement in negotiation. Importantly, we establish the ability of entitlement to predict these consequences above and beyond traits robustly situated in the personality literature (e.g. narcissism, low agreeableness, neuroticism). Our findings indicate entitlement may have pernicious effects for negotiation ethics. We close by addressing the methodological limitations of our study and by proposing a research agenda for management, personality and negotiation researchers interested in mitigating the effects of entitlement in negotiating.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:555 / 574
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] THE ATTITUDES OF INCEST OFFENDERS - SEXUAL ENTITLEMENT AND ACCEPTANCE OF SEX WITH CHILDREN
    HANSON, RK
    GIZZARELLI, R
    SCOTT, H
    CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND BEHAVIOR, 1994, 21 (02) : 187 - 202
  • [42] Individuals higher in psychological entitlement respond to bad luck with anger
    Zitek, Emily M.
    Jordan, Alexander H.
    PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2021, 168
  • [43] Academic entitlement: relations to perceptions of parental warmth and psychological control
    Turner, Lisa A.
    McCormick, Wesley H.
    EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 38 (02) : 248 - 260
  • [44] Idiosyncratic deals and creative deviance: the mediating role of psychological entitlement
    Liu, Fangzhou
    Zhou, Ke
    R & D MANAGEMENT, 2021, 51 (05) : 433 - 446
  • [45] Influences of (in)congruences in psychological entitlement and felt obligation on ethical behavior
    Chen, Qin
    Shen, Yifei
    Zhang, Li
    Zhang, Zhenduo
    Zheng, Junwei
    Xiu, Jing
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 13
  • [46] Deprived and Grandiose Explanations for Psychological Entitlement: Implications for Theory and Measurement
    Hart, William
    Tortoriello, Gregory K.
    Richardson, Kyle
    JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT, 2020, 102 (04) : 488 - 498
  • [47] An empirical examination of the role of attributions in psychological entitlement and its outcomes
    Harvey, Paul
    Martinko, Mark J.
    JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR, 2009, 30 (04) : 459 - 476
  • [48] Getting rid of the excess heat: The cooling system
    Rukes, Sherri
    Goodwin, Debbie
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2015, 250
  • [49] Attitudes towards questionable negotiation tactics in Turkey
    Erkus, Ahmet
    Banai, Moshe
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONFLICT MANAGEMENT, 2011, 22 (03) : 239 - 263
  • [50] NIGHTINGALISM AND NEGOTIATION - NEW ATTITUDES OF HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
    RUTSOHN, PD
    GRIMES, RM
    PERSONNEL JOURNAL, 1977, 56 (08) : 398 - 401