Too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill

Existing research examining the curvilinear relationship between network centrality and performance tends to focus on the information recipients' perspective. Focusing on the information providers' perspective, our study draws upon social exchange theory to demonstrate that the advice-givi...

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Main Authors: Chen, Yi, Boh, Wai Fong, Wong, Sze Sze, Shao, Jun
Other Authors: Nanyang Business School
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170312
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1703122023-09-06T06:03:45Z Too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill Chen, Yi Boh, Wai Fong Wong, Sze Sze Shao, Jun Nanyang Business School Business::Management Advice Network Political Skill Existing research examining the curvilinear relationship between network centrality and performance tends to focus on the information recipients' perspective. Focusing on the information providers' perspective, our study draws upon social exchange theory to demonstrate that the advice-giving centrality-performance relationship for information providers has an inverse U-shape due to decreasing benefits and increasing costs of maintaining more advice-giving ties. We further show that increasing advice-giving centrality increases the likelihood that individuals would become a hindrance to coworkers, as they become bottlenecks impeding efficient workflow. However, our study demonstrates that political skill enables them to overcome the interpersonal challenges associated with high advice-giving centrality. Specifically, individuals with high political skills can better convert advice-giving ties to resources that could assist their cooperation with coworkers, reducing the hindrance they impose. Overall, we provide insights into the trade-off between the benefits and costs of advice-giving ties from a social exchange perspective and examine political skill as an important mitigator of the downsides of large advice-giving networks - a key area that has been hitherto largely unexplored. Ministry of Education (MOE) This work was supported by the Singapore Ministry of Education Tier 1 Grant RG66-19, Ministry of Education Nanyang Technological University Tier 1 Grant RG144/15, Shanghai International Studies University Youth Research Grant (2020114044), and Shanghai International Studies University Innovative Research Team (2020114085). 2023-09-06T06:03:45Z 2023-09-06T06:03:45Z 2023 Journal Article Chen, Y., Boh, W. F., Wong, S. S. & Shao, J. (2023). Too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill. Management and Organization Review, 19(2), 316-347. https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/mor.2023.6 1740-8776 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170312 10.1017/mor.2023.6 2-s2.0-85159227449 2 19 316 347 en RG66-19 RG144/15 Management and Organization Review © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The International Association for Chinese Management Research.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Business::Management
Advice Network
Political Skill
spellingShingle Business::Management
Advice Network
Political Skill
Chen, Yi
Boh, Wai Fong
Wong, Sze Sze
Shao, Jun
Too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill
description Existing research examining the curvilinear relationship between network centrality and performance tends to focus on the information recipients' perspective. Focusing on the information providers' perspective, our study draws upon social exchange theory to demonstrate that the advice-giving centrality-performance relationship for information providers has an inverse U-shape due to decreasing benefits and increasing costs of maintaining more advice-giving ties. We further show that increasing advice-giving centrality increases the likelihood that individuals would become a hindrance to coworkers, as they become bottlenecks impeding efficient workflow. However, our study demonstrates that political skill enables them to overcome the interpersonal challenges associated with high advice-giving centrality. Specifically, individuals with high political skills can better convert advice-giving ties to resources that could assist their cooperation with coworkers, reducing the hindrance they impose. Overall, we provide insights into the trade-off between the benefits and costs of advice-giving ties from a social exchange perspective and examine political skill as an important mitigator of the downsides of large advice-giving networks - a key area that has been hitherto largely unexplored.
author2 Nanyang Business School
author_facet Nanyang Business School
Chen, Yi
Boh, Wai Fong
Wong, Sze Sze
Shao, Jun
format Article
author Chen, Yi
Boh, Wai Fong
Wong, Sze Sze
Shao, Jun
author_sort Chen, Yi
title Too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill
title_short Too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill
title_full Too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill
title_fullStr Too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill
title_full_unstemmed Too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill
title_sort too much of a good thing: downsides of a large social network and moderating effects of political skill
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170312
_version_ 1779156511508922368