Guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of Guanxi

The overall goal of this research project is to use the perspective of guanxi to better understand the use of influence tactics in workplace relationships in Singapore. Influence tactics are a form of communication between individuals in the workplace. They convey different messages depending on the...

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Main Author: Koh, Eugenen Wenhui
Other Authors: Kenichi Ito
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-687592020-03-20T21:50:38Z Guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of Guanxi Koh, Eugenen Wenhui Kenichi Ito School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities::Ethics The overall goal of this research project is to use the perspective of guanxi to better understand the use of influence tactics in workplace relationships in Singapore. Influence tactics are a form of communication between individuals in the workplace. They convey different messages depending on the type of tactic employed and the setting in which they are used. Culture might be expected to impact the perception of which tactics are most socially appropriate and effective in the workplace. However, to date, no study has examined whether the pattern of influence tactics deemed most appropriate and effective in the United States, holds true in a Chinese society. In Study 1, I examined this question in the context of Singapore. I found that while Singaporean participants endorsed the same set of influence tactics as reported for Westerners as appropriate for the workplace, they endorsed a different group of influence tactics as more effective. To gain a greater depth of insight into cultural differences in the perception of workplace influence tactics, in the second study I made a closer examination of how influence behaviours are perceived in the workplace. Specifically, I selected gift-giving as a concrete behavioral example of the operation of a set of influence tactics related to guanxi as the focus of Study 2. The results from the second study showed that only Singaporean participants associated work-related gifts with the concept of trust, while Western participants did not. This pair of studies contributes to a better understanding of how employees navigate through complexities of guanxi principles in a law abiding Singaporean workplace and how guanxi can be understood with influence tactics. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (HSS) 2016-05-31T09:01:00Z 2016-05-31T09:01:00Z 2016 Thesis Koh, E. W. (2016). Guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of Guanxi. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. 10356/68759 10.32657/10356/68759 en 185 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Ethics
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Ethics
Koh, Eugenen Wenhui
Guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of Guanxi
description The overall goal of this research project is to use the perspective of guanxi to better understand the use of influence tactics in workplace relationships in Singapore. Influence tactics are a form of communication between individuals in the workplace. They convey different messages depending on the type of tactic employed and the setting in which they are used. Culture might be expected to impact the perception of which tactics are most socially appropriate and effective in the workplace. However, to date, no study has examined whether the pattern of influence tactics deemed most appropriate and effective in the United States, holds true in a Chinese society. In Study 1, I examined this question in the context of Singapore. I found that while Singaporean participants endorsed the same set of influence tactics as reported for Westerners as appropriate for the workplace, they endorsed a different group of influence tactics as more effective. To gain a greater depth of insight into cultural differences in the perception of workplace influence tactics, in the second study I made a closer examination of how influence behaviours are perceived in the workplace. Specifically, I selected gift-giving as a concrete behavioral example of the operation of a set of influence tactics related to guanxi as the focus of Study 2. The results from the second study showed that only Singaporean participants associated work-related gifts with the concept of trust, while Western participants did not. This pair of studies contributes to a better understanding of how employees navigate through complexities of guanxi principles in a law abiding Singaporean workplace and how guanxi can be understood with influence tactics.
author2 Kenichi Ito
author_facet Kenichi Ito
Koh, Eugenen Wenhui
format Theses and Dissertations
author Koh, Eugenen Wenhui
author_sort Koh, Eugenen Wenhui
title Guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of Guanxi
title_short Guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of Guanxi
title_full Guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of Guanxi
title_fullStr Guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of Guanxi
title_full_unstemmed Guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of Guanxi
title_sort guanxi influence system : understanding influence tactics from the perspective of guanxi
publishDate 2016
_version_ 1681048926780653568