Who is gossiping? Interactive effects of status and status conflict on competence-related gossip

Laypersons and scholars have conflicting views on the effect of status on gossip. Some argue that individuals with higher status may engage in less gossip than their lower-status counterparts because gossip is socially undesirable and associated with social costs, while others suggest that high stat...

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Main Authors: DONG, Pei, VADERA, Abhijeet K.
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2024
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7661
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spelling sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-86602025-01-16T09:29:57Z Who is gossiping? Interactive effects of status and status conflict on competence-related gossip DONG, Pei VADERA, Abhijeet K. Laypersons and scholars have conflicting views on the effect of status on gossip. Some argue that individuals with higher status may engage in less gossip than their lower-status counterparts because gossip is socially undesirable and associated with social costs, while others suggest that high status might engage in more gossip as it can be used to maintain/attain status and enhance relatedness with others. We draw on status and gossip literature to argue that the effect of status on gossip depends on one important characteristic of hierarchy — group status conflict. We also focus on one particular type — negative competence-related gossip, which refers to sharing negative information about a target’s abilities and skills at work with others (e.g., lack of competence). Specifically, we hypothesize that status enhances negative competence-related gossip only when people perceive a higher level of group status conflict. In a two-wave field study with a round-robin design, we show that when status conflict is perceived as higher, higher-status individuals engage in more negative competence-related gossip. The supplemental analyses suggest that status did not interact with group status conflicts in predicting other types of gossip. We discuss the implications of our research for both status and gossip research and practice. 2024-08-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7661 info:doi/10.5465/AMPROC.2024.19665abstract Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Gossip Status Status conflict Organizational Behavior and Theory
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Gossip
Status
Status conflict
Organizational Behavior and Theory
spellingShingle Gossip
Status
Status conflict
Organizational Behavior and Theory
DONG, Pei
VADERA, Abhijeet K.
Who is gossiping? Interactive effects of status and status conflict on competence-related gossip
description Laypersons and scholars have conflicting views on the effect of status on gossip. Some argue that individuals with higher status may engage in less gossip than their lower-status counterparts because gossip is socially undesirable and associated with social costs, while others suggest that high status might engage in more gossip as it can be used to maintain/attain status and enhance relatedness with others. We draw on status and gossip literature to argue that the effect of status on gossip depends on one important characteristic of hierarchy — group status conflict. We also focus on one particular type — negative competence-related gossip, which refers to sharing negative information about a target’s abilities and skills at work with others (e.g., lack of competence). Specifically, we hypothesize that status enhances negative competence-related gossip only when people perceive a higher level of group status conflict. In a two-wave field study with a round-robin design, we show that when status conflict is perceived as higher, higher-status individuals engage in more negative competence-related gossip. The supplemental analyses suggest that status did not interact with group status conflicts in predicting other types of gossip. We discuss the implications of our research for both status and gossip research and practice.
format text
author DONG, Pei
VADERA, Abhijeet K.
author_facet DONG, Pei
VADERA, Abhijeet K.
author_sort DONG, Pei
title Who is gossiping? Interactive effects of status and status conflict on competence-related gossip
title_short Who is gossiping? Interactive effects of status and status conflict on competence-related gossip
title_full Who is gossiping? Interactive effects of status and status conflict on competence-related gossip
title_fullStr Who is gossiping? Interactive effects of status and status conflict on competence-related gossip
title_full_unstemmed Who is gossiping? Interactive effects of status and status conflict on competence-related gossip
title_sort who is gossiping? interactive effects of status and status conflict on competence-related gossip
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2024
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7661
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