Effects of Transparent Performance Data on Employee Performance: Evidence from a Field Experiment

dc.contributor.author Li, Shelley
dc.contributor.author Bernstein, Ethan
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-20T19:40:01Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-20T19:40:01Z
dc.date.issued 2022
dc.description.abstract There is a growing trend of continuously tracking performance metrics and providing them to employees via digital means without supervisor intermediation. Using a field experiment at a service organization, we examine how employees respond to transparent performance data previously available only to supervisors (i.e., daily performance metrics of employees in the same work group). We find that, compared with the pre-intervention mean value, the treatment group experienced an 11-percent decrease in strictly nonproductive time relative to the control group. The effect on reducing strictly nonproductive time seems greater than that on increasing strictly productive time. Performance improvements are greater in certain employee subsamples: those who previously perceived their supervisors as less-supportive, those with low intrinsic motivation, and those with high extrinsic motivation. We find inconclusive evidence on the moderating effects of social comparison orientation, suggesting that the main effect is unlikely to be driven by access to relative performance information.
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10125/104075
dc.subject performance feedback
dc.subject performance transparency
dc.subject disintermediation
dc.subject management control
dc.title Effects of Transparent Performance Data on Employee Performance: Evidence from a Field Experiment
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