The co-evolution of power and friendship networks in an organization

Despite the pivotal role that both power and interpersonal trust play in a multitude of social exchange situations, relatively little is known about their interplay. Moreover, previous theorizing makes competing claims. Do we consider our relatively more powerful exchange partners to be less trustworthy, as rational choice reasoning would suggest? Or do more complex psychological mechanisms lead us to trust them more, as motivated cognition reasoning implies? Extending the latter approach, we develop and empirically test three hypotheses on the interrelation between perceptions of interpersonal trust and power. According to the status value hypothesis, individuals are more likely to befriend those whom they or others perceive as powerful. The status signaling hypothesis states that the friends of people one perceives as powerful will also be seen as powerful. According to the self-monitoring hypothesis, high self-monitors are more likely than low self-monitors to befriend those they or others perceive as powerful. We use multiplex stochastic actor-based models to analyze the co-evolution of trust and power relations among n = 49 employees in a Dutch Youth Care organization. Data covers three waves of a longitudinal sociometric network survey collected over a period of 18 months in the years 2009–2010. In general, we find some support for all three hypotheses, though the effects are weak. Being one of the first organizational field studies on the co-evolution of power and trust, we conclude with discussing the implications of these findings for the study of social exchange processes.

[1]  Shane R. Thye A Status Value Theory of Power in Exchange Relations , 2000, American Sociological Review.

[2]  Daniel J. Brass,et al.  Changing patterns or patterns of change: the effects of a change in technology on social network str , 1990 .

[3]  Mark Snyder,et al.  Self-monitoring processes in organizational settings , 1989 .

[4]  Michael Schweinberger,et al.  MAXIMUM LIKELIHOOD ESTIMATION FOR SOCIAL NETWORK DYNAMICS. , 2010, The annals of applied statistics.

[5]  T. Judge,et al.  Personality and leadership: a qualitative and quantitative review. , 2002, The Journal of applied psychology.

[6]  Joel Podolny Networks as the Pipes and Prisms of the Market1 , 2001, American Journal of Sociology.

[7]  Ruth M. Ripley,et al.  Manual for RSiena , 2011 .

[8]  Stephen J. Zaccaro,et al.  Self-monitoring and trait-based variance in leadership: An investigation of leader flexibility across multiple group situations. , 1991 .

[9]  A. Kruglanski Motivated social cognition: Principles of the interface. , 1996 .

[10]  Dwight D. Frink,et al.  Political skill: An antidote for workplace stressors , 2000 .

[11]  Johan C. Karremans,et al.  Relationship regulation in the face of eye candy: a motivated cognition framework for understanding responses to attractive alternatives , 2015 .

[12]  S. Gangestad,et al.  Self-Monitoring : Appraisal and Reappraisal , 2001 .

[13]  Ajay Mehra,et al.  The Social Networks of High and Low Self-Monitors: Implications for Workplace Performance , 2001 .

[14]  Daniel J. Brass Being in the right place: A structural analysis of individual influence in an organization. , 1984 .

[15]  Bruce Robertson,et al.  The Social Network Ties of Group Leaders: Implications for Group Performance and Leader Reputation , 2006, Organ. Sci..

[16]  Marshall W. Meyer,et al.  Power in Organizations. , 1982 .

[17]  Gerhard G. van de Bunt,et al.  The Evolution of Intra-Organizational Trust Networks , 2005 .

[18]  M. Snyder Public Appearances, Private Realities: The Psychology of Self-Monitoring , 1986 .

[19]  R. Cialdini,et al.  Basking in Reflected Glory: Three (Football) Field Studies , 1976 .

[20]  James E. Rauch,et al.  Bandwidth and Echo: Trust, Information, and Gossip in Social Networks , 2001 .

[21]  Per Block,et al.  Reciprocity, transitivity, and the mysterious three-cycle , 2015, Soc. Networks.

[22]  Rafael Wittek,et al.  The co-evolution of gossip and friendship in workplace social networks , 2012, Soc. Networks.

[23]  Z. Kunda,et al.  The case for motivated reasoning. , 1990, Psychological bulletin.

[24]  Tom A. B. Snijders,et al.  Friendship Networks Through Time: An Actor-Oriented Dynamic Statistical Network Model , 1999, Comput. Math. Organ. Theory.

[25]  Francis J. Flynn,et al.  Carnegie Mellon , 2003 .

[26]  Jeffrey Pfeffer,et al.  The Ambiguity of Leadership , 1977 .

[27]  L. H.,et al.  Communication Networks , 1936, Nature.

[28]  Tom A. B. Snijders,et al.  Introduction to stochastic actor-based models for network dynamics , 2010, Soc. Networks.

[29]  N. Lin Social Capital: A Theory of Social Structure and Action , 2001 .

[30]  K. Cook,et al.  Power decreases trust in social exchange , 2015, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[31]  D. Krackhardt,et al.  Bringing the Individual Back in: A Structural Analysis of the Internal Market for Reputation in Organizations , 1994 .

[32]  Valerian J. Derlega,et al.  Friendship and social Interaction: An Introduction , 1986 .

[33]  V. Nee,et al.  The Handbook of Rational Choice Social Research , 2013 .

[34]  W. C. Carter,et al.  Detecting measurement bias in respondent reports of personal networks , 2002, Soc. Networks.

[35]  M. Clark,et al.  Motivated cognition in relationships , 2015 .

[36]  U. Braendle,et al.  Corporate Governance in China - is Economic Growth Potential Hindered by Guanxi? , 2005 .

[37]  Joel Podolny,et al.  Status, Quality, and Social Order in the California Wine Industry , 1999 .

[38]  G. Graen,et al.  Effects of Linking-Pin Quality on the Quality of Working Life of Lower Participants. , 1977 .

[39]  J. Meindl,et al.  A NETWORK EFFECTS MODEL OF CHARISMA ATTRIBUTIONS , 2002 .

[40]  P. Blau The Dynamics Of Bureaucracy , 1955 .

[41]  D. Day,et al.  Do Chameleons Get Ahead? The Effects of Self-Monitoring on Managerial Careers , 1994 .

[42]  R. Merton The Matthew Effect in Science , 1968, Science.

[43]  C. A. Higgins,et al.  THE BIG FIVE PERSONALITY TRAITS, GENERAL MENTAL ABILITY, AND CAREER SUCCESS ACROSS THE LIFE SPAN , 1999 .

[44]  David R. Schaefer,et al.  The Value of Reciprocity , 2007, Social Psychology Quarterly.

[45]  E. Higgins,et al.  Social psychology: Handbook of basic principles. , 1996 .

[46]  R. Lennox,et al.  Revision of the self-monitoring scale. , 1984, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[47]  Harold J. Leavitt,et al.  Readings in managerial psychology , 1964 .

[48]  J. Coleman Foundations of Social Theory , 1990 .

[49]  Alessandro Lomi,et al.  A model for the multiplex dynamics of two-mode and one-mode networks, with an application to employment preference, friendship, and advice , 2013, Soc. Networks.

[50]  Steven B. Andrews,et al.  Structural Holes: The Social Structure of Competition , 1995, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[51]  Daniel J. Brass,et al.  POTENTIAL POWER AND POWER USE: AN INVESTIGATION OF STRUCTURE AND BEHAVIOR , 1993 .

[52]  Frans Stokman,et al.  Handbook of Rational Choice Social Research , 2013 .

[53]  Robert A. Giacalone,et al.  Impression management in the organization. , 1989 .

[54]  G. G. V. D. Bunt,et al.  Paper Factory: An Empirical Test of Six Trust Mechanisms The Evolution of Intra-Organizational Trust Networks : The Case of a German , 2011 .

[55]  George Strauss,et al.  Tactics of lateral relationship : the purchasing agent , 1962 .