拆箱
心理学
社会心理学
背景(考古学)
认知心理学
哲学
语言学
生物
古生物学
作者
Akvilė Bouwens,Kathleen Ann Stephenson,Sabrine El Baroudi,Svetlana N. Khapova,Sergey Gorbatov
摘要
ABSTRACT Organizations face a persistent challenge: while negative feedback is essential for learning and performance, individuals often avoid giving it because of concerns about damaging workplace relationships. This creates a gap between organizational needs and individual behavior that existing explanations, focusing on how feedback givers assess recipients' emotions and motivations, fail to fully account for. We argue that resolving this challenge requires understanding how the organizational social context shapes whether individuals view negative feedback as merely uncomfortable or as a necessary practice worth the discomfort—a necessary evil. Drawing on the necessary evils literature, we conduct an in‐depth qualitative study based on 98 interviews across three global public and private organizations. We identify two mechanisms—organizational authorization and individual imprinting—that shape how individuals engage in negative feedback. Our findings challenge the assumption that strong organizational support is required for negative feedback‐giving. Instead, we reveal that individuals imprinted with feedback practices persist in giving negative feedback, even in unsupportive environments, and may even create structures to sustain it. These findings challenge prevailing theories of organizational influence, highlighting how past experiences can override present organizational contexts, and deepen our understanding of how necessary evils operate and persist in organizations.
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