Published2019Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes

The self-presentational consequences of upholding one's stance in spite of the evidence

Authors: John, Jeong, Gino, Huang

Abstract

Five studies explore the self-presentational consequences of refusing to "back down" -- that is, upholding a stance despite evidence of its inaccuracy. Using data from an entrepreneurial pitch competition, Study 1 shows that entrepreneurs tend not to back down even though investors are more impressed by entrepreneurs who do. Next, in two sets of experiments, we unpack the psychology underlying why actors refuse to publicly back down and investigate observers' impressions of those actors. Specifically, we show that observers view people who refuse to back down as confident but unintelligent, and these perceptions drive consequential decisions about such refusers, such as whether to invest in their ideas (Studies 1 & 2) or whether to hire them (Study 3). Although actors can intuit these effects (Study 4), this understanding is not reflected in their behavior because they are concerned with saving face (Study 5).

Keywords

Self-presentationbelief perseverancejudgmentconfidencepersuasion

Tags of Social Finance

#Investment Decisions (Institutional)#Social Transmission Biases#Experimental & Survey-Based Empirical#Manager & Firm Behavior