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Intense Job Demands Hinder Executive Performance
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- Stringent board oversight, threats of prompt dismissal for poor performance, compensation contracts with heavy contingent pay elements, and other mechanisms designed to maximize shareholder value may actually hinder the performance of top executives, according to research co-authored by Donald C. Hambrick of Penn State University's Smeal College of Business."Executive Job Demands: New Insights for Explaining Strategic Decisions and Leader Behaviors," which is forthcoming in the journal Academy of Management Review, analyzes how the level of difficulty faced by executives influences their actions and performance. The study -- co-authored by Sydney Finkelstein from the Tuck School at Dartmouth College and Ann C. Mooney at the Wesley J. Howe School at the Stevens Institute of Technology -- is the first to address the topic of executive job demands."CEOs at Mattel, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Kmart, as well as highly visible cases at Enron, Tyco, Worldcom, and Adelphia, were all widely criticized for aggressive, even ethically dubious acts," the authors write. "Some observers would attribute their actions to hubris or to greed, but in our estimation, extremely intense job demands also may have played a major role."The varying levels of demand facing top executives is determined by three factors: task challenges, performance challenges (i.e. requirements or expectations imposed by the firm's owner, directors and other constituencies), and executive aspirations (i.e. the internal drive to succeed), the study suggests. Combined, these factors make the work of executives more (or less) difficult and result in a variety of consequences or behaviors with the potential to negatively impact the organization.Executives under extreme job demands for instance, will exhibit more extreme strategic behaviors such as large-scale acquisitions, divestitures, reorganizations, downsizing, and aggressive accounting practices; leaders who have successfully weathered difficult conditions will develop a sense of invincibility; and as executive demands increase, so does the tendency to imitate the strategic actions of other firms without the necessary analysis."We do not wish to be seen as apologists for the recent mistakes of executives," the authors write. "America's corporate leaders were fully responsible for their actions. Nor are we saying that executives should necessarily be spared any pressure. As the old adage goes, 'If you cant stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.' We are simply proposing that the heat in the kitchen, or executive job demands, is an instrumental factor in shaping executive behavior."Hambrick, the Smeal Professor of Management, is the author of numerous articles, chapters and books on the topics of strategy formulation, strategy implementation, executive staffing and incentives, and the composition and processes of top management teams. His recent book, Navigating Change: How CEOs, Top Teams, and Boards Steer Transformation, presents leading-edge thinking for executives who are embarking on corporate change initiatives.Visit Penn State University: www.psu.edu"