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by Maura Wyler
In the seventh edition of the UBS Center Public Paper series, Ernst Fehr steps into the corporate world. He argues that corporate culture strongly drives employees’ behavior, thus designing the right corporate culture is in every company’s best interest. But what does it take to achieve a successful corporate culture? Dipping into the fascinating field of behavioral and experimental economics, Fehr explains how the right behavioral rules and incentives can foster productive cooperation among employees and at the same time limit free-rider effects or similar unwanted behavior.
Among the many different aspects of a corporate culture, cooperation is one of the core elements for performance and success. A cooperative culture helps to build trust in an organization: employees trust that their colleagues will also behave in line with the organization’s values, and this trust itself reinforces obedience to the cooperative culture and strengthens it. Research shows that firms in which the employees perceive their top managers as trustworthy and ethical in their business practices are more productive. Another study shows that countries, which uphold values that lead to a high level of cooperation and trustworthiness – and thus trust – flourish significantly better. This is the case in most northern European countries, such as Norway, Sweden, and Finland – in sharp contrast to countries like Liberia or Rwanda.
While every company has some sort of corporate culture, there is a big variance in their design. Unsurprisingly, they also face different corporate culture problems – like free-riding or the lack of cooperation among coworkers. Some problems are easily solved with simple nudges and awareness campaigns, such as providing feedback opportunities to identify free riders. However, others require implementing a new set of strong social norms with associated enforcement rules. Fehr introduces a matrix to assess and address corporate culture problems. He classifies problems along two dimensions: the employees’ average willingness to comply voluntarily with the cooperative social norms, and the employees’ awareness of the negative effects that result from non-compliance. Depending on the category in which a problem falls, Fehr proposes different measures, such as changing norm-driven and financial incentives or raising awareness for the needs of other business units within a firm.
A final important takeout from Fehr’s paper is that the mere proclamation of abstract values – such as integrity, loyalty, or commitment – does not suffice for achieving a cooperative culture. Values need to be translated into concrete behaviors, they need to be widely shared, lived, integrated into everyday actions, and enforced by both top management and the employees. Moreover, to make it work, the behavioral rules must be clear and simple.
by Maura Wyler
In the seventh edition of the UBS Center Public Paper series, Ernst Fehr steps into the corporate world. He argues that corporate culture strongly drives employees’ behavior, thus designing the right corporate culture is in every company’s best interest. But what does it take to achieve a successful corporate culture? Dipping into the fascinating field of behavioral and experimental economics, Fehr explains how the right behavioral rules and incentives can foster productive cooperation among employees and at the same time limit free-rider effects or similar unwanted behavior.
Ernst Fehr received his doctorate from the University of Vienna in 1986. His work has shown how social motives shape the cooperation, negotiations and coordination among actors and how this affects the functioning of incentives, markets and organisations. His work identifies important conditions under which cooperation flourishes and breaks down. The work on the psychological foundations of incentives informs us about the merits and the limits of financial incentives for the compensation of employees. In other work he has shown the importance of corporate culture for the performance of firms. In more recent work he shows how social motives affect how people vote on issues related to the redistribution of incomes and how differences in people’s intrinsic patience is related to wealth inequality. His work has found large resonance inside and outside academia with more than 100’000 Google Scholar citations and his work has been mentioned many times in international and national newspapers.
Ernst Fehr received his doctorate from the University of Vienna in 1986. His work has shown how social motives shape the cooperation, negotiations and coordination among actors and how this affects the functioning of incentives, markets and organisations. His work identifies important conditions under which cooperation flourishes and breaks down. The work on the psychological foundations of incentives informs us about the merits and the limits of financial incentives for the compensation of employees. In other work he has shown the importance of corporate culture for the performance of firms. In more recent work he shows how social motives affect how people vote on issues related to the redistribution of incomes and how differences in people’s intrinsic patience is related to wealth inequality. His work has found large resonance inside and outside academia with more than 100’000 Google Scholar citations and his work has been mentioned many times in international and national newspapers.