• Log In
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

MIS Distinguished Speaker Series

Temple University

Jan 24: Lynn Wu to speak on Social Network Effects on Performance and Layoffs: Evidence from the Adoption of a Social Networking Tool

January 21, 2011 By Sunil Wattal

Lynn Wu

PhD Candidate
Sloan School of Management,
MIT

January 24, 2011

Speakman Hall 200, 1000am – 1130am

Abstract

By studying the changes in employees’ networks and performance before and after the introduction of a social networking tool, I find that a structurally diverse network (low in cohesion and rich in structural holes) has a positive effect on work performance. The size of the effect is smaller than traditional estimates, suggesting that omitted individual characteristics may bias the estimated network effect. I consider two intermediate mechanisms by which a structurally diverse network is theorized to improve work performance: information diversity (instrumental) and friendship (expressive). I quantify their effects on two types of work outcomes: billable revenue and layoffs. Analysis shows that the information diversity derived from a structurally diverse network is more correlated with generating billable revenue than is friendship. However, the opposite is true for layoffs. Friendship in a diverse network of colleagues is more correlated with reduced layoff risks than is information diversity. Field interviews suggest that friends can serve as advocates in critical situations, ensuring that favorable information is distributed to decision makers. This, in turn, suggests that having a structurally diverse network can drive both work performance and job security, but that there is a tradeoff between either mobilizing friendship or gathering diverse information. Furthermore, it is important to examine the mechanisms by which friendship reduces the risks of being laid off. If friendship promotes team effectiveness, delegating decisions rights to managers is optimal. However, if managers choose to optimize their own power at the expense of the firm, the positive impact of friendships on layoffs is evidence that delegating layoff decisions to managers can incur important costs.

For a copy of the paper, click here..

Tagged With: friendship, information diversity, layoffs, lynn wu, mit, productivity, social network

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Michelle Dy-Reyes says

    January 21, 2011 at 1:37 pm

    Hi Sunil. This looks really interesting. Is it open for undergrads to attend?

  2. Sunil Wattal says

    January 21, 2011 at 2:26 pm

    yes!

Primary Sidebar

RSS MIS News

  • AIS Student Chapter Leadership Conference 2025 April 17, 2025
  • Temple AIS wins at the 2024 AIS Software Innovation Challenge! January 15, 2025
  • 10 Week Summer Internship in CyberSecurity October 7, 2024
  • Volunteer for Cybersecurity Awareness Month October 7, 2024
  • MIS faculty awarded promotions June 17, 2024

Tags

AI amrit tiwana Artificial Intelligence blockchain boston college bots brian butler carnegie mellon univ crowd culture deception Deep Learning Design experiment Field Experiment financial technology georgia state georgia tech Healthcare Human vs AI information security Innovation Institutional Theory IT Outsourcing long tail Machine Learning machines Maryland media Online Communities platform privacy productivity Quasi-natural experiment recommender systems simulation Social Capital social media social network steven johnson technology adoption temple univ user generated content UT Dallas wharton

Archives

Copyright © 2025 Department of Management Information Systems · Fox School of Business · Temple University