Too Good to Be True? The Unintended Signaling Effects of Educational Prestige on External Expectations of Team Performance
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Sauer, Stephen J.; Thomas-Hunt, Melissa C.; Morris, Patrick A.
署名单位:
Clarkson University; University of Virginia
刊物名称:
ORGANIZATION SCIENCE
ISSN/ISSBN:
1047-7039
DOI:
10.1287/orsc.1090.0523
发表日期:
2010
页码:
1108-1120
关键词:
status
diversity
EXTERNAL EVALUATION
affirmative action bias
摘要:
In this paper we report the results of two experimental studies designed to test how demographic characteristics affect outsiders' assessments of a firm's top managers. We draw on theories of evaluation and status characteristics to examine the interactive effects of managers' racial characteristics and educational prestige on external perceptions. In the first study, we find that top executives' educational background and race affected analysts' valuation of a firm's stock. Outside analysts made the highest stock price projections for firms led by white executives who had highly prestigious educational backgrounds but made the lowest valuations for firms led by African Americans with the same prestigious education. We posit that the moderating effect of executives' racial characteristics stems from outsiders' assumptions that African American managers received preferential treatment in the admissions process for high prestige universities. In the second study, we find that when we explicitly removed the possibility of preferential selection, analysts gave the same stock valuation to firms led by white and African American executives with high educational prestige. We discuss the implications of these findings for theory and management.