This week, I read an interesting interview with several scholars from the Kellogg School of Management. In the interview, Professor Cynthia Wang describes an interesting study that she conducted with Denise Loyd, Katherine Phillips, and Robert Lount, Jr. They published their findings in an Organization Science paper titled, "Social Category Diversity Promotes Premeeting Elaboration: The Role of Relationship Focus." Wang reports that people tend to prepare better for meetings when they anticipate interacting with others with whom they expect to have conflicting views. This preparation and introspection leads to better decisions. Here's Wang commenting on the research:
Sometimes conflict can actually be productive. When you go into a group meeting with somebody who is very different from you, the assumption that there’s going to be a conflict actually leads to better outcomes because you prepare better. For example, in one study, Katherine Phillips and I gave people tasks and said, “Hey, you’re going to be working with a stranger from the opposite political persuasion.” We then saw that knowing this leads you to start preparing a little bit more for the discussion, because you assume that there is going to be conflict. This drives better decisions in the end, because you’re more prepared and more introspective. On the other hand, if we come from the same group, we don’t challenge each other as much.
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