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Political skill in job negotiations: : a two-study constructive replication

  • Autores: Marc Solga, Jaqueline Betz, Moritz Düsenberg, Helen Ostermann
  • Localización: International Journal of Conflict Management, ISSN-e 1044-4068, Vol. 26, Nº. 1, 2015, págs. 2-24
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Purpose - This paper aims to investigate the effects of political skill in a specific workplace setting - the job negotiation. The authors expected negotiator political skill to be positively related to distributive negotiation outcome, problem-solving as a negotiation strategy to mediate this relationship and political skill to also moderate - that is amplify - the link between problem-solving and negotiation outcome.

      Design/methodology/approach - In Study 1, a laboratory-based negotiation simulation was conducted with 88 participants; the authors obtained self-reports of political skill prior to the negotiation and - to account for non-independence of negotiating partners' outcome - used the Actor-Partner Interdependence Model for data analysis. Study 2 was carried out as a real-life negotiation study with 100 managers of a multinational corporation who were given the opportunity to re-negotiate their salary package prior to a longer-term foreign assignment. Here, the authors drew on two objective measures of negotiation success, increase of annual gross salary and additional annual net benefits.

      Findings - In Study 1, the initial hypothesis - political skill will be positively related to negotiator success - was fully supported. In Study 2, all three hypotheses (see above) were fully supported for additional annual net benefits and partly supported for increase of annual gross salary.

      Originality/value - To the authors' best knowledge, this paper presents the first study to examine political skill as a focal predictor variable in the negotiation context. Furthermore, the studies also broaden the emotion-centered approach to social effectiveness that is prevalent in current negotiation research.


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