On the Effects of Authority on Peer Motivation: Learning from Wikipedia

When managers use their (legitimate) power to take decisions on behalf of their staff, they risk setting back employees and making them detach from the firm. This danger is particularly salient whenever highly motivated teams of staff autonomously work on corporate problems and are used to governing themselves. Examples range from skunkwork initiatives within traditional firms to entire team‐based organizations, such as Valve or Zappos. When and how managers can add value by resolving conflicts within and across these teams once their self‐organization fails is what we study in this article. Inspired by data from Wikipedia, we suggest that managers should not intervene prematurely, benefit from visible competence, and are respected most for their actions by specialized peers who recently joined the organization.

Published Date
20 May 2025

Written By
Helge Jan Dirk Klapper, Markus Reitzig

Article Type
Journal Article Video Abstract

Topics
Human Resources, Strategy Process

Interest Group
Strategic Human Capital IG, Strategy Process IG

Content Source
Strategic Management Journal