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Why Successful Individuals Should Reveal Their Failures
出版Harvard Business School, 2018
URLhttp://books.google.com.hk/books?id=ocKJtQEACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋People often feel malicious envy, a destructive interpersonal emotion, when they compare themselves to successful peers. Across two online experiments and an experimental field study, we identify an interpersonal strategy that can mitigate others' feelings of malicious envy: revealing one's failures. People are reticent to reveal their failures--both as they are happening and after they have occurred. However, in two experiments, we find that revealing successes and the failures encountered on the path to success (compared to revealing only successes) decreases observers' malicious envy. This effect holds regardless of whether the individual is ambiguously or unambiguously successful. Then, in a field experiment set in an entrepreneurial pitch competition, where pride displays are common and stakes are high, we find suggestive evidence that learning about the failures of a successful entrepreneur decreases observers' malicious envy, increases their benign envy, decreases their perceptions of the entrepreneur's hubristic pride (i.e., arrogance), and increases their perceptions of the entrepreneur's authentic pride (i.e., confidence). These findings align with previous work on the social-functional relation of envy and pride. Taken together, our results highlight how revealing the failures encountered on the way to success can be a counterintuitive yet effective interpersonal emotion regulation strategy.