Really, really liking yourself may give you the edge in your next job interview, a new study suggests. |
Really, really liking yourself may give you the edge in your next job interview, a new study suggests. That's because narcissists, known to be obnoxiously high on self-esteem, are better able to talk about and promote themselves, which projects confidence and expertise to interviewers, University of Nebraska-Lincoln researchers explained. In their two-part study, narcissists scored much higher in a simulated job interview than equally qualified non-narcissists. "This is one setting where it's OK to say nice things about yourself and there are no ramifications. In fact, it's expected," study co-author Peter Harms, an assistant professor of management, said in a university news release. "Simply put, those who are comfortable doing this tend to do much better than those who aren't." The study, which appears in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology, first involved 72 people being videotaped as job applicants. While non-narcissistic people eased up on their self-promotion when challenged by expert interviewers, the narcissists actually increased their attempts to promote themselves, the researchers found. In the second part of the study, 222 expert interviewers rated videos of applicants with similar job skills and varying degrees of narcissism. The self-promoters -- those who spoke quickly and at length and used such "ingratiation tactics" as smiling, gesturing and complimenting others -- received far more positive evaluations than equally qualified applicants who used tactical modesty, the researchers reported. "This shows that what is getting (narcissists) the win is the delivery," Harms said. "These results show just how hard it is to effectively interview, and how fallible we can be when making interview judgments. We don't necessarily want to hire narcissists, but might end up doing so because they come off as being self-confident and capable." The findings also suggest that interviewers need to be aware of the tactics used by narcissists, Harms said. "On the whole, we find very little evidence that narcissists are more or less effective workers. But what we do know is that they can be very disruptive and destructive when dealing with other people on a regular basis," he said. And, he added, "If everything else is equal, it probably is best to avoid hiring them." (Read by Nelly Min. Nelly Min is a journalist at the China Daily Website.) (Agencies) |
一項(xiàng)新研究顯示,自戀確實(shí)能讓你在下一個(gè)求職面試中占據(jù)優(yōu)勢(shì)。 內(nèi)布拉斯加大學(xué)林肯分校的研究人員解釋說,正如大家所知道的,自戀者自視過高,正因如此他們能更好地談?wù)撟约汉屯其N自己,展現(xiàn)給面試考官的是自信和有專長(zhǎng)的形象。 在他們的這項(xiàng)由兩部分組成的研究當(dāng)中,自戀者在模擬求職面試中的得分比資質(zhì)相當(dāng)?shù)牟蛔詰僬吒叩枚唷?/p> 該研究的作者之一、管理學(xué)副教授皮特?哈慕斯在一份大學(xué)新聞稿中說:“在求職面試的情境下,說自己的好話是可以接受的,在這點(diǎn)上并沒有分歧。事實(shí)上,考官期待你夸贊自己。簡(jiǎn)而言之,那些夸贊自己時(shí)感覺很自在的面試者比那些不自在的面試者成績(jī)好得多?!?/p> 這一發(fā)表在《應(yīng)用社會(huì)心理學(xué)雜志》上的研究的第一部分讓72個(gè)人參加求職,并將過程拍成錄像。研究人員發(fā)現(xiàn),不自戀者在受到面試專家的挑戰(zhàn)時(shí)會(huì)減輕自我推銷力度,而自戀者卻更努力地推銷自己。 在研究的第二部分,222位面試專家觀看工作能力相近但自戀程度不同的求職者的視頻,對(duì)他們做出了評(píng)價(jià)。研究人員報(bào)告說,那些自我推銷者語速快、談話內(nèi)容詳細(xì),運(yùn)用微笑、打手勢(shì)和贊美他人等“逢迎戰(zhàn)術(shù)”,他們比那些資質(zhì)相當(dāng)、采用謙虛戰(zhàn)略的求職者得到的正面評(píng)價(jià)要多得多。 哈慕斯說:“這表明自戀者的制勝法寶其實(shí)是姿態(tài)。這些結(jié)果顯示了有效面試的難度有多大,在對(duì)面試者做判斷時(shí)我們有多容易犯錯(cuò)。我們不一定想雇用自戀者,但也許結(jié)果就雇用了這種人,因?yàn)樗麄儽憩F(xiàn)得更自信、更有能力?!?/p> 哈慕斯說,研究結(jié)果還顯示,面試考官需要留心自戀者運(yùn)用的策略。 他說:“總體而言,我們發(fā)現(xiàn)鮮有證據(jù)表明自戀者工作算得上有效率,然而我們所知道的是,自戀者在日常與他人往來時(shí)可能產(chǎn)生消極的破壞性影響。” 而且,他補(bǔ)充說:“如果其他條件都一樣的話,也許最好還是避免雇用他們?!?/p> 相關(guān)閱讀 (中國日?qǐng)?bào)網(wǎng)英語點(diǎn)津 陳丹妮 編輯:Julie) |
Vocabulary: edge: 優(yōu)勢(shì) obnoxiously: 惹人討厭地 expertise: 專長(zhǎng),專門技術(shù)或知識(shí) ramification: 分枝;分歧 at length: 詳細(xì)地 ingratiation: 逢迎 delivery: 演講(或唱歌)的姿態(tài) fallible: 容易犯錯(cuò)的;不可靠的 |