Exploring the impact of punishments on employee effort and performance in the workplace: Insights from England's premier league

Author:

Gligor David1,Gölgeci Ismail23ORCID,Garg Vipul4ORCID,Idug Yavuz5,Ekezie Uchenna6,Feiz Abadi Javad7,Caliskan Ferhat6

Affiliation:

1. Florida Gulf Coast University Fort Myers Florida USA

2. Department of Business Development and Technology Aarhus University Herning Denmark

3. InnoLab University of Vaasa Vaasa Finland

4. Department of Management and Marketing, College of Business Texas A&M University–San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

5. Department of Management and Human Resource Management, College of Business California State University‐Long Beach Long Beach California USA

6. Department of Logistics and Operations Management, G. Brint Ryan College of Business University of North Texas Denton Texas USA

7. Asper School of Business University of Manitoba Winnipeg Manitoba Canada

Abstract

AbstractDespite the prevalence of punishment as a method of enforcing organizational policies, management literature provides little guidance on the impact of punishment on individuals' work performance. A sample of 412 professional soccer players in England's Premier League was utilized to collect unobtrusive, longitudinal data to better understand how individuals react to punishments in their workplace. Our findings indicate that individuals deploy significantly more effort (run more kilometers) following a punishment. However, the findings also indicate that individuals do not perform better following the administration of punishment. In fact, their performance is significantly lower than before the punishment. Although individuals work harder, they actually perform weaker. Further, we found that, when punished more than their team members, individuals deploy significantly more effort than individuals who get punished less than their team members but perform significantly weaker than those individuals.

Publisher

Wiley

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