Post by arfanho7 on Feb 25, 2024 4:28:47 GMT
In this case it helps for observers to be aware that hiding information isn t necessarily an admission of guilt. As observers we may be prone to missing opportunities to form friendships or hire people by unfairly inferring that they are untrustworthy she says. There may be completely innocuous reasons someone may wish to keep personal information private.
Full Disclosure While John s study shows that people think badly of people who withhold information another recent HBS study found differently. In Is No News Perceived As Bad News An Experimental Investigation of Information Exposure pdf Assistant Professor Michael Luca also from the NOM unit found that people Ukraine Mobile Number List are likely to give others the benefit of the doubt when they fail to fully disclose bad news about themselves. would seem to contradict John s paper in reality the two studies complement each other showing just how subtle can be the way we process information. Luca who works a few doors down the hall from John has studied the ways in which organizations hide information from consumers sometimes duplicitously. In a previous paper about.
U.S. News World Report college rankings of MBA programs for example he found a strong link between where a school fell on the rankings and how likely it was to list that ranking on its website. Outside of the top programs business schools with worse rankings become less and less likely to mention them on their websites and more and more likely to include other information instead says Luca. The problem is that in some cases keeping information private can directly harm consumers.
Full Disclosure While John s study shows that people think badly of people who withhold information another recent HBS study found differently. In Is No News Perceived As Bad News An Experimental Investigation of Information Exposure pdf Assistant Professor Michael Luca also from the NOM unit found that people Ukraine Mobile Number List are likely to give others the benefit of the doubt when they fail to fully disclose bad news about themselves. would seem to contradict John s paper in reality the two studies complement each other showing just how subtle can be the way we process information. Luca who works a few doors down the hall from John has studied the ways in which organizations hide information from consumers sometimes duplicitously. In a previous paper about.
U.S. News World Report college rankings of MBA programs for example he found a strong link between where a school fell on the rankings and how likely it was to list that ranking on its website. Outside of the top programs business schools with worse rankings become less and less likely to mention them on their websites and more and more likely to include other information instead says Luca. The problem is that in some cases keeping information private can directly harm consumers.