Atypicality and Accountability: Evidence from Five Experiments

NE (Nathan) Betancourt, Inga Hoever, Filippo Carlo Wezel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This paper investigates the interactive effect of organizational atypicality and accountability on evaluation. Prior research has shown that audience members sometimes react positively and other times negatively to atypical organizations or that the main effect of atypicality is not always consistent. We seek to further advance our understanding of this inconsistency in the assessment of atypical organizations. To do so, we focus on accountability, defined as a person’s expectation that she may be asked to justify her choices to others. We theorize that accountability will influence the assessment of atypical organizations because it causes evaluators to think about justifying their decisions and considering what their audience will find acceptable. We investigate two different ways in which accountability, by making others’ social expectations salient, shapes the effect of atypicality on appeal. First, when the preferences of the evaluator’s audience are implicit, we propose that accountability will strengthen the negative effect of atypicality on evaluation. Second, when the preferences of the evaluator’s audience are explicit, we propose that evaluators will conform to these preferences. When an evaluator is accountable to an audience that prefers typical organizations, atypicality will negatively effect evaluation. Conversely, when an evaluator is accountable to an audience that prefers atypical organizations, atypicality should positively effect evaluation. We tested these predications in five pre-registered studies and found support for our predictions. These results help to explain variance in audience member’s reactions to atypicality and suggest that accountability plays a fundamental role in the evaluation of atypical organizations.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages50
JournalOrganization Science
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 13 Aug 2024

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