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Networks in professional groups: a matter of connection or self-exile?

Smaranda Boros (Department of People and Organisation, Vlerick Business School, Brussels, Belgium)
Lore Van Gorp (Department of Sociology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium and Department of People and Organisation, Vlerick Business School, Ghent, Belgium)

Team Performance Management

ISSN: 1352-7592

Article publication date: 3 October 2017

Issue publication date: 9 October 2017

273

Abstract

Purpose

Integrating predictions of social exchange theory and implicit social cognition, this paper aims to investigate mechanisms of co-evolution between professional and personal support networks in a professional, non-hierarchical setting.

Design/methodology/approach

The study covers simultaneously people’s behaviours and their subjective interpretations of them in a cross-lagged network design in a group of 65 MBA students.

Findings

Results show that people build on their professional support network to develop personal support relations. People who have a high status in the professional support network appear to be afraid to lose them by asking too many others for personal support and people with a low status in the professional support network seem also be reluctant to ask many others for personal support.

Practical implications

Although personal support is a key social mechanism facilitating individual well-being and organizational success, support in the workplace often remains limited to professional topics. This research shows why people hesitate to expand their networks in professional settings and to what extent their fears have a basis in reality.

Originality/value

It goes beyond predictions of social exchange theory which inform most network evolution studies and tap into implicit social cognition predictions to expand the explanatory power of the hypotheses. The study’s network analysis takes into account both behaviours and social perceptions. The sample is a non-hierarchical professional group which allows a more ecological observation of how hierarchies are born in social groups.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research was supported in part by the Vlerick Academic Research Fund, partially subsidized by the Flemish government.

Citation

Boros, S. and Van Gorp, L. (2017), "Networks in professional groups: a matter of connection or self-exile?", Team Performance Management, Vol. 23 No. 7/8, pp. 318-332. https://doi.org/10.1108/TPM-10-2016-0044

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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