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Are managers too busy to be fair? Probably, an FIU Business study reveals.

Are managers too busy to be fair? Probably, an FIU Business study reveals.

Are managers too busy to be fair? Probably, an FIU Business study reveals.

Employees often complain that managers don’t treat them fairly, meet with them, listen to their concerns, or update them about decisions. New research from FIU Business finds that “unfairness” may be less about bosses being biased and more about them lacking time to juggle multiple competing priorities.

“Sometimes they’re just too busy,” said Ravi Gajendran, assistant professor of global leadership and management at FIU Business. “When managers are forced to work under time pressure and have to deal with multiple projects and deliverables, they may often lose their focus on treating employees fairly.”

Ravi Gajendran

The research, published in the current issue of the Academy of Management Journal, examined data from three studies:

Managers, he said, can take the lead in prioritizing fairness by changing up their management routine:

However, managers aren’t the only ones responsible when employees feel they are being treated unfairly.

“Companies can encourage bosses to balance technical tasks and fair treatment by rewarding and celebrating managers who act fairly,” Gajendran said. “Doing so clearly signals that fair treatment and engaging with employees are core leadership tasks.”

The studies conducted as part of the research paper revealed that managers prioritizing their actual work responsibilities harmed fairness and didn’t improve the business’ performance.

“Organizations that reward fairness may see a win-win: busy leaders can act fairly without compromising their performance on core work tasks,” Gajendran added.

The paper was co-authored by Gajendran with Elad Sherf, assistant professor of organizational behavior at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Vijaya Venkataramani, associate professor of management and organization at University of Maryland.

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