Music at work increases cooperation, teamwork
In
a paper newly published by the Journal of Organizational Behavior, Cornell
researchers Kevin Kniffin, Jubo Yan, Brian Wansink and William Schulze describe
two studies they conducted to test the effect of different types of music on
the cooperative behaviour of individuals working as a team.
For
each study, participants were grouped into teams of three. Each team member was
given multiple opportunities to either contribute to the team’s value using
tokens or keep the tokens for personal use.
When
happy, upbeat music was played — researchers chose the Happy Days theme song,
Brown Eyed Girl by Van Morrison, Yellow Submarine by the Beatles and Walking on
Sunshine by Katrina and the Waves — team members were more likely to contribute
to the group’s value. When music deemed unpleasant was played — in this case,
heavy metal songs by less than well-known bands — participants were more likely
to keep tokens for themselves. The researchers found contribution levels to the
public good when happy, upbeat songs were played were approximately one-third
higher compared to the less pleasant music.
When
researchers conducted a second experiment testing how people react when no
music is played, the results were the same. The researchers conclude that happy
music provokes people to more often make decisions that contribute to the good
of the team.
“Music
is a pervasive part of much of our daily lives, whether we consciously notice
it or not,” said Kniffin, a behavioural scientist at Cornell and lead author on
the paper. “Music might melt into the background in places like supermarkets or
gyms and other times it’s very prominent like places of worship or presidential
nominating conventions. Our results show that people seem more likely to get
into sync with each other if they’re listening to music that has a steady beat
to it.”
Wansink,
director of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab, added: “What’s great about these
findings, other than having a scientific reason to blast tunes at work, is that
happy music has the power to make the workplace more cooperative and supportive
overall.”
The
researchers suggest managers consider not only the customer experience but also
workers’ when picking the day’s music. Starting the day with this simple
consideration in mind could result in happier employees and more teamwork.
“Lots of employers spend significant sums of time and money on off-site
teambuilding exercises to build cooperation among employees. Our research
points to the office sound system as a channel that has been under-appreciated
as a way to inspire cooperation among co-workers,” said Kniffin.
Source | Asian Age | 29 August 2016
Regards
Pralhad Jadhav
Senior Manager @ Library
Khaitan & Co
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