Content area

Abstract

In modern organizations, new communication channels are reshaping the way in which people get in touch, interact and cooperate. This paper, adopting an experimental economics framework, investigates the effect of different communication channels on promise-making and promise-keeping in an organizational context. Inspired by Ellingsen and Johannesson (Econ J 114:397-420, 2004 ), five experimental treatments differ with respect to the communication channel employed to solicit a promise of cooperation, i.e., face-to-face, phone call, chat room, and two different sorts of computer-mediated communication. The more direct and synchronous (face-to-face, phone, chat room) the interpersonal interaction is, the higher the propensity of an agent to make a promise. Treatment effects, however, vanish if we then look at the actual promise-keeping rates across treatments, as more indirect channels (computer-mediated) do not perform statistically worse than the direct and synchronous channels.

Details

Title
The effect of communication channels on promise-making and promise-keeping: experimental evidence
Author
Conrads, Julian 1 ; Reggiani, Tommaso 2 

 University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany 
 LUMSA University, Rome, Italy; IZA, Bonn, Germany 
Pages
595-611
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Oct 2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
1860711X
e-ISSN
18607128
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1931546473
Copyright
Journal of Economic Interaction and Coordination is a copyright of Springer, 2017.