Tag: competition

What? That headline must be wrong. Women are known for boosting team collaboration and creativity, and they are not afraid to compete. But new research from associate professor of organizational behavior Markus Baer finds that men become more creative and women less so when intergroup competition heats up.

“Women contributed less and less to the team’s creative output when the competition between teams became cutthroat, and this fall-off was most pronounced in teams composed entirely of women,” Baer says.

The findings are counterintuitive because previous research has shown that women generally are more collaborative than men when working in teams.

“If teams work side by side, women tend to perform better and even outperform men – they’re more creative,” according to Baer.

“As soon as you add the element of competition though, the picture changes. Men under those circumstances gel together. They become more interdependent and more collaborative, and women just do the opposite.

“So, what is true for non-competitive circumstances, flips when it gets competitive,” he says.

The study should serve as a caution to managers attempting to use competition among teams to spur creativity. It shows that intense competition can erase the creative advantage that women tend to enjoy over their male counterparts.

Markus Baer discusses his research on how competition kills creativity for women working in groups in the video above.

The simple lesson, Baer said, is that competition should not be used in all situations to stimulate creativity. It’s not going to help women and probably hurts their creativity, so managers should look for different methods of motivation.

“Given that women represent a growing portion of the workforce, using competition as a means to enhance the creativity of groups, regardless of how they are composed, implies that the creative potential available to businesses is seldom fully realized,” the study contends.

Baer emphasizes that nothing in his study suggests women are inherently bad at competition. Rather, it shows that gender stereotypes continue to influence behavior in the workplace.

“It’s not that women stink at competing, it’s that the way society views women and the way we view competition, gender specific, has an impact and that impact is observable in the lab as well as in the field,” Baer said. “It changes behaviors and outcomes.”

Published in the May-June issue of the journal Organization Science, the study is titled “Intergroup Competition as a Double-Edged Sword: How Sex Composition Regulates the Effects of Competition on Group Creativity.”

Findings are based on an experiment involving male and female college students working together in groups, as well as data gathered in the field from 50 teams of scientists, engineers and technicians at a global oil and gas company.

Co-authors include Abhijeet K. Vadera, PhD, of the Indian School of Business, Hyderabad, India; Roger T. A. J. Leenders, PhD, of the Tilburg School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Tilburg University, The Netherlands; and Greg R. Oldham, PhD, of the A. B. Freeman School of Business at Tulane University.

Thanks to Gerry Everding, WUSTL Newsroom, for his contributions to this post.




Five Olin graduate students competed against six St. Louis area universities and won the local round of the CFA Institute Research Challenge. The CFA Institute Research Challenge is an annual global competition that provides university students with hands-on mentoring and intensive training in financial analysis.

Team Olin pictured above: left to right: Benjamin Bray, MSF; Mary Bond, MBA; Professor Charles Cuny, faculty mentor; Shibasish Das, MBA; John Zhang, MBA; Eli Lustgarten, industry mentor; Rupeng Zhuo, MBA.

Each team is responsible for producing  a written report on their assigned stock with a buy, sell, or hold recommendation and may be asked to present and defend their thesis to a panel of industry veterans. Teams have the opportunity to research a publicly traded company. The Olin team researched Emerson Electric and analyzed the company’s publicly traded stock.

The Olin team will advance to the Americas regional competition held in Denver, Colorado on March 18-19.   The team will provide their recommendation alongside 49 other teams from across North and South America. The winner of the Americas regional competes in Singapore at the Global Final. Go Olin!

For more information on the CFA Institute Research Challenge click here.

 




Seven current and former Washington University in St. Louis students, collectively known as “The Force,” took home the top prize of $50,000 during the GlobalHack event held Jan. 31-Feb. 2 at Union Station in St. Louis.

Eric Elias (BSBA ‘07), senior Arts & Sciences student Kristy Okada, junior fine arts student Leslie Ding, freshman engineering student Du Zhang, junior engineering student SeungJu SJ Lee, sophomore architecture student Daniel Borstelmann and junior engineering student Fangzhou Xiao made up the team.

“I still cannot believe my team and I won,” Okada said. “We were up against professionals with years of experience and other amazingly smart teams with great ideas. What made the win more gratifying was the fact that every individual was from the university. Most of us had never previously met before that day, but we came together, collaborated and created something we are all proud of. Even if we didn’t win, I’m glad to have participated because I made so many new friends and connections.”

GlobalHack’s quarterly hackathon competitions bring together developers, designers and entrepreneurs for 48-hour computer programming events focused on solving a technology-related problem for a St. Louis-based company. Teams compete for a $50,000 cash prize, among other prizes.

Teams were asked to develop a new software solution tool to help sales organizations manage their sales leads within the Salesforce.com platform.

The event drew more than 200 participants from St. Louis and beyond. Each team of up to 10 members had 48 hours to build an application on top of the Salesforce1 platform. The title sponsor, TopOpps for this event, makes a $50,000 acquisition offer to the winning team for the prototype that they develop during the weekend-long event.

“The WUSTL team stood apart from the others through the predictive analytics features and built-in recommendation engines that they developed in their solution,” said Clifford Holekamp, senior lecturer in entrepreneurship at Olin Business School and one of the judges for the competition.

“It was impressive that this young team was so savvy to the business analytics that sales managers would need in order to make better management decisions,” he said.

The hackathon was sponsored by TopOpps, Bank of America and the St. Louis Economic Development Partnership. Partners were Arch Grants, Cultivation Capital, Lockerdome, Strangeloop, T-Rex, Think Big Partners, Techli and WUSTL’s School of Engineering & Applied Science and the Entrepreneurship Platform at Olin Business School.

“The Force’s success at GlobalHack is indicative of the active and talented computer science community at Washington University,” said junior Shane Carr, president of the university’s Association for Computing Machinery. “Through our weekly Thursday Tech Talks and Code & Cookies programming sessions, we are proud to provide a meaningful lineup of events for the enrichment of students in the computer science program.”

GlobalHack is a nonprofit organization that hosts quarterly hackathon competitions and an annual product competition, with plans to award more than $1 million in prize money annually. The second GlobalHack event will be held in May. Learn more at globalhack.org.

GlobalHack was co-sponsored by the WUSTL School of Engineering and the Entrepreneurship Platform at Olin Business School.

Post by Neil Schoenherr, WUSTL News

Photo credit: Techli.com, The Force team with TopOpps founder Jim Eberlin.




EMBA alumna Alicia Herald is in the final round of the Dream Big America competition for startups. You can cast a vote for Alicia’s myEDmatch.com until noon today, July 31.

There are several ways to vote:

  1. GO VOTE AT http://bit.ly/DBAfin!
  1. SPREAD THE WORD!  Have your friends and networks vote and then tell their friends and networks to vote.  You can either share our Facebook post or retweet our announcement, OR use this suggested language:
    1. Facebook: Help more great teachers and great schools find each other on @myEDmatch by voting for them in the Dream Big America finals! Please take a minute to VOTE & SHARE: http://bit.ly/DBAfin
    2. Twitter: Get more great #schools and #teachers on @myEDmatch by voting for them to win the @DreamBigUSA finals: bit.ly/DBAfin Then pls RT!
    3. Email:  Our friends over at myEDmatch are in the finals of the Dream Big America competition.  If they win, myEDmatch will get the resources and exposure they need to fulfill their dream of getting every teacher and school in America using myEDmatch.  Help ’em out by voting and then spreading the word to your friends and networks! Vote at http://bit.ly/DBAfin and then share on Facebook and Twitter!
  1. VOTE AGAIN! Give us a little extra love by texting “DBA” to 612-223-7326 and click on the link that gets sent to your smartphone.

For more info read an earlier post about Alicia and the competition.

 




MyEDmatch.com, a startup created by EMBA alumna Alicia Herald, is a contestant on Dream Big America a national radio show that promotes entrepreneurship.  Listeners are asked to vote for the startup they would like to see succeed.  You can check out the competition and vote for Alicia’s company, myEDmatch.com, that she started planning while a student at Olin.

If Alicia and myEDmatch win, the start-up receives assistance in the form of mentorship, crowdfunding, and seed money.

Voting is open through 2 p.m. ET on Wednesday, July 10. Vote for Alicia and myEDmatch today! Voting is by text (Text DBA to 612-22-DREAM (612-223-7326 once voting is live) or via the DreamBigAmerica.us website.

Alicia was a member of the inaugural Kansas City Executive MBA class.  While working for Teach for America, she had a dream that is now a reality: myEDmatch. The business is a job-matching site that matches good-fit educators and schools.  It’s an easier, more effective way to connect educators and schools with similar goals and beliefs about education, and offers an information-rich environment for teachers and schools to learn about each other during the job-search and hiring process.

Dream Big America’s ™ mission is to provide a modern-day platform for entrepreneurs across America to learn, interact, and to provide the resources needed to get great ideas to the market. Importantly, its mission is to allow great ideas, great American Dreams, to make their way to our communities, into our markets, onto our computers, and more.

Dream Big America airs each Tuesday at 9:10am to 9:40am EDT on Doug Stephan’s Good Day Program (www.dougstephan.com), syndicated to 485 markets across the United States with a weekly listening audience of 3.5 million. In addition to being broadcast on the radio, the Dream Big America Show can be heard via live podcast on the DreamBigAmerica.us website.

Voting begins immediately after the show at approximately 10:00 am EDT and continues for 28 hours until 2:00 pm EDT each Wednesday. Voting is by text (Text DBA to 612-22-DREAM (612-223-7326 once voting is live) or via the DreamBigAmerica.us website. The winner of each weekly show is announced each Thursday on the Good Day Show at 9:50am EDT.