Individual training and employees’ cooperative behavior: evidence from a contextualized laboratory experiment.

Employers are constantly seeking to improve employee performance by means of investing in employee training. The results of training are to a large extent dependent on employees’ willingness to behave productively in a cooperative manner. Yet, systematic evidence investigating the causal relation between training and employees’ cooperative behavior is rare. Here we present results from a contextualized laboratory experiment in which subjects, who differ in terms of training participation, were asked to contribute resources to a team effort. We conclude that training promotes cooperative behavior, i.e. voluntary contributions made to the team effort, in teams of employees working together for short periods of time. Training enhances cooperative behavior the most when provided to the higher skilled subjects. We also find that members in more stable teams act very cooperatively under all conditions, but their contributions do not increase further with training.

Additional Info

Source http://doi.org/10.24416/UU01-JTEL3C
Access type Restricted Access
Collections ERC: Sustainable Workforce
Funder references European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP/2007-2013) (340045)
Language en
Publisher Utrecht University
Version 1
Year of publication 2018