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The Performance Effect of Feedback Frequency and Detail: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Customer Satisfaction
Authors:PABLO CASAS‐ARCE  SOFIA M LOURENÇO  F ASÍS MARTÍNEZ‐JEREZ
Institution:1. Arizona State University;2. ISEG, Universidade de Lisboa and AdvanceCSG Research Center;3. University of Notre Dame
Abstract:This paper presents the results from a field experiment that examines the effects of nonfinancial performance feedback on the behavior of professionals working for an insurance repair company. We vary the frequency (weekly and monthly) and the level of detail of the feedback that the 800 professionals receive. Contrary to what we would expect if these professionals conformed to the model of the Bayesian decision maker, more (and more frequent) information does not always help improve performance. In fact, we find that professionals achieve the best outcomes when they receive detailed but infrequent (monthly) feedback. The treatment groups with frequent feedback, regardless of how detailed it is, perform no better than the control group (with monthly and aggregate information). The results are consistent with the information in the latest feedback report being most salient and professionals in the weekly treatments overweighting their most recent performance, hampering their ability to learn.
Keywords:C93  D81  D91  J01  M40  M41  M52  M54  M55  feedback  incentives  salience  performance  customer satisfaction  field experiment
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