"Frankly, it's an ugly finding," says lead investigator Brent Scott. The study reveals that the unattractive workers were treated much more harshly than attractive employees even when other key factors were taken into account, including age, gender, and how long they had worked at the health care facility. (thesantosrepublic.com)

by Andy Henion, University of Michigan

June 24, 2013 (TSR) – Employees who are considered unattractive are more likely to deal with insults and bullying in the workplace.

“Frankly, it’s an ugly finding,” says lead investigator Brent Scott, associate professor of management at Michigan State University. “Although we like to think we’re professional and mature in the workplace, it can be just like high school in many ways.”

While plenty of research has found that attractive students tend to be more popular in school, the study is the first to link attractiveness to cruelty in the workplace. The results appear in the research journal Human Performance.

"Frankly, it's an ugly finding," says lead investigator Brent Scott. The study reveals that the unattractive workers were treated much more harshly than attractive employees even when other key factors were taken into account, including age, gender, and how long they had worked at the health care facility. (thesantosrepublic.com)
“Frankly, it’s an ugly finding,” says lead investigator Brent Scott. The study reveals that the unattractive workers were treated much more harshly than attractive employees even when other key factors were taken into account, including age, gender, and how long they had worked at the health care facility. (thesantosrepublic.com)

The researchers surveyed 114 workers at a health care facility in the southeastern United States. The workers were asked how often their co-workers engaged in cruel behavior toward them, which included saying hurtful things, acting rudely, and making fun of them.

People who didn’t know the study participants judged their attractiveness from digital photos.

The unattractive workers were treated much more harshly than attractive employees even when other key factors were taken into account, including age, gender, and how long they had worked at the health care facility.

The researchers also collected information on how agreeable or friendly the workers were, based on questionnaires completed by their spouses, partners, or good friends. The study found that disagreeable workers, like unattractive employees, were treated more harshly than their co-workers.

“Our findings revealed that both personality and appearance matter,” Scott says.

Knowing the potential targets of hurtful behavior could help managers monitor susceptible employees to prevent them from becoming victims or to provide counseling and social support if prevention attempts fail, he says.

Scott’s co-author was Timothy Judge of the University of Notre Dame.

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