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CEO Success: It's All in the Face
By Andrea Thompson, LiveScience Staff Writer
posted: 16 January 2008 09:09 am ET
Heed this, executives: Look sharp.
The first impression a CEO gives, even based solely on certain facial
characteristics, could predict how successful his company will be, a
new study suggests.
First impressions — what others think of a person at a glance — can
tell us a lot about another person, and several psychological studies
have shown that they can predict success in areas such as running for
elected office or teaching. But how well a teacher teaches and how much
a candidate appeals to voters are both subjective ideas.
Psychologists Nicholas Rule and Nalini Ambady of Tufts University set
out to study whether first impressions could predict performance in a
more objective evaluation: how successful a CEO's company was.
In their experiment, the researchers had college students rate the
faces of the CEOs of the highest and lowest ranking Fortune 1000
companies according to their perceived leadership abilities .
Certain personality traits associated with leadership, including
competence, dominance, likeability, facial maturity and
trustworthiness, can be judged from a person's face, previous studies
have shown.
The researchers grouped these traits into two factors influencing
leadership. Competence, dominance and facial maturity were combined to
represent "power," while likeability and trustworthiness represented
"warmth."
The CEOs who were rated as more powerful by the students turned out to be running more successful companies.
"CEOs who are ranked higher in terms of looking more powerful do better
or have more profitable companies than those who are ranked warm,"
Ambady said.
Whether the fact that the CEO gives off a powerful first impression
actually influences their work in the business world is hard to say for
certain, the researchers say.
"In the business world, first impressions matter," Ambady told LiveScience. "How much this [result] translates is another question."
But Rule and Ambady say their study, detailed in the February issue of the journal Psychological Science, supports the earlier work that first impressions can be used to tell how well someone will do at a certain job or task.
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