CEOs have offered many different reasons for calling workers back into the officeâdespite research that suggests working from home can be as effective, if not more effective, than in-office work.Â
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy wrote in an RTO memo that âcollaborating, brainstorming, and inventing are simpler and more effectiveâ in person, and that âteaching and learning from one another are more seamless.â Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri said his five-day in-office mandate would increase creativity, and BlackRock CEO Larry Fink even suggested that getting employees back into the office could help offset inflation. JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon famously derided video-call-heavy remote work as âmanagement by Hollywood Squares,â and has argued that in-person work is crucial for mentoring, fostering innovation, and maintaining corporate culture.
But there may be another reason for work-from-home crackdowns and in-office mandates that CEOs havenât mentioned: their own egos.Â
A new study from Wharton organizational psychologist Adam Grant and co-authors Marissa Shandell and Courtney Elliott found that leader narcissism was associated with greater resistance to remote work. A big reason? Power trips are easier to stage in-person.
â[I]n leadership roles, narcissists have a clear preference for face-to-face interaction, where richer channels allow them to not only gain attention but also wield power and status,â the authors write. Remote settings curtail leadersâ usual means of âdirecting and inspiring employeesâ like using hand gestures, fluctuating the volume of their voice, making eye contact, and adjusting their posture. âWhen communicating by video, phone, email, or text, it is more difficult for leaders to command the attentionâand gauge and bask in the admirationâof their employees,â the authors write.Â
As part of their six-year study, which included large-scale surveys, the authors established proxies for measuring Fortune 500 CEOsâ egos, such as the size of their pay packages, the size of their signatures in company reports, and the size of their photos in company reports.Â
CEOs with higher narcissism scores were more likely to seek more status, such as becoming chair of their company board, and were more likely to make negative statements about remote and hybrid work early in the pandemic
In another experiment, the authors primed CEOsâ narcissistic self-image by asking them to reflect on the role that a bold, assertive ego played in the successes of Apple CEO Steve Jobs and Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison. Afterwards, leaders whoâd been primed were more likely to oppose working from home, compared to those who werenât primed. This, the researchers concluded, suggests a causal link between activating ego and opposing remote work.
âThe higher the opinions of themselves leaders expressed, the more they coveted power and statusâand the more they favored return-to-office mandates,â the authors wrote in a New York Times opinion piece.
The authors warn that CEOsâ egos may be blinding them to the upside of more flexible working arrangementsâa perk employees loveâand motivating them to impose full-time in-office mandates that could backfire.Â
The study should be a wakeup call for leaders: There may be totally legitimate reasons to call employees back into the office, but massaging the bossâs ego isnât one of them.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
