Entitled People Don’t Follow Instructions Because They See Them as “Unfair”

Authored by spsp.org and submitted by mvea

From job applications to being in line at the DMV, instructions, and the expectations that we follow them, are everywhere. Recent research found people with a greater sense of entitlement are less likely to follow instructions than less entitled people are, because they view the instructions as an unfair imposition on them. The results appear in the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science.

Scientists already know entitled people - technically, individuals with a higher sense of entitlement - are more likely to believe they deserve preferences and resources that others don’t and that they are less concerned about what is socially acceptable or beneficial. For authors Emily Zitek (Cornell University) and Alexander Jordan (Harvard Medical School), understanding the reasons for their behavior could lead to solutions as well.

“The fact that there are a lot of complaints these days about having to deal with entitled students and entitled employees,” says Zitek, “suggests the need for a solution.”

Zitek and Jordan conducted a series of studies, first to see who was more likely to avoid following instructions in a word search. After establishing that people who scored high on measures of entitled personality were less likely to follow instructions, they provided a set of scenarios to try to understand why the entitled individuals ignore the instructions: selfishness, control, or punishment. But none of these affected the outcomes; entitled people still wouldn’t follow instructions.

The researchers were surprised that it was so hard to get entitled individuals to follow instructions.

“We thought that everyone would follow instructions when we told people that they would definitely get punished for not doing so, but entitled individuals still were less likely to follow instructions than less entitled individuals,” said Zitek.

A final set of experiments, exploring fairness, finally got to the reason: “Entitled people do not follow instructions because they would rather take a loss themselves than agree to something unfair,” wrote the authors.

“A challenge for managers, professors, and anyone else who needs to get people with a sense of entitlement to follow instructions is to think about how to frame the instructions to make them seem fairer or more legitimate,” said Zitek.

Zitek and Jordan write that organizations and societies run more smoothly when people are willing to follow instructions.

Social Psychological and Personality Science (SPPS) is an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP), the Association for Research in Personality (ARP), the European Association of Social Psychology (EASP), and the Society for Experimental Social Psychology (SESP). Social Psychological and Personality Science publishes innovative and rigorous short reports of empirical research on the latest advances in personality and social psychology.

Fibonacci35813 on December 25th, 2017 at 14:15 UTC »

How did they measure entitlements?

AhoyPalloi on December 25th, 2017 at 13:47 UTC »

I used to hire installers to put our equipment in the field, and I saw this all the time. Some of the guys who were "the best" would do it all completely wrong because despite the fact that we were brand new, high tech, and highly custom... They had been doing this for xx years and didn't need to follow directions.

my_life_is_a_gif on December 25th, 2017 at 13:39 UTC »

That explains why people who get punished for not following instructions, especially when those instructions are the law, seem to sound so persecuted. I’d like to see a follow-up that examines why entitled people feel that rules or laws are such an unfair imposition. I wonder if there are particular kinds of rules that get ignored more often. I’d hazard a guess that any rule which places the burden of work on the person following it, such as correctly formatting a response to a written question, get ignored the most.