JOURNAL ARTICLE

Initial impressions: What they are, what they are not, and how they influence structured interview outcomes.

Brian W. SwiderMurray R. BarrickT. Brad Harris

Year: 2016 Journal:   Journal of Applied Psychology Vol: 101 (5)Pages: 625-638   Publisher: American Psychological Association

Abstract

Nearly all employment interviews, even those considered highly structured, begin with a brief meet-and-greet conversation typically coalescing around non-job-related topics (i.e., rapport building). Although applicants and interviewers often view rapport building as an essential, value-adding component of the interview, it may contaminate interviewers' evaluations of answers to subsequently asked structured questions (Levashina, Hartwell, Morgeson, & Campion, 2014). Yet research has not determined the extent to which initial impressions developed during rapport building influence subsequent interviewer ratings through job-related interview content versus non-job-related content; whether these effects extend beyond more commonly examined image-related factors that can bias interviewers (i.e., self-presentation tactics); or how these effects are temporally bound when influencing interviewer ratings during the formal structured interview question-and-answer process. Addressing these questions, we integrate interview research with the extant social psychology literature to clarify rapport building's unique effects in the employment interview. In contrast to prior assumptions, findings based on 163 mock interviews suggest that a significant portion of initial impressions' influence overlaps with job-related interview content and, importantly, that these effects are distinct from other image-related constructs. Finally, initial impressions are found to more strongly relate to interviewer evaluations of applicant responses earlier rather than later in the structured interview. (PsycINFO Database Record

Keywords:
Interview Psychology PsycINFO Job interview Social psychology Conversation Impression formation Impression management Semi-structured interview Applied psychology Social perception Qualitative research MEDLINE Perception Communication

Metrics

66
Cited By
12.04
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
102
Refs
0.98
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Social and Intergroup Psychology
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Sociology and Political Science
Psychology of Social Influence
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Sociology and Political Science
Deception detection and forensic psychology
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Social Psychology

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