Bragger or complainer: how do you share online? Quiz | Ben Ambridge | Life and style
How you choose to share personal achievements on social media says more about you than you think. Caution: you may not always create the impression you were hoping forâ¦
Suppose you have achieved the most prestigious award available in your line of work. How would you share the news on social media?
(a) Not at all.
(b) Drowning in interview requests since I won that Oscar. Sorry if Iâm slow getting back to you â" just canât keep up with them all!
(c) Still canât believe they gave me an Oscar. What were they thinking?
(d) I WON AN OSCAR!
(e) Canât keep up! Stressed out!
If you said (a), congratulations on your self-restraint â" a rarity these days. If you said (b) or (c), then you are officially a âhumblebraggerâ; someone who tries to tone down their bragging with a dose of either (b) complaining or (c) humility. If you said (d), you are just a straightforward bragger; if you said (e), a straightforward complainer.
A recent Harvard Business School study found that both (b) complaint-based and (c) humility-based humblebrags were less effective than (d) straightforward brags or even (e) straightforward complaints. Both types of humblebragger were rated as less likeable than straightforward braggers or complainers. Also, (b) complaint-based humblebrags (the most common type) were rated as worst of all. So if youâve achieved something great and you just canât keep it in, donât humblebrag, just brag â" maybe because itâs more honest, itâs more likeable, too.
A fully referenced version of this article is at benambridge.com. Order Are You Smarter Than a Chimpanzee? by Ben Ambridge for £11.04 at bookshop.theguardian.com
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