Telephone: 617-552-0450
Email: benjamin.rogers@bc.edu
ORCID 0000-0001-9565-5998
Organizational Behavior
Meaning of Work; Narratives; Well-being; and Growth Mindset.
Benjamin Rogers’s research explores the meaning of work and narratives in the workplace, specifically the way that the stories we tell manifest in our organizational experiences to shape our well-being. His work particularly focuses on how these narratives can be used to design effective and scalable psychological interventions to help workers—and people, more broadly—to find more meaning and improve their well-being. His findings have included how a growth mindset can lead employees to help others at work, what leads workers to conclude their boss has naively “fallen for flattery,” and how seeing your personal narrative as similar to a “Hero’s Journey” can give life and work more meaning. Professor Rogers’s scholarly research has been published in Academy of Management Discoveries, the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Behavioral Science & Policy, and has been featured in media outlets such as TIME.
Professor Rogers teaches the Fundamentals of Organizational Behavior at the undergraduate level and has assisted in the instruction of negotiations, teamwork, and research methods for MBA and Ph.D. students.
"Too Naïve to Lead: When Leaders Fall for Flattery." (With Ovul Sezer and Nadav Klein.) Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. July, 2023.
"Seeing your life story as a Hero’s Journey increases meaning in life.” (With Herrsion Chicas, John Michael Kelly, Emily Kubin, Michael Christian, Frank Kachanoff, Jonah Berger, Curtis Puryear, Dan McAdams and Kurt Gray.) Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 125 (4), 752-778. 2023.
"The Growth Mindset at Work: Will Employees Help Others to Develop Themselves?" (With Jessica Christian, Remy Jennings and Klodiana Lanaj.) Academy of Management Discoveries, 9 (1). March, 2023.
"Behavioral insights for minimizing loneliness during the COVID-19 pandemic," (With Kelly Nault, Ovul Sezer and Nadav Klein.) Behavioral Science & Policy, 6 (2), 137-143. 2020.