Are you talkin' to me? : the role of culture in crisis management sensemaking
Purpose: This paper considers the role of culture in crisis management narratives. The importance of sensemaking and sense-giving to crisis management is expanded by exploring how understanding organization culture may affect the plausibility of sense-giving narratives in crises. Design/methodology/approach: The crisis management, sensemaking, sense-giving and organizational culture literature studies are briefly reviewed. The paper then explores how plausibility may be dependent on organizational culture and how different cultures may create different dependencies. Propositions are developed and the potential organizational interventions based on these propositions in the action research tradition are offered, as they are potential practical and research implications. Findings: Organizational cultures as shared sensemaking mechanisms provide leaders with the framework for constructing crisis management messages. A plausible message must resonate within the shared cultural experiences of members to shape and direct behaviors during a crisis while maintaining necessary flexibility to evolve as the crisis progresses. Research limitations/implications: Potential avenues of future research include empirically testing the effects of cultural alignment on crisis management messaging employing action research or other methods, how strength of culture affects the process and the malleability of plausibility. Practical implications: Practical implications include an organization's understanding of how culture affects not only the messages sent but also how employees might receive the sense-giving narratives. The paper also highlights the importance of flexibility in sense-giving narratives to allow evolution of the message as the crisis changes. Additional practical implications are provided. Originality/value: This manuscript considers the role of culture in crisis management sense-giving narratives, a topic that has received little research attention. The manuscript argues that aligning the narrative within the organization's shared cultural understanding will increase employee acceptance and adherence to the message. The paper further discusses the importance of flexibility in the sense-giving narratives as the crisis changes.
Year of publication: |
2020
|
---|---|
Authors: | Sherman, W. Scott ; Roberto, Katherine J. |
Published in: |
Management Decision. - Emerald, ISSN 0025-1747, ZDB-ID 2023018-7. - Vol. 58.2020, 10 (31.10.), p. 2195-2211
|
Publisher: |
Emerald |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Sherman, W. Scott, (2009)
-
Calling corporate "audibles" : changing signals in response to environmental jolts
Sherman, W. Scott, (2016)
-
Sherman, W. Scott, (2009)
- More ...