Survivors' Discursive Construction of Organizational Identification after a Downsizing

Helle Kryger Aggerholm, Mona Agerholm Andersen

    Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    This study examines how surviving employees discursively construct organizational identifications after a downsizing in a large Scandinavian telecommunications company. Further, the analysis reveals which factors in survivors´ discourse are determining for the creation of their organizational identifications. Discourse analysis of the interview data indicate four types of employee identification response categories: 1) non-identification caused by indifference, 2) identification fuelled by job identification, consensus as to the downsizing strategy, sense of procedural justice and acceptance of transactional contract, 3) contextual dis-identification due to radical, cultural changes, elimination of networks and poor corporate reputation, and 4) procedural dis-identification caused by lack of procedural credibility, disrespect and responsibility avoidance. The results of this study indicate that a strong identification with the pre-downsized organization seems to foster a strong sense of dis-identification with the post-downsized organization. The implications of these findings are discussed and recommendations for future research are provided.
    Original languageEnglish
    Publication date2011
    Number of pages17
    Publication statusPublished - 2011
    EventThe Conference on Corporate Communication 2011 - New York, United States
    Duration: 7 Jun 201110 Jun 2011

    Conference

    ConferenceThe Conference on Corporate Communication 2011
    Country/TerritoryUnited States
    CityNew York
    Period07/06/201110/06/2011

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