Journey or toolbox? Integrated reporting and processes of organisational change

Purpose Motivated by Morgan’s (1997) analysis of the “paradoxical” role of metaphors in understanding and managing organisations, the purpose of this paper is to assess in what respects organisations using integrated reporting (IR) are on a “journey” of organisational change. Design/methodology/appr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Accounting, auditing & accountability journal auditing & accountability journal, 2019-09, Vol.32 (6), p.1662-1689
Hauptverfasser: Higgins, Colin, Stubbs, Wendy, Tweedie, Dale, McCallum, Gregory
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container_end_page 1689
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1662
container_title Accounting, auditing & accountability journal
container_volume 32
creator Higgins, Colin
Stubbs, Wendy
Tweedie, Dale
McCallum, Gregory
description Purpose Motivated by Morgan’s (1997) analysis of the “paradoxical” role of metaphors in understanding and managing organisations, the purpose of this paper is to assess in what respects organisations using integrated reporting (IR) are on a “journey” of organisational change. Design/methodology/approach The paper analyses IR practitioner literature to interpret the IR journey metaphor more precisely. The authors then use in-depth interviews to assess the extent to which this metaphor captures how six early adopter organisations in Australia implement IR, and what changes result, over four years. Findings The journey metaphor implies substantive and holistic organisational change. By contrast, the authors find organisations use IR in contextual, instrumental and piecemeal ways. The authors propose a “toolbox” metaphor to help (re)present how organisations adapt their reporting to fit decisions already made, and challenges presented, through ordinary and ongoing strategic management. Research limitations/implications Morgan (1997) stresses metaphors are invariably used to both describe and manage organisations. The authors’ analysis identifies specific ways the IR journey metaphor is descriptively misleading. The authors’ “toolbox” metaphor suggests different ways organisations are, or could, manage IR to create value. Originality/value This is the first paper to provide a systematic analysis of the IR journey metaphors, and to assess in what respects this metaphor captures actual organisational practice. The findings also challenge the broader notion in academic research that reporting frameworks can lead organisational change.
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subjects Annual reports
Business models
Corporate responsibility
Culture
Financial reporting
Managers
Metaphor
Organizational change
Performance management
Strategic management
Sustainability
title Journey or toolbox? Integrated reporting and processes of organisational change
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