Getting heard? How employees learn to gain senior management attention in inclusive strategy processes

Research Summary Recent trends toward inclusive strategy processes raise the issue of how employees acquire the discursive competence necessary to gain senior management attention. Building on the emergent dynamic attention‐based view's (DABV) emphasis on communicative interaction, we ethnograp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Strategic management journal 2024-10, Vol.45 (10), p.1877-1925
Hauptverfasser: Splitter, Violetta, Seidl, David, Whittington, Richard
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creator Splitter, Violetta
Seidl, David
Whittington, Richard
description Research Summary Recent trends toward inclusive strategy processes raise the issue of how employees acquire the discursive competence necessary to gain senior management attention. Building on the emergent dynamic attention‐based view's (DABV) emphasis on communicative interaction, we ethnographically track an inclusive strategy process in a large insurance company. We find that employees typically failed to gain CEO attention because they lacked the discursive competence to integrate their operational knowledge with the CEO's corporate themes. Employees acquired this competence by both experiential and vicarious learning. The CEO promoted employee learning more effectively by specific coaching than by generic coaching. We contribute primarily to the DABV by showing how interactions are sites for learning as well as communications and that communication channels can be both expandable and transparent. Managerial Summary The benefits of increased employee inclusion in strategy processes depend upon participants being truly heard. This study of an inclusive strategy process in a large insurance company shows that top management attention to employee contributions cannot be assumed. Employees often fail to pitch ideas in a manner that top managers can work with. Employees learn to pitch ideas effectively both by receiving direct feedback from top management and by observing feedback on other employees' contributions. Top managers must also learn how to coach effectively, engaging with the specifics of employees' contributions rather than offering general advice. Designs for new inclusive strategy processes should include opportunities for top managers to improve their coaching and for employees to learn from both direct feedback and indirect observation.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/smj.3602
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Attention
attention quality
Chief executive officers
Chief executives
Coaching
Communication
Competence
discursive competence
dynamic attention based view (DABV)
Employee involvement
Employee management relations
Employees
Experiential learning
Feedback
Insurance
Insurance companies
learning
open strategy
Strategic management
Top management
Upper management
Vicarious learning
title Getting heard? How employees learn to gain senior management attention in inclusive strategy processes
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