Moral Branding - The role of a moral brand in a context of organizational culture, identity & change
(2015) BUSN49 20151Department of Business Administration
- Abstract
- Purpose: To gain an understanding of how organizational culture and identity are seen as interrelated with a moral brand, by investigating a company that is going through an organizational change. In addition to this, we intend to explore what happens with a company’s moral brand, culture, and identity, when going through these kinds of changes.
Research question: How are culture and identity related to a moral brand, and how are they affected by rebranding and expansion?
Method: A qualitative hermeneutic study within an interpretive paradigm. The empirical data was foremost collected by 13 semi-structured interviews in order to capture the employees’ experiences of the change. In addition to this, we observed the company internally... (More) - Purpose: To gain an understanding of how organizational culture and identity are seen as interrelated with a moral brand, by investigating a company that is going through an organizational change. In addition to this, we intend to explore what happens with a company’s moral brand, culture, and identity, when going through these kinds of changes.
Research question: How are culture and identity related to a moral brand, and how are they affected by rebranding and expansion?
Method: A qualitative hermeneutic study within an interpretive paradigm. The empirical data was foremost collected by 13 semi-structured interviews in order to capture the employees’ experiences of the change. In addition to this, we observed the company internally and externally through their social media channels, in order to gain a richer insight in the company.
Findings: The company had a strong moral brand, working as a unifying force, interrelated with the culture and identity. It further had a strong cultural alignment, and the moral brand values appeared to be deeply rooted in the culture and identity. The change led to an identity-shift and the creation of two subcultures. However, the change seemed to strengthen the moral brand values. Our research indicated how the moral brand worked as a unifying force, holding the company together. It was striking how the product had a central role in the moral brand, identity and culture. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/7508939
- author
- Falkenhaug, Ragnhild LU ; Henriksson, Rebecca LU and Nyman, Emelie LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- BUSN49 20151
- year
- 2015
- type
- H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
- subject
- keywords
- Organizational Change, Moral Brand, Organizational Culture, Identity, Corporate Branding, Rebranding
- language
- English
- id
- 7508939
- date added to LUP
- 2015-08-07 12:32:07
- date last changed
- 2015-08-07 12:32:07
@misc{7508939, abstract = {{Purpose: To gain an understanding of how organizational culture and identity are seen as interrelated with a moral brand, by investigating a company that is going through an organizational change. In addition to this, we intend to explore what happens with a company’s moral brand, culture, and identity, when going through these kinds of changes. Research question: How are culture and identity related to a moral brand, and how are they affected by rebranding and expansion? Method: A qualitative hermeneutic study within an interpretive paradigm. The empirical data was foremost collected by 13 semi-structured interviews in order to capture the employees’ experiences of the change. In addition to this, we observed the company internally and externally through their social media channels, in order to gain a richer insight in the company. Findings: The company had a strong moral brand, working as a unifying force, interrelated with the culture and identity. It further had a strong cultural alignment, and the moral brand values appeared to be deeply rooted in the culture and identity. The change led to an identity-shift and the creation of two subcultures. However, the change seemed to strengthen the moral brand values. Our research indicated how the moral brand worked as a unifying force, holding the company together. It was striking how the product had a central role in the moral brand, identity and culture.}}, author = {{Falkenhaug, Ragnhild and Henriksson, Rebecca and Nyman, Emelie}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Moral Branding - The role of a moral brand in a context of organizational culture, identity & change}}, year = {{2015}}, }