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“It leaves a bitter aftertaste” : Uncovering the Tensions of Employees’ Communication Engagement and Impression Vulnerability on Social Media

Sossini, Alessandra LU (2026) In Journal of Communication Management 30(5). p.17-35
Abstract
Purpose: This article problematizes the dominant functionalistic and organization‑centric view of employees’ communication engagement on social media and challenges the assumption that such engagement merely reflects managerial success or failure. Adopting an employee‑centred, relational approach, the study advances the understanding of employees’ communication engagement by foregrounding the tensions between competing meanings and discursive logics that shape communication (dis)engagement beyond the traditional employee–organization relationship.

Design/methodology/approach: Adopting a qualitative case study approach within a talent management program at a Swiss corporation, the empirical material was collected through 20... (More)
Purpose: This article problematizes the dominant functionalistic and organization‑centric view of employees’ communication engagement on social media and challenges the assumption that such engagement merely reflects managerial success or failure. Adopting an employee‑centred, relational approach, the study advances the understanding of employees’ communication engagement by foregrounding the tensions between competing meanings and discursive logics that shape communication (dis)engagement beyond the traditional employee–organization relationship.

Design/methodology/approach: Adopting a qualitative case study approach within a talent management program at a Swiss corporation, the empirical material was collected through 20 semi-structured interviews, supported by photo-elicitation and descriptive observations of participants’ LinkedIn profiles.

Findings: The study indicates that employees’ communication (dis)engagement on social media is embedded within three dialectical tensions rooted in their relationships with their organization, a broader professional network, and the platform itself. The tensions arose from competing meanings around visibility, representation and boundaries. These tensions then fostered impression vulnerabilities – unresolvable dilemmas around employees’ impression management online – that often lead to disengagement.

Research implications: The findings underscore the need for a relational understanding of employees’ communication (dis)engagement in the digital sphere that moves beyond managerial success or failure and foregrounds the communicative dynamics and relations shaping communication (dis)engagement.

Practical implications: The study highlights the importance of organizational sensitivity to relational dynamics and the discursive struggles employees encounter when engaging on social media.

Originality: This study contributes to a critical, relational perspective on employees’ social media communication engagement, offering insights into the dialectical tensions that underpin their communication decisions.
(Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Purpose: This article problematizes the dominant functionalistic and organization‑centric view of employees’ communication engagement on social media and challenges the assumption that such engagement merely reflects managerial success or failure. Adopting an employee‑centred, relational approach, the study advances the understanding of employees’ communication engagement by foregrounding the tensions between competing meanings and discursive logics that shape communication (dis)engagement beyond the traditional employee–organization relationship.

Design/methodology/approach: Adopting a qualitative case study approach within a talent management program at a Swiss corporation, the empirical material was collected through 20... (More)
Purpose: This article problematizes the dominant functionalistic and organization‑centric view of employees’ communication engagement on social media and challenges the assumption that such engagement merely reflects managerial success or failure. Adopting an employee‑centred, relational approach, the study advances the understanding of employees’ communication engagement by foregrounding the tensions between competing meanings and discursive logics that shape communication (dis)engagement beyond the traditional employee–organization relationship.

Design/methodology/approach: Adopting a qualitative case study approach within a talent management program at a Swiss corporation, the empirical material was collected through 20 semi-structured interviews, supported by photo-elicitation and descriptive observations of participants’ LinkedIn profiles.

Findings: The study indicates that employees’ communication (dis)engagement on social media is embedded within three dialectical tensions rooted in their relationships with their organization, a broader professional network, and the platform itself. The tensions arose from competing meanings around visibility, representation and boundaries. These tensions then fostered impression vulnerabilities – unresolvable dilemmas around employees’ impression management online – that often lead to disengagement.

Research implications: The findings underscore the need for a relational understanding of employees’ communication (dis)engagement in the digital sphere that moves beyond managerial success or failure and foregrounds the communicative dynamics and relations shaping communication (dis)engagement.

Practical implications: The study highlights the importance of organizational sensitivity to relational dynamics and the discursive struggles employees encounter when engaging on social media.

Originality: This study contributes to a critical, relational perspective on employees’ social media communication engagement, offering insights into the dialectical tensions that underpin their communication decisions.
(Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Employee Communication, Employee engagement, Social Media, relational dialectics, Communication Management
in
Journal of Communication Management
volume
30
issue
5
pages
17 - 35
publisher
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
ISSN
1363-254X
DOI
10.1108/JCOM-12-2025-0328
project
Coworkers as their own brand: Redefining Coworker’s Communicative Co-Creation in Times of Social Singularity
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7d717d0a-5eb9-4a60-8361-3b17101ec3b7
date added to LUP
2026-04-07 21:44:56
date last changed
2026-05-07 08:06:31
@article{7d717d0a-5eb9-4a60-8361-3b17101ec3b7,
  abstract     = {{Purpose: This article problematizes the dominant functionalistic and organization‑centric view of employees’ communication engagement on social media and challenges the assumption that such engagement merely reflects managerial success or failure. Adopting an employee‑centred, relational approach, the study advances the understanding of employees’ communication engagement by foregrounding the tensions between competing meanings and discursive logics that shape communication (dis)engagement beyond the traditional employee–organization relationship.<br/><br/>Design/methodology/approach: Adopting a qualitative case study approach within a talent management program at a Swiss corporation, the empirical material was collected through 20 semi-structured interviews, supported by photo-elicitation and descriptive observations of participants’ LinkedIn profiles.<br/><br/>Findings: The study indicates that employees’ communication (dis)engagement on social media is embedded within three dialectical tensions rooted in their relationships with their organization, a broader professional network, and the platform itself. The tensions arose from competing meanings around visibility, representation and boundaries. These tensions then fostered impression vulnerabilities – unresolvable dilemmas around employees’ impression management online – that often lead to disengagement.<br/><br/>Research implications: The findings underscore the need for a relational understanding of employees’ communication (dis)engagement in the digital sphere that moves beyond managerial success or failure and foregrounds the communicative dynamics and relations shaping communication (dis)engagement.<br/><br/>Practical implications: The study highlights the importance of organizational sensitivity to relational dynamics and the discursive struggles employees encounter when engaging on social media.<br/><br/>Originality: This study contributes to a critical, relational perspective on employees’ social media communication engagement, offering insights into the dialectical tensions that underpin their communication decisions.<br/>}},
  author       = {{Sossini, Alessandra}},
  issn         = {{1363-254X}},
  keywords     = {{Employee Communication; Employee engagement; Social Media; relational dialectics; Communication Management}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{04}},
  number       = {{5}},
  pages        = {{17--35}},
  publisher    = {{Emerald Group Publishing Limited}},
  series       = {{Journal of Communication Management}},
  title        = {{“It leaves a bitter aftertaste” : Uncovering the Tensions of Employees’ Communication Engagement and Impression Vulnerability on Social Media}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/JCOM-12-2025-0328}},
  doi          = {{10.1108/JCOM-12-2025-0328}},
  volume       = {{30}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}