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Fear of Being Replaced: The Dark Side of Employee Ambassadorship on Social Media

Sossini, Alessandra LU and Heide, Mats LU orcid (2024) In Corporate Communications 29(7). p.58-73
Abstract
Purpose: Starting from a power perspective, the study problematizes the prevailing normative and management-dominated view of self-initiated employee ambassadorship on social media. The aim is to provide a more nuanced and critical understanding of the negative aspects of this phenomenon.

Design/methodology/approach: The empirical material encompasses qualitative interviews with employees from 14 organizations, and Foucault’s concept of disciplinary discursive power is used to analyze which and how discourses exert power over employee communication on social media as well as what role visibility plays in this.

Findings: The study indicates that employee ambassadors’ social media communication is governed by two discourses... (More)
Purpose: Starting from a power perspective, the study problematizes the prevailing normative and management-dominated view of self-initiated employee ambassadorship on social media. The aim is to provide a more nuanced and critical understanding of the negative aspects of this phenomenon.

Design/methodology/approach: The empirical material encompasses qualitative interviews with employees from 14 organizations, and Foucault’s concept of disciplinary discursive power is used to analyze which and how discourses exert power over employee communication on social media as well as what role visibility plays in this.

Findings: The study indicates that employee ambassadors’ social media communication is governed by two discourses that create complex tensions, where ambassadors must constantly negotiate between self-branding requirements and an authenticity paradox. These tensions intensify through visibility on social media, where employees strategize and situationally silence their communication through self-monitoring and self-surveillance practices. The findings also outline the need for further critical research to offer a deeper understanding of power relations that influence the communication practices of organization members.

Research implications: The paper contributes a more nuanced understanding of self-initiated employee ambassadorship on social media and highlights disciplinary power relations that extend beyond organizational borders.

Practical implications: The findings stress that organizations need to address the critical aspects of self-initiated employee ambassadorship and act as facilitators to support employees in their navigation process.

Originality: The paper contributes a new critical power perspective on employee ambassadorship on social media.
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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Employee Ambassadorship, Employee Communication, Social Media, Power, Foucault, Discourse, Visibility, Surveillance, Resistance
in
Corporate Communications
volume
29
issue
7
pages
58 - 73
publisher
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
external identifiers
  • scopus:85188461436
ISSN
1356-3289
DOI
10.1108/CCIJ-11-2023-0158
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
c3910d03-af74-464e-b3c5-18c7be708785
date added to LUP
2024-02-15 13:27:53
date last changed
2024-04-12 10:07:12
@article{c3910d03-af74-464e-b3c5-18c7be708785,
  abstract     = {{Purpose: Starting from a power perspective, the study problematizes the prevailing normative and management-dominated view of self-initiated employee ambassadorship on social media. The aim is to provide a more nuanced and critical understanding of the negative aspects of this phenomenon.<br/><br/>Design/methodology/approach: The empirical material encompasses qualitative interviews with employees from 14 organizations, and Foucault’s concept of disciplinary discursive power is used to analyze which and how discourses exert power over employee communication on social media as well as what role visibility plays in this.<br/><br/>Findings: The study indicates that employee ambassadors’ social media communication is governed by two discourses that create complex tensions, where ambassadors must constantly negotiate between self-branding requirements and an authenticity paradox. These tensions intensify through visibility on social media, where employees strategize and situationally silence their communication through self-monitoring and self-surveillance practices. The findings also outline the need for further critical research to offer a deeper understanding of power relations that influence the communication practices of organization members.<br/><br/>Research implications: The paper contributes a more nuanced understanding of self-initiated employee ambassadorship on social media and highlights disciplinary power relations that extend beyond organizational borders.<br/><br/>Practical implications: The findings stress that organizations need to address the critical aspects of self-initiated employee ambassadorship and act as facilitators to support employees in their navigation process.<br/><br/>Originality: The paper contributes a new critical power perspective on employee ambassadorship on social media.<br/>}},
  author       = {{Sossini, Alessandra and Heide, Mats}},
  issn         = {{1356-3289}},
  keywords     = {{Employee Ambassadorship; Employee Communication; Social Media; Power; Foucault; Discourse; Visibility; Surveillance; Resistance}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{7}},
  pages        = {{58--73}},
  publisher    = {{Emerald Group Publishing Limited}},
  series       = {{Corporate Communications}},
  title        = {{Fear of Being Replaced: The Dark Side of Employee Ambassadorship on Social Media}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/CCIJ-11-2023-0158}},
  doi          = {{10.1108/CCIJ-11-2023-0158}},
  volume       = {{29}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}