Communicating multiple change : understanding the impact of change messages on stakeholder perceptions

This study explored change implementation communication from a multifaceted (more than one at any particular time) change perspective. It examined how employees make sense of and respond to the organizational coordination of multifaceted change efforts. The case of a merger provides the backdrop for...

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Main Author: Laster, Nicole Mary
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/18134
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-181342015-09-20T17:10:22ZCommunicating multiple change : understanding the impact of change messages on stakeholder perceptionsLaster, Nicole MaryCommunication in organizations--Case studiesOrganizational change--Case studiesThis study explored change implementation communication from a multifaceted (more than one at any particular time) change perspective. It examined how employees make sense of and respond to the organizational coordination of multifaceted change efforts. The case of a merger provides the backdrop for which to understand the multiplicity and complexity of organizational change (both planned and unplanned) and how the communicative organizational response to these overlapping and subsequent changes both complement and compete with the initially introduced change. This project was organized into two studies. The first explored the messages stakeholders recall receiving from implementers about multifaceted change. The second tested the relationships between change messages and specific individual and organizational change outcomes. Thematic analysis revealed that implementers used four different change messages. Statistical analysis revealed that multifaceted change messages create higher levels of change satisfaction, message quality, change liking, and organizational trust. Moreover, messages including information about the multiplicity (or magnitude) produced the least degree of perceived deception, the greatest degree of coping efficacy, and higher degrees of organizational competency appraisals.text2012-10-02T19:55:10Z2012-10-02T19:55:10Z2008-082012-10-02electronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/18134engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Communication in organizations--Case studies
Organizational change--Case studies
spellingShingle Communication in organizations--Case studies
Organizational change--Case studies
Laster, Nicole Mary
Communicating multiple change : understanding the impact of change messages on stakeholder perceptions
description This study explored change implementation communication from a multifaceted (more than one at any particular time) change perspective. It examined how employees make sense of and respond to the organizational coordination of multifaceted change efforts. The case of a merger provides the backdrop for which to understand the multiplicity and complexity of organizational change (both planned and unplanned) and how the communicative organizational response to these overlapping and subsequent changes both complement and compete with the initially introduced change. This project was organized into two studies. The first explored the messages stakeholders recall receiving from implementers about multifaceted change. The second tested the relationships between change messages and specific individual and organizational change outcomes. Thematic analysis revealed that implementers used four different change messages. Statistical analysis revealed that multifaceted change messages create higher levels of change satisfaction, message quality, change liking, and organizational trust. Moreover, messages including information about the multiplicity (or magnitude) produced the least degree of perceived deception, the greatest degree of coping efficacy, and higher degrees of organizational competency appraisals. === text
author Laster, Nicole Mary
author_facet Laster, Nicole Mary
author_sort Laster, Nicole Mary
title Communicating multiple change : understanding the impact of change messages on stakeholder perceptions
title_short Communicating multiple change : understanding the impact of change messages on stakeholder perceptions
title_full Communicating multiple change : understanding the impact of change messages on stakeholder perceptions
title_fullStr Communicating multiple change : understanding the impact of change messages on stakeholder perceptions
title_full_unstemmed Communicating multiple change : understanding the impact of change messages on stakeholder perceptions
title_sort communicating multiple change : understanding the impact of change messages on stakeholder perceptions
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/18134
work_keys_str_mv AT lasternicolemary communicatingmultiplechangeunderstandingtheimpactofchangemessagesonstakeholderperceptions
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