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The interplay of sensegiving and sensemaking: politics of ideology at a Japanese retailer in Hong Kong

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The interplay of sensegiving and sensemaking: politics of ideology at a Japanese retailer in Hong Kong. / Zhu, Zoe.
In: Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management, Vol. 18, No. 4, 07.11.2023, p. 291-309.

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Zhu Z. The interplay of sensegiving and sensemaking: politics of ideology at a Japanese retailer in Hong Kong. Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management. 2023 Nov 7;18(4):291-309. Epub 2023 Aug 4. doi: 10.1108/QROM-09-2022-2393

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Zhu, Zoe. / The interplay of sensegiving and sensemaking : politics of ideology at a Japanese retailer in Hong Kong. In: Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management. 2023 ; Vol. 18, No. 4. pp. 291-309.

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@article{09cd0216ee0c4ba9b2d38ee6ef6e29c9,
title = "The interplay of sensegiving and sensemaking: politics of ideology at a Japanese retailer in Hong Kong",
abstract = "Purpose: This study explores the politics of ideology in the process of sensegiving and sensemaking at a Japanese retailer in Hong Kong. Studies on power and politics are scarce despite key role of power and politics in understanding the factors behind the conflict between the management's policy legitimization (sensegiving) and employees' policy interpretation (sensemaking). By using the three dimensions proposed in the critical sensemaking approach (discourse, rules and contexts), this paper explores the complex mechanism of power and politics in sensemaking and sensegiving. Design/methodology/approach: Using 15 months of participant observation as a salesperson, this paper discusses how the Japan-centric customer service philosophy (dominant discourse), customer service policies and practices (organizational rules) and asymmetric power structure between the Japanese global headquarters and Hong Kong subsidiaries (formative contexts) are presented and perpetuated through the sensegiving–sensemaking process. Findings: Dominant discourse was observed in the management's sensegiving, which placed the Japanese style of customer service over others. This ethnocentric dominant discourse informed the creation of customer service policies, although the realization of the discourse was determined by the employees' conflicting interpretations of the organizational rules. As a formative context, an asymmetric power structure was present that positioned the Hong Kong subsidiary as subservient to the global headquarters in Japan. This shows that the political process of sensegiving and sensemaking deeply implicates the dominant discourse, organizational rules and power structure as central forces that determine the level of perpetuating ideology. Originality/value: This research illustrates the wider implications of power and politics in sensegiving–sensemaking studies and provides a complex picture of ethnocentric management.",
keywords = "Sensegiving, Sensemaking, Politics, Ideology, Discourse, Power",
author = "Zoe Zhu",
year = "2023",
month = nov,
day = "7",
doi = "10.1108/QROM-09-2022-2393",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "291--309",
journal = "Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management",
issn = "1746-5648",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The interplay of sensegiving and sensemaking

T2 - politics of ideology at a Japanese retailer in Hong Kong

AU - Zhu, Zoe

PY - 2023/11/7

Y1 - 2023/11/7

N2 - Purpose: This study explores the politics of ideology in the process of sensegiving and sensemaking at a Japanese retailer in Hong Kong. Studies on power and politics are scarce despite key role of power and politics in understanding the factors behind the conflict between the management's policy legitimization (sensegiving) and employees' policy interpretation (sensemaking). By using the three dimensions proposed in the critical sensemaking approach (discourse, rules and contexts), this paper explores the complex mechanism of power and politics in sensemaking and sensegiving. Design/methodology/approach: Using 15 months of participant observation as a salesperson, this paper discusses how the Japan-centric customer service philosophy (dominant discourse), customer service policies and practices (organizational rules) and asymmetric power structure between the Japanese global headquarters and Hong Kong subsidiaries (formative contexts) are presented and perpetuated through the sensegiving–sensemaking process. Findings: Dominant discourse was observed in the management's sensegiving, which placed the Japanese style of customer service over others. This ethnocentric dominant discourse informed the creation of customer service policies, although the realization of the discourse was determined by the employees' conflicting interpretations of the organizational rules. As a formative context, an asymmetric power structure was present that positioned the Hong Kong subsidiary as subservient to the global headquarters in Japan. This shows that the political process of sensegiving and sensemaking deeply implicates the dominant discourse, organizational rules and power structure as central forces that determine the level of perpetuating ideology. Originality/value: This research illustrates the wider implications of power and politics in sensegiving–sensemaking studies and provides a complex picture of ethnocentric management.

AB - Purpose: This study explores the politics of ideology in the process of sensegiving and sensemaking at a Japanese retailer in Hong Kong. Studies on power and politics are scarce despite key role of power and politics in understanding the factors behind the conflict between the management's policy legitimization (sensegiving) and employees' policy interpretation (sensemaking). By using the three dimensions proposed in the critical sensemaking approach (discourse, rules and contexts), this paper explores the complex mechanism of power and politics in sensemaking and sensegiving. Design/methodology/approach: Using 15 months of participant observation as a salesperson, this paper discusses how the Japan-centric customer service philosophy (dominant discourse), customer service policies and practices (organizational rules) and asymmetric power structure between the Japanese global headquarters and Hong Kong subsidiaries (formative contexts) are presented and perpetuated through the sensegiving–sensemaking process. Findings: Dominant discourse was observed in the management's sensegiving, which placed the Japanese style of customer service over others. This ethnocentric dominant discourse informed the creation of customer service policies, although the realization of the discourse was determined by the employees' conflicting interpretations of the organizational rules. As a formative context, an asymmetric power structure was present that positioned the Hong Kong subsidiary as subservient to the global headquarters in Japan. This shows that the political process of sensegiving and sensemaking deeply implicates the dominant discourse, organizational rules and power structure as central forces that determine the level of perpetuating ideology. Originality/value: This research illustrates the wider implications of power and politics in sensegiving–sensemaking studies and provides a complex picture of ethnocentric management.

KW - Sensegiving

KW - Sensemaking

KW - Politics

KW - Ideology

KW - Discourse

KW - Power

U2 - 10.1108/QROM-09-2022-2393

DO - 10.1108/QROM-09-2022-2393

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

SP - 291

EP - 309

JO - Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management

JF - Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management

SN - 1746-5648

IS - 4

ER -