We apply an affordance lens on qualitative data from three case organisations using a digital voice channel providing employees with the opportunity to speak up via answering periodic mini‐surveys and making comments in an anonymous mini‐forum. We find that imbrications of material and social agencies (i.e., the voice channel's features and managerial reactions to voice) in the respective organisational contexts culminate in employees perceiving the channel as either affording or constraining voice, leading to perceived voice outcomes that eventually encourage or discourage them to speak up. Whether voice is encouraged or discouraged partly results from the mere interaction between employees and the digital voice channel independent of managerial reactions. Our findings thus challenge the emphasis on managerial behaviour and reactions to voice in explaining voice behaviour and outcomes in extant literature.
%0 Journal Article
%1 ellmer2020channel
%A Ellmer, Markus
%A Reichel, Astrid
%D 2020
%I Wiley
%J Human Resource Management Journal
%K affordances employee_involvement employee_voice participation
%N 1
%P 259--276
%R 10.1111/1748-8583.12297
%T Mind the channel! An affordance perspective on how digital voice channels encourage or discourage employee voice
%U https://doi.org/10.1111%2F1748-8583.12297
%V 31
%X We apply an affordance lens on qualitative data from three case organisations using a digital voice channel providing employees with the opportunity to speak up via answering periodic mini‐surveys and making comments in an anonymous mini‐forum. We find that imbrications of material and social agencies (i.e., the voice channel's features and managerial reactions to voice) in the respective organisational contexts culminate in employees perceiving the channel as either affording or constraining voice, leading to perceived voice outcomes that eventually encourage or discourage them to speak up. Whether voice is encouraged or discouraged partly results from the mere interaction between employees and the digital voice channel independent of managerial reactions. Our findings thus challenge the emphasis on managerial behaviour and reactions to voice in explaining voice behaviour and outcomes in extant literature.
@article{ellmer2020channel,
abstract = {We apply an affordance lens on qualitative data from three case organisations using a digital voice channel providing employees with the opportunity to speak up via answering periodic mini‐surveys and making comments in an anonymous mini‐forum. We find that imbrications of material and social agencies (i.e., the voice channel's features and managerial reactions to voice) in the respective organisational contexts culminate in employees perceiving the channel as either affording or constraining voice, leading to perceived voice outcomes that eventually encourage or discourage them to speak up. Whether voice is encouraged or discouraged partly results from the mere interaction between employees and the digital voice channel independent of managerial reactions. Our findings thus challenge the emphasis on managerial behaviour and reactions to voice in explaining voice behaviour and outcomes in extant literature.},
added-at = {2021-01-26T19:58:24.000+0100},
author = {Ellmer, Markus and Reichel, Astrid},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2356de0e73afd2fbe5f0aff1731a0aeb7/meneteqel},
doi = {10.1111/1748-8583.12297},
interhash = {986102b33be902daabf631c1ca92c756},
intrahash = {356de0e73afd2fbe5f0aff1731a0aeb7},
issn = {1748-8583},
journal = {Human Resource Management Journal},
keywords = {affordances employee_involvement employee_voice participation},
language = {en-UK},
month = may,
number = 1,
pages = {259--276},
publisher = {Wiley},
timestamp = {2021-01-26T19:58:24.000+0100},
title = {Mind the channel! An affordance perspective on how digital voice channels encourage or discourage employee voice},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1111%2F1748-8583.12297},
volume = 31,
year = 2020
}