Key determinants of organisational silence for non-standard workers


Autoria(s): Pirie-Sture, William Joseph
Contribuinte(s)

Abertay University. Dundee Business School

Data(s)

20/07/2016

20/07/2016

11/07/2016

20/05/2016

Resumo

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to identify the key determinants of organisational silence from the perspective of non-standard workers (NSWs). The study focuses on three research themes: first, analysing the experiences motivating NSWs to remain silent; second, analysing the role of the NSW life cycle in the motivation to remain silent, the final theme is evaluation of the impact on organisational voice of an organisation employing a workforce in which NSWs and standard workers (SWs) are blended. Design/methodology/approach – The study utilises a phenomenological approach, as defined by Van Manen (2007), to collect and analyse the phenomenon of organisational silence from the perspective of NSWs. The NSWs are defined as individuals operating via Limited Liability UK registered companies created for the purpose of delivering services to organisations via a contract of services. This study employed a combination of phenomenology and hermeneutics to collect and analyse the data collected from the NSWs using semi-structured interviews (Lindseth and Norberg, 2004). Findings – The study concludes with three core findings. NSWs experience similar motivational factors to silence as experienced by standard workers (SWs). The key differential between a SW and a NSW is the role of defensive silence as a dominant motivator for a start-up NSW. The study identified that the reasons for this is that new NSWs are defensive to protect their reputation for any future contract opportunities. In addition, organisations are utilising the low confidence of new start up NSWs to suppress the ability of NSWs to voice. The research indicates how experienced NSWs use the marketing stage of their life cycle to establish voice mechanisms. The study identified that NSWs, fulfiling management and supervisory roles for organisations, are supporting/creating climates of silence through their transfer of experiences as SWs prior to becoming NSWs. Research limitations/implications – This study is a pilot study, and the findings from this study will be carried forward into a larger scale study through engagement with further participants across a diverse range of sectors. This study has identified that there is a need for further studies on organisational silence and NSWs to analyse more fully the impact of silence on the individuals and the organisation itself. A qualitative phenomenological hermeneutical study is not intended to be extrapolated to provide broad trends. The focus of the phenomenological hermeneutic research methodology is on describing and analysing the richness and depth of the NSW’s experiences of silence in organisational settings. Originality/value – This paper draws together the studies of worker classification, motivators for organisational silence, and the impact of blending SWs and NSWs in an organisational setting. The study demonstrates that academic research to date has focused predominantly on SWs to the exclusion of the 1.5 million, and growing, NSWs in the UK. This study examines these under-represented workers to analyse the participants’ experiences of organisational silence, and its consequences in organisational settings, demonstrating a need for further studies.

Identificador

Pirie, W. J. 2016. Key determinants of organisational silence for non-standard workers. Management Decision. 54(6): pp.1522-1538. doi: 10.1108/MD-11-2015-0490

0025-1747

http://hdl.handle.net/10373/2396

https://dx.doi.org/10.1108/MD-11-2015-0490

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Emerald

Relação

Management Decision, 54(6)

Direitos

This is the author accepted manuscript © 2016 Emerald publishing group. It is embargoed until 11th July 2018. Publishing and permission has been granted for this version to appear at Abertay Research Collections (https://repository.abertay.ac.uk/jspui/). Emerald does not grant permission for this article to be further copied/distributed or hosted elsewhere without the express permission from Emerald Group Publishing Limited. Available from doi: 10.1108/MD-11-2015-0490

Palavras-Chave #Employee silence #Blending of workers #Non-standard workers (NSWs) #Organizational silence #Standard workers (SWs)
Tipo

Journal Article

published

peer-reviewed

accepted