Publication | Closed Access
The Social Processes of Organizational Sensemaking
1.4K
Citations
47
References
2005
Year
Social InfluenceCommunicationSensemakingOrganizational BehaviorOrganizational SocializationOrganizing (Management)ManagementOrganizational SensemakingOrganizational PsychologyOrganizational SystemsStrategic CommunicationSocial OrganizationTrustOrganizational ResearchSocial ProcessesOrganizational CommunicationBusinessRelational CommunicationArts
A longitudinal study of the social processes of organizational sensemaking suggests that they unfold in four distinct forms: guided, fragmented, restricted, and minimal. These forms result from the degree to which leaders and stakeholders engage in “sensegiving”—attempts to influence others' understandings of an issue. Each of the four forms of organizational sensemaking is associated with a distinct set of process characteristics that capture the dominant pattern of interaction. They also each result in particular outcomes, specifically, the nature of the accounts and actions generated.
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