Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Organizational Images and Member Identification

4.8K

Citations

41

References

1994

Year

TLDR

The study develops a model explaining how organizational images influence members’ identification with their organization. The model posits two organizational images—an internal distinctive core and an external perception—whose attractiveness is judged by continuity of self‑concept, distinctiveness, and self‑esteem enhancement. The model yields propositions linking organizational identification to members’ social interaction patterns. Thanks to numerous colleagues and reviewers for comments on earlier drafts.

Abstract

We thank Massimo Bergami, Arthur Brief, Mason Carpenter, Brian Golden, Frances Hauge, Rod Kramer, Sharon Lobel, Reuben McDaniel, Debra Meyerson, Wendy Penner, Sandy Piderit, Linda Pike, Mlchael Pratt, Robert Quinn, Anat Rafaeli, Lance Sandelands, Bob Sutton, David Whetten, Batia Wiesenfeld, and three anonymous reviewers for comments on earlier drafts of this paper. We develop a model to explain how images of one's work organization shape the strength of his or her identification with the organization. We focus on two key organizational images: one based on what a member believes is distinctive, central, and enduring about his or her organization and one based on a member's beliefs about what outsiders think about the organization. According to the model, members assess the attractiveness of these images by how well the image preserves the continuity of their self-concept, provides distinctiveness, and enhances self-esteem. The model leads to a number of propositions about how organizational identification affects members' patterns of social interaction.'

References

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