2020
DOI: 10.1177/0170840620926825
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Resourcing Under Tensions: How frontline employees create resources to balance paradoxical tensions

Abstract: Managing resources and tensions at the front line is crucial for organizational success. To advance our understanding of how frontline employees turn assets into useful resources under tensions, we draw on research on resourcing and practices of responding to paradoxical tensions. Our ethnographic study of employees in a multinational retail fashion company finds three resourcing practices – situational reframing, organizational preframing and institutional deframing – that enable frontline employees to balanc… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
23
0

Year Published

2020
2020
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
8

Relationship

2
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 22 publications
(23 citation statements)
references
References 53 publications
0
23
0
Order By: Relevance
“…During this pandemic, employees are asked to simultaneously strive to meet performance targets (e.g., sales targets, time-keeping) whilst applying novel hygiene directives (e.g., issued by health agencies or based on corporate rules) such as wearing masks, hand-sanitizing and maintaining as well as enforcing physical distance from coworkers and clients. In interactive service work (e.g., waiters, care workers, retail workers, actors), workers struggle to integrate competing requirements on a day-to-day base (Francis & Keegan, 2020; Schneider et al, 2020). They must be creative and learn from varied and often ambivalent customer views and feedback on their efforts.…”
Section: Human Resource Management and Paradox: Lessons From The Pandmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…During this pandemic, employees are asked to simultaneously strive to meet performance targets (e.g., sales targets, time-keeping) whilst applying novel hygiene directives (e.g., issued by health agencies or based on corporate rules) such as wearing masks, hand-sanitizing and maintaining as well as enforcing physical distance from coworkers and clients. In interactive service work (e.g., waiters, care workers, retail workers, actors), workers struggle to integrate competing requirements on a day-to-day base (Francis & Keegan, 2020; Schneider et al, 2020). They must be creative and learn from varied and often ambivalent customer views and feedback on their efforts.…”
Section: Human Resource Management and Paradox: Lessons From The Pandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, in the COVID-19 era, it has become critical for leaders to consider whether their messages resonate with relevant audience (e.g., followers, general public, etc.). Resonance, or an "audience's experienced personal connection with a frame" (Giorgi, 2017) may be especially important in 'unlocking' the capabilities and resources of followers and in bolstering their commitment to work through paradoxical tensions alongside their leaders (Nielsen & Hansen, 2020;Schneider, Bullinger & Brandl, 2020). Resonant messages may reduce employees' anxiety, disengagement or avoidance (Nielsen & Hansen, 2020;Argyris, 1990;Lüscher & Lewis, 2008;Cheal, 2020, p. 52), and minimize the perception of leaders' efforts as manipulative (Grant & Wolfram Cox, 2017) or as superficial impression management (Gaim, Clegg, Cunha, 2019).…”
Section: Rikke Kristine Nielsen and Joe Chealmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In contrast, by scrutinizing daily interactions closely, pragmatist scholarship highlights the complexity of service interaction and is more attentive to the embeddedness and materiality of frontline workers' situated actions. We therefore offer a conceptual framework that foregrounds the pragmatist approach to interactive service work and emphasizes the key foundational concepts of sensemaking (Llewellyn & Hindmarsh, 2013;Weick, 1995) and resourcing (Feldman & Worline, 2012;Schneider et al, 2020) underpinning this approach. This enables us to account for contact employee agency in situated action in service organizations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The paradox lens is gaining momentum and it is increasingly applied across organization and management research on, for example, artificial intelligence in organizations (Raisch and Krakowski, 2021), change management (Luger et al, 2018), identity construction (Dameron and Torset, 2014), flexible work (Putnam et al, 2014), innovation (Sheep et al, 2016) and corporate social responsibility (Hahn et al, 2018). Recently, research applying the paradox perspective has increased, deepened and shown results for taking the analysis of tensions further in HRM studies in different contexts (Aust et al, 2017;Keegan et al, 2018bCañibano, 2019Schneider et al, 2020). However, to our knowledge, there are no prior studies of paradox and HRM practices conducted in a growth SME context.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%