This study examines how identities become constructed and regulated during a strategic organizational change process. Planning and implementing a strategy is a social process, which consists of constructing, delivering, compelling, receiving, resisting and multiple contradicting meanings. The process includes multiple social factors influencing the strategy. The visions, notions, images, conceptions, assumptions and appreciation of members of an organization make the process dynamic and flexible. Thus, the strategy process is also always a matter of organizational change. By participating in the strategy process, the members produce meanings for the process and receive meanings produced somewhere else that shape their conceptions of the org...
Organizational control theorists traditionally have conceptualized control as any process by which o...
Albert and Whetten defined organizational identity (OI) as the central, distinctive and enduring cha...
In the last decades, identity has become an increasing target and outcome of organizational control...
This article seeks to explore the construction of group and professional identities in situations of...
Our findings show that depending on the contextual setting and what sort of merger an organization g...
Existing research regarding organizational identity are dominated by comparative static, cross-secti...
This single case study examined the construct of organizational identity, defined as that which is c...
Purpose: The aim of this research is to investigate the relationship between (dual) organizational i...
During periods of strategic change, maintaining the congruence between new configurations of resourc...
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to explore organizational identity as a potential process. D...
The aim of this chapter is to better understand how identity regulation – a key mode of control – is...
The concept of organizational identity has its roots in the exploration of identity in an individua...
WOS: 000415645900011The new millennium started with evident hints that strategic management is one o...
This conceptual article draws on structuration theory and social identity theory to isolate firm-int...
many organizational researchers make reference to Mead’s theory of social identity, none have explor...
Organizational control theorists traditionally have conceptualized control as any process by which o...
Albert and Whetten defined organizational identity (OI) as the central, distinctive and enduring cha...
In the last decades, identity has become an increasing target and outcome of organizational control...
This article seeks to explore the construction of group and professional identities in situations of...
Our findings show that depending on the contextual setting and what sort of merger an organization g...
Existing research regarding organizational identity are dominated by comparative static, cross-secti...
This single case study examined the construct of organizational identity, defined as that which is c...
Purpose: The aim of this research is to investigate the relationship between (dual) organizational i...
During periods of strategic change, maintaining the congruence between new configurations of resourc...
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to explore organizational identity as a potential process. D...
The aim of this chapter is to better understand how identity regulation – a key mode of control – is...
The concept of organizational identity has its roots in the exploration of identity in an individua...
WOS: 000415645900011The new millennium started with evident hints that strategic management is one o...
This conceptual article draws on structuration theory and social identity theory to isolate firm-int...
many organizational researchers make reference to Mead’s theory of social identity, none have explor...
Organizational control theorists traditionally have conceptualized control as any process by which o...
Albert and Whetten defined organizational identity (OI) as the central, distinctive and enduring cha...
In the last decades, identity has become an increasing target and outcome of organizational control...