I use rhetorical theory to reconceptualize the diffusion of managerial practices. Spe-cifically, I argue that the diffusion of a practice depends on the discursive justifica-tions used to rationalize it. When such justifications are accepted and taken for granted, a practice reaches a state of institutionalization. Furthermore, I propose that changes in justifications and diffusion provide a basis for explaining institutional-ization as both a process and a state. I then develop several propositions from this model. The management field has witnessed the rise and fall of many managerial practices, includ-ing sensitivity training, quality circles, and re
We contribute to a growing focus on variation in diffusion processes by examining the ways in which ...
In management theory scholars emphasize that what actors do is often not what they say, but they ten...
Despite theoretical and methodological progress in what is now coined as the third generation of dif...
In the current research of managerial practice diffusion, discussions on how to understand and manag...
Diffusion and institutionalization are of prime sociological importance, as both pro-cesses unfold a...
Some managerial innovations (MIs) spread widely, and others do not. To gain a better understanding o...
We extend institutional theory’s account of diffusion by examining the interplay between economic an...
We examine the evolution of a new population of organizations (state offices of dispute resolution) ...
Forces that influence managerial innovation (MI) diffusion are still unclear. This paper aims to she...
IT-enabled administrative innovation has been increasingly important to managers, both in the privat...
Purpose Although drawing from neoinstitutional theoretical apparatus and ontology, management fashi...
In this paper we propose rhetoric as a valuable yet underdeveloped alternative paradigm for examinin...
In this paper we propose rhetoric as a valuable yet underdeveloped alternative paradigm for examinin...
International audienceThe purpose of this paper is to explain how a rhetoric approach with several d...
In this paper we propose rhetoric as a valuable yet underdeveloped alternative paradigm for examinin...
We contribute to a growing focus on variation in diffusion processes by examining the ways in which ...
In management theory scholars emphasize that what actors do is often not what they say, but they ten...
Despite theoretical and methodological progress in what is now coined as the third generation of dif...
In the current research of managerial practice diffusion, discussions on how to understand and manag...
Diffusion and institutionalization are of prime sociological importance, as both pro-cesses unfold a...
Some managerial innovations (MIs) spread widely, and others do not. To gain a better understanding o...
We extend institutional theory’s account of diffusion by examining the interplay between economic an...
We examine the evolution of a new population of organizations (state offices of dispute resolution) ...
Forces that influence managerial innovation (MI) diffusion are still unclear. This paper aims to she...
IT-enabled administrative innovation has been increasingly important to managers, both in the privat...
Purpose Although drawing from neoinstitutional theoretical apparatus and ontology, management fashi...
In this paper we propose rhetoric as a valuable yet underdeveloped alternative paradigm for examinin...
In this paper we propose rhetoric as a valuable yet underdeveloped alternative paradigm for examinin...
International audienceThe purpose of this paper is to explain how a rhetoric approach with several d...
In this paper we propose rhetoric as a valuable yet underdeveloped alternative paradigm for examinin...
We contribute to a growing focus on variation in diffusion processes by examining the ways in which ...
In management theory scholars emphasize that what actors do is often not what they say, but they ten...
Despite theoretical and methodological progress in what is now coined as the third generation of dif...