Crafting Attention Flows in Organizations: How employees can shape communication structures

Mid-Level Employees Hold Power in Shaping Strategy and Communication. Unlike the old belief of top managers as sole decision-makers, our study shows mid-level employees wield substantial influence over how strategic issues get attention and which communication channels are used for it.

Authors

Anna Plotnikova
Vrije Universiteit (VU) Amsterdam
Krsto Pandza
Leeds University Business School
Richard Whittington
Saïd Business School and New College, University of Oxford

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Plotnikova, A., Pandza, K., & Whittington, R. (2023). EXPRESS: Bending the Pipes: Regaining Attention through Reinvention and Renewal. Strategic Organization, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/14761270231184616

25 September 2023

Think of organizations as intricate networks of communication channels—meetings, reports, calls, workshops, and other interactions. Communication channels are especially important in organizations that are organized into specialized units or departments. They help to align with strategic objectives, ensuring that each unit’s efforts contribute to the organization’s overarching goals. How this network is structured significantly shapes what leaders and other members find crucial, how they direct their day-to-day efforts, and where they focus their attention. The “pipes and prisms” of this attention architecture determine when, where, and how decisions are discussed and made, involving specific individuals and adhering to certain protocols.

While this organizational architecture might seem unchanging and dictated by upper management based on their vision and preferences, our study published in the journal Strategic Organization reveals that these ‘pipes’ aren’t rigid. They respond not only to top management teams but also to other organizational actors, adding dynamism to our understanding of attention architecture and the agency of mid-level actors.

Strategic shifts within an organization lead to changes in attention architecture

When an organization alters its strategy as a consequence of new technologies, emerging players, or shifts in the external environment, the attention of leaders naturally shifts too, resulting in changes to attention structures. However, such changes can bring both positive and negative outcomes for those who work with communication channels – mid-level employees. The communication channels they contribute to can gain or lose its importance. This was evident in our study of professional strategists at Ericsson (large telecommunication firm) who, despite losing their central role initially due to strategic transformation, managed to regain their position. Two strategies aided their resurgence.

Expanding and Connecting ‘Pipes’

First, the group we studied reinvented some of the communication channels. They explored digital tools, recognizing the potential of involving new actors in established practices, such as understanding industry trends. Traditionally, this task was performed by experts. Mid-level employees also harnessed existing connections with core customers, proposing a Customer Engagement Group to align with top management’s focus on customer satisfaction. This experimental approach aims to add novel elements to existing channels, often by broadening participation through digital tools like crowdsourcing or online communities. Such experimental thinking is the underlying logic of reinvention – what is the novel aspect we can add to the existing channel? Extending the number of participants involved in a communication channel could be one of the promising ways to reinvent or expand the existing ‘pipe’. The availability of digital  tools like crowdsourcing or online communities and chats are useful in it.

This experimental approach aims to add novel elements to existing channels, often achieved by broadening participation through digital tools like crowdsourcing or online communities.

Reviving and Repurposing ‘Pipes’

Another way to align communication channels with the evolving architecture is by revitalizing outdated channels. We called this renewal. To reintegrate old practices, it’s essential to identify gaps or areas where communication channels can bring value. Networking skills are crucial here. We observed how forming alliances with groups entrenched in the new attention architecture is the key. The group of professional strategists partnered with the technologists, who managed essential communication channels for top management decisions. The professional strategists’ strategic knowledge and industry expertise complemented the technological prowess of the technologists, successfully reintroducing joint strategy meetings into the new communication architecture. This approach of repurposing channels involves identifying how and when channels can be useful in addressing new strategic challenges. The selective reuse of familiar practices is the underlying logic of renewal. It is important to consider: what are the core communication channels for Top Management Team? Who is the core player in them? And what value can we add by partnering with those players? The ability to evaluate the new communication structure and clear value proposition for potential partners plays a pivotal role in reviving old ‘pipes.

This approach of repurposing channels involves identifying how and when channels can be useful in addressing new strategic challenges.

Organizational shifts might be an opportunity for different professional groups to regain their importance

Any transformation that an organization undergoes in its structure, culture, processes, strategies, or other fundamental aspects present opportunities for diverse professional groups to reclaim significance. The story of Ericsson’s strategists exemplifies how organizations can adapt to significant changes through flexibility and innovation. When traditional structures are disrupted, various employee groups, from strategy professionals to HR, Finance, and Marketing, can maintain their importance by creatively redesigning communication channels. As technologies like AI increasingly challenge professional roles, the ability to reinvent and renew communication channels empowers employees to strengthen their position, amidst major organizational changes.

Authors

Anna Plotnikova
Vrije Universiteit (VU) Amsterdam

Dr. Anna Plotnikova is Assistant Professor of Strategic Change at Vrije Universiteit (VU) Amsterdam, School of Business and Economics. Her research interests lie at the intersection of strategy practice and process research, focusing on topics such as open strategy and strategy participation.

Krsto Pandza
Leeds University Business School

Krsto Pandza is Professor of Strategy and Innovation at the Leeds University Business School. His research interests lie at the intersection of strategy, technology innovation and organizational theory.

Richard Whittington
Saïd Business School and New College, University of Oxford

Richard Whittington is Professor of Strategic Management at the Saïd Business School and New College, University of Oxford. His main current research interests are Strategy as Practice and Open Strategy.

Crisis or opportunity? Entrepreneurship and Covid-19 in Africa

The Covid-19 pandemic decreased entrepreneurial intentions in Africa, but at the same time entrepreneurs illustrated entrepreneurial resilience and innovativeness. Considering these contrasting effects, we urge practitioners to take local contextual dimensions into account and foster entrepreneurial resilience whilst designing entrepreneurial education and entrepreneurial support programmes in the aftermath of the pandemic.

Authors

Maud van Merriënboer (editor)
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Hanâa Benchrifa
Université Hassan II de Casablanca
Steven Kator Iorfa
University of Portsmouth
Magnus Godvik Ekeland
Radboud University Nijmegen
Lotte-Marie Brouwer
Utrecht University
Neema Komba
Hanken School of Economics
Chanyoung Park
Hanken School of Economics

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van Merriënboer, M. (ed). (2022). Entrepreneurial Responses to Covid-19 in Africa. Utrecht: Eburon Academic Publishers.

11 September 2023

The Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent government measures decreased the number of people who wanted to or could become entrepreneurs in Africa. At the same time, the crisis yielded innovativeness and resilience among new and existing business owners. How can entrepreneurs and policy makers turn crisis into opportunity, and build back better through entrepreneurship?

The global crisis affected entrepreneurs all around the world, and Africa was no exception. Much focus was on the negative impact of the crisis: several relief funds were released by the donor community in the global North to support African entrepreneurs in these difficult times, and the pandemic was dubbed a “gendered” crisis as women entrepreneurs were said to be disproportionately affected through the increased time spent on childcare and other unpaid care tasks. There was little space for discussing the resilience demonstrated by African entrepreneurs, and the opportunities Covid-19 unlocked. The four studies in the edited volume ‘Entrepreneurial Responses to Covid-19 in Africa’ take a closer look at these two contrasting effects on entrepreneurship and Covid-19 in Africa: crisis on the one hand, and opportunity and resilience on the other.

Entrepreneurial intentions go down

Although the impact of the pandemic varied greatly across the continent, African economies generally were hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent measures, such as lockdowns and market closures. Entrepreneurial intentions and activities had a broad downturn due to substantial risks on both demand and supply side. Entrepreneurs were forced to downsize or (temporarily) quit their businesses, while fewer novel entrepreneurs started their own companies. Those that did engage with entrepreneurship seemingly did so out of necessity. A survey conducted by Hanâa Benchrifa and Steven Kator Iorfa amongst Moroccan university students (chapter 1), for example, found that students who felt threatened about their future due to the lockdown and subsequent scarcity of resources developed more positive attitudes towards entrepreneurial activities – considering it as the only viable option in a depleting job market.

Students who felt threatened about their future due to the lockdown and subsequent scarcity of resources developed more positive attitudes towards entrepreneurial activities – considering it as the only viable option in a depleting job market.

On the other side of the continent, Magnus Godvik Ekeland (chapter 2) spent one year in a South African township during Covid-19 times to better understand how the Covid-19 pandemic impacted the lives and livelihoods of young township residents. Specifically, his research aimed to uncover whether a government-dispensed Basic Income Grant would increase entrepreneurial intentions. Based on conversations with unemployed young men and observations on how they spent a temporary Covid-19 grant, Ekeland explains that entrepreneurial intentions are not likely to increase because of specific contextual dimensions. For these men, it was for instance less than desirable to become dependent on a (female) relative. This fear kept them from viewing entrepreneurship as a short-term solution to unemployment.

Entrepreneurial resilience and innovation go up

In both studies described above, entrepreneurship is considered second best to salaried employment in times of crisis. The final two chapters, however, shed light on a different outcome of the pandemic. These studies showcase entrepreneurs’ resilience in crisis, and the ability to come up with innovative solutions. When export numbers declined, Mercy Mwende, a Kenyan agri-business woman, developed a new product (affordable porridge) to appeal to the local community and diminish dependence on external markets. Mercy was part of a larger interview study conducted by Lotte-Marie Brouwer comprising twenty Kenyan female agri-entrepreneurs (chapter 3). Her chapter explores how these entrepreneurs demonstrated entrepreneurial resilience: “the ability of an entrepreneur to manage difficult personal and market conditions as well as destabilising events, and be future-oriented”[1]. Short-term strategies included reducing costs and working side jobs, and long-term adaptation strategies were changing target markets and implementing digital solutions. For this specific group of entrepreneurs, the Covid-19 pandemic even provided new markets that otherwise would have been more difficult to enter as they would have had to compete with (Northern) imported products.

When export numbers declined, Mercy Mwende, a Kenyan agri-business woman, developed a new product (affordable porridge) to appeal to the local community and diminish dependence on external markets.

Similarly, two medical innovations from Tanzania and Kenya were exemplary of how innovative responses can offer coping mechanisms in times of crisis. Neema Komba and Chanyoung Park (chapter 4) show us that, rather than becoming paralyzed by the fear that was instigated by the pandemic, the entrepreneurs in these cases were able to ‘fight’ instead of ‘flight’, provided they receive proper support. This resulted in the founding of Tiba-Vent, a low-mechanical ventilator built by fifteen students of Kenyatta University in Nairobi, and the Cubic Bupiji Sauna – a steam inhalation treatment invented by George Buchafwe of Star Natural Products from Tanzania. The development cycles of these inventions were quite different due to differences in institutional or policy support. Whereas Tiba-Vent had to wait a long time to receive the proper certification, the Bipiji Sauna was endorsed by local politicians and public media instantly, and as a result the invention was adopted by hospitals a lot sooner.

From crisis to opportunity – three tips for practitioners

On the one hand, the Covid-19 pandemic decreased entrepreneurial intentions in Africa. On the other hand, entrepreneurs illustrated entrepreneurial resilience and innovativeness in responses to the crisis. Based on our findings, we end with three tips for practitioners who want to build back better through entrepreneurship.

  1. Design proper entrepreneurial education.

In entrepreneurship education, it is important to consider the different motivations students have to engage in entrepreneurship. Students who consider entrepreneurship as the only viable option because there are no jobs, are inherently different from students who are opportunity-driven. Benchrifa and Iorfa encourage entrepreneurship educators to design educational programs such that both groups of students are activated to effectively increase entrepreneurial behaviour.

  1. Take contextual dimensions into consideration.

Entrepreneurs come in all shapes and sizes. On a continent with more than 50 unique countries, there are many factors such as gender, class, sector, and national context that play a role in how well entrepreneurs respond to crises. Whereas schemes such as Basic Income Grants might have been proven successful in other regions to promote entrepreneurial behaviour, Ekeland’s research shows that it is important to also consider local notions of personhood whilst designing these policies. Depending on contextual perspectives of for example masculinity and dependency, programs that are supposed to increase entrepreneurial behaviour might not prove effective.

  1. Foster entrepreneurial resilience and innovation.

Policy makers and ecosystem stakeholders have the potential to create positive framework conditions to foster entrepreneurial resilience. Brouwer, for example, demonstrates how the Northern donor community should be careful in approaching “African women entrepreneurs” as a homogenous group portraying them as “victims” during crises. Instead, they should analyse them in their specific context to uncover their particular needs while acknowledging their adaptive resilience. Komba and Park also show the importance of peer- and institutional support in fostering resilient entrepreneurial communities.


[1] Fatoki, O. (2018). “The Impact of Entrepreneurial Resilience on the Success of Small and Medium Enterprises in South Africa,” Sustainability 10-7: 2527.

Authors

Maud van Merriënboer (editor)
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Maud van Merrienboer is a PhD student at the department of Management and Organisation of the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Her research focuses on the experiences of visible minority entrepreneurs in the Dutch tech start-up scene. Learn more about Maud’s research here.

Hanâa Benchrifa
Université Hassan II de Casablanca

Hanâa Benchrifa is an Assistant professor at Université Hassan II de Casablanca. Hanâa does research on entrepreneurship and corporate entrepreneurship inside SMEs.

Steven Kator Iorfa
University of Portsmouth

Steven Kator is a PhD student at the University of Portsmouth. He is a positive psychologist and researcher pioneering research in the field of value for life. His other research interests are human well-being/thriving, grief, trauma, substance abuse, environmental sustainability and climate change.

Magnus Godvik Ekeland
Radboud University Nijmegen

Magnus Godvik Ekeland is a PhD student at Radboud University Nijmegen. His research focuses on survival strategies, distribution and aspirations towards the good life in rural South Africa. The data is collected from ethnographic fieldwork conducted in several townships, before and during South Africa’s lockdown. How residents lives were impacted by pandemic and the subsequent lockdown will be given due attention.

Lotte-Marie Brouwer
Utrecht University

Lotte-Marie Brouwer is a PhD student at Utrecht University conducting research in gender and entrepreneurship among agri-businesswomen in Kenya. She is also the Women’s Entrepreneurship Lead of Bopinc. As such she helps to ensure that Bopinc’s entrepreneurship programs, innovative products and services and related business models are beneficial to everyone.

Neema Komba
Hanken School of Economics

Neema Komba is a poet, writer, and PhD student at Hanken School of Economics interested in entrepreneurship, corruption, gender and Tanzania. She is the founder of Amimeita Ventures Limited (irashoptz) making natural mosquito repellents, soaps, lotions, oils and co-founder of Lapoetista Arts Initiative.

Chanyoung Park
Hanken School of Economics

Chanyoung Park works at Hanken School of Economics and is interested in Health Psychology, Positive Psychology, Clinical Psychology, Entrepreneurial Economics, Business Economics and Business Administration.