Memory-based change management: Using the past to guide the future

IF 3.9 1区 心理学 Q2 MANAGEMENT
Boram Do, Matthew C. B. Lyle
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Scholars have suggested that individual change recipients affectively respond to change events but have yet to examine how change recipients’ memories influence those affective responses. Drawing from prior scholarship on memory, we propose that two theoretically distinct forms of memory – explicit and schematic – produce different forms of affective and behavioral responses when recipients process change events consciously or non-consciously. Given this proposed importance of memory to affective and behavioral responses, we then develop a stage model of memory-based change management, which we define as the managing of change recipients’ responses to change events through memory work. We theorize four discrete strategies – guided consolidating, schematic re-framing, contextual delimiting, and selective re-instating – that, based on recipients’ memory-based actions during particular stages of a change, would be likely to enhance positive affective responses and support for change. Plain Language Summary This paper explains how memories of organizational change influence affective and behavioral responses to ongoing change initiatives. We identify two types of memories related to change contexts: 1) abstracted, comprehensive schematic memory (i.e., “change is chaotic”) and 2) anecdotal, specific explicit memory (i.e., “I was demoted in a restructuring process last year”). We suggest that, when change events are highly ambiguous, schematic memories non-consciously influence employees’ general moods and a broad range of work behaviors which may or may not relate to the change (i.e., feeling unpleasant for an unknown reason and becoming less cooperative with coworkers than usual). When change events are less ambiguous, explicit memories play a larger role by eliciting discrete emotions triggering change-targeted behaviors (i.e., feeling angry at a change agent and confronting them about it). Since these responses are rooted in memory, we further suggest how change agents can manage affective and behavioral responses through four types of memory-based change management. We explain how during four stages of change – gestation, preparation, implementation, and aftermath – change agents can engage in guided consolidating (i.e., having recipients behaviorally engage in sharing positive experiences of change), schematic re-framing (i.e., framing a change as a continuation of past precedent), contextual delimiting (i.e., generalizing positive memories of change while isolating negative ones) and selective reinstating (i.e., having recipients selectively recall positive experiences in the recent change initiative), respectively. Our model complements existing studies focusing on the conscious, future-oriented processing of change events to provide an alternative view of change management.
基于记忆的变更管理:用过去指导未来
学者们认为,个体变化接受者对变化事件有情感反应,但尚未研究变化接受者的记忆如何影响这些情感反应。根据先前关于记忆的研究,我们提出,当接受者有意识或无意识地处理变化事件时,两种理论上不同的记忆形式——外显记忆和示意记忆——会产生不同形式的情感和行为反应。鉴于记忆对情感和行为反应的重要性,我们开发了一个基于记忆的变化管理的阶段模型,我们将其定义为通过记忆工作来管理变化接受者对变化事件的反应。我们提出了四种离散的策略——指导性巩固、示意性重建、上下文界定和选择性重建——基于接受者在变革特定阶段基于记忆的行动,这些策略可能会增强积极的情感反应和对变革的支持。简明语言摘要本文解释了组织变革的记忆如何影响对正在进行的变革举措的情感和行为反应。我们确定了两种与变化背景相关的记忆:1)抽象的、全面的示意性记忆(即“变化是混乱的”)和2)轶事的、特定的外显性记忆(例如“我去年在重组过程中被降级了”)。我们认为,当变化事件高度模糊时,图式记忆会无意识地影响员工的总体情绪和广泛的工作行为,这些行为可能与变化有关,也可能与变化无关(即,由于未知原因感到不愉快,与同事的合作比平时少)。当变化事件不那么模糊时,外显记忆会通过引发离散情绪来触发针对变化的行为(即对变化因素感到愤怒并就此与他们对峙),从而发挥更大的作用。由于这些反应植根于记忆,我们进一步提出了改变主体如何通过四种基于记忆的改变管理来管理情感和行为反应。我们解释了在变革的四个阶段——酝酿、准备、实施和后果——变革推动者如何参与指导性整合(即让接受者以行为方式参与分享变革的积极经验)、示意性重新构建(即将变革视为过去先例的延续)、,上下文界定(即,概括对变化的积极记忆,同时隔离消极记忆)和选择性恢复(即,让接受者选择性地回忆最近变化倡议中的积极经历)。我们的模型补充了现有的研究,重点是有意识地、面向未来地处理变化事件,以提供一种关于变化管理的替代观点。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
1.60%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Organizational Psychology Review is a quarterly, peer-reviewed scholarly journal published by SAGE in partnership with the European Association of Work and Organizational Psychology. Organizational Psychology Review’s unique aim is to publish original conceptual work and meta-analyses in the field of organizational psychology (broadly defined to include applied psychology, industrial psychology, occupational psychology, organizational behavior, personnel psychology, and work psychology).Articles accepted for publication in Organizational Psychology Review will have the potential to have a major impact on research and practice in organizational psychology. They will offer analyses worth citing, worth following up on in primary research, and worth considering as a basis for applied managerial practice. As such, these should be contributions that move beyond straight forward reviews of the existing literature by developing new theory and insights. At the same time, however, they should be well-grounded in the state of the art and the empirical knowledge base, providing a good mix of a firm empirical and theoretical basis and exciting new ideas.
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