Carillion的战略选择和董事会的说服力策略:精神气质、理性和悲情

IF 3.9 Q1 BUSINESS, FINANCE
Fadi Alkaraan, Mohamamd Albahloul, K. Hussainey
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引用次数: 5

摘要

目的公司的年度报告等文件将重复的修辞策略作为公司董事会促进战略变革和战略选择的有效机制。这些机制可以被视为有说服力的呼吁,以促进董事会的讨论。尽管先前的研究通过叙事分析领域做出了贡献,但叙事实践的概念化在现存的会计文献中仍然是一个相对被忽视的领域。设计/方法论/方法分析框架植根于亚里士多德的修辞证明的三大支柱:精神气质(可信度/可信度),悲情(通过文化领域的情感/认同)和理性(理由/理由),通过年度报告调查Carillion董事会通过的关于说服力诉求的叙事摘录,以促进关于Carillion战略选择的讨论。此外,作者强调了年度报告中关于Carillion收购战略的重复修辞口号策略。我们将收购叙事视为修辞交流的产物,并分析了这些公司文件中重复的修辞口号。研究结果本研究从上层理论、印象管理和沟通模式等方面揭示了说服策略和重复口号是如何引发Carillion年度报告话语的。研究结果表明,Carillion董事会战略性地使用重复的修辞口号来塑造乐观的企业未来业绩,这可能与可行的现实不同。最后,作者认为,企业高管们正在努力构建一个替代现实,这源于他们最初不切实际的愿望,即领导其市场份额控制较少的行业。这项研究的结果具有理论和管理意义。研究局限性/含义本研究的主要局限性在于作为研究方法的案例研究。主体性在解释这项研究的发现时仍然是固有的。未来的研究可能会采用或调整作者的分析框架,以研究支撑公司报告实践的其他领域。实际意义这项研究的结果对董事会和决策者具有实际意义。这项研究的结果具有理论和管理意义。乐观程度会影响财务决策者的情绪,当乐观程度高时,管理者可能会考虑做出更多的投资决策,从而进行许多收购。管理者的过度自信已经在文献中得到了广泛的记录。过度自信的管理者系统地高估了他们的行为产生好结果的概率(相应地低估了坏结果的概率)。社会含义管理者过度自信是指高估管理者自身的能力和与他们所控制的行动有关的结果。高管们认为他们对结果有最终的控制权,这导致他们普遍低估了失败的可能性。根据自我归因偏见,许多人倾向于过度相信自己的技能会带来好的结果,而过度相信外部因素会带来坏的结果。原创性/价值本研究探讨了Carillion收购战略年度报告中的重复修辞口号策略。此外,该研究揭示了Carillion董事会如何在早期报告中使用话语和重复口号来维持其合法性。调查结果显示,Carillion董事会战略性地使用重复的修辞口号来塑造乐观的企业未来业绩,这可能与可行的现实不同。最后,作者认为,企业高管们正在努力构建一个替代现实,这源于他们最初不切实际的愿望,即领导其市场份额控制较少的行业。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Carillion's strategic choices and the boardroom's strategies of persuasive appeals: ethos, logos and pathos
PurposeCompanies documents such as annual reports incorporate narratives of repetitive rhetorical strategies as effective mechanisms adopted by companies' boardrooms to promote strategic change and strategic choices. These mechanisms can be viewed as persuasive appeals to facilitate boardrooms’ discourses. Despite the contribution of previous research through narrative analysis domains, conceptualization of narrative practices remains a relatively neglected area in the extant accounting literature.Design/methodology/approachThe analytical framework is rooted in Aristotle's three pillars of rhetorical proofs: ethos (credibility/trustworthiness), pathos (emotion/identification through cultural domains) and logos (reason/rationale) in investigating narrative extracts regarding persuasive appeals adopted by Carillion's board through annual reports that facilitate discourse regarding Carillion’s strategic choices. Further, the authors emphasis on repetitive rhetorical slogan strategies embedded in the annual reports regarding Carillion's acquisitions strategy. We viewed acquisitions narratives as rhetorical communication artefacts and analyzed the repetitive rhetoric slogans in these corporate documents.FindingsFindings of this study show how persuasive strategies and repetitive slogans trigger the discourses of Carillion's annual reports by drawing on perspectives from upper echelon theory, impression management and communication patterns. Findings reveal that Carillion’ board strategically use repetitive rhetoric slogans to shape optimistic corporate future performance which might be different from the feasible reality. Finally, the authors argue that corporate executives are striving to construct an alternative reality stem from their initial unrealistic aspiration to lead their sector of less controlled market share. Findings of this study have theoretical and managerial implications.Research limitations/implicationsThe key limitation of this study lies with the case study as the research methodology. Subjectivity remains inherent in interpreting the findings of this study. Future studies may adopt or adapt the authors’ analytical framework to examine other domains underpinning corporate reporting practices.Practical implicationsThe findings of this study have practical implications for boardrooms and policymakers. Findings of this study have theoretical and managerial implications. The level of optimism has its impact on the mood of financial decision-makers, and when there is a high level of optimism, managers may consider making more investment decisions and therefore making many acquisitions. Managerial overconfidence has been widely documented in the literature. Overconfident managers systematically overestimate the probability of good outcomes (and correspondingly underestimate the probability of bad outcomes) resulting from their actions.Social implicationsManagerial overconfidence refers to overestimation of managers' own abilities and outcomes relating to actions which are under their control. Executives believed that they have ultimate control over outcomes, which leads them to underestimate the probability of failure generally. According to self-attribution bias, many people tend to excessively credit their own skills for good results and overly credit external factors for bad outcomes.Originality/valueThe study explores the repetitive rhetorical slogan strategies embedded in the annual reports regarding Carillion's acquisitions strategy. Further, the study reveals how Carillion's board engaged through the early report with discourse and repetitive slogans to maintain their legitimacy. Findings reveal that Carillion’s board strategically uses repetitive rhetoric slogans to shape optimistic corporate future performance, which might be different from the feasible reality. Finally, the authors argue that corporate executives are striving to construct an alternative reality stem from their initial unrealistic aspiration to lead their sector of less controlled market share.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
13.30%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: The Journal of Applied Accounting Research provides a forum for the publication of high quality manuscripts concerning issues relevant to the practice of accounting in a wide variety of contexts. The journal seeks to promote a research agenda that allows academics and practitioners to work together to provide sustainable outcomes in a practice setting. The journal is keen to encourage academic research articles which develop a forum for the discussion of real, practical problems and provide the expertise to allow solutions to these problems to be formed, while also contributing to our theoretical understanding of such issues.
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