Prelims

Sivaram Vemuri (Charles Darwin University)

Managing Silence in Workplaces

ISBN: 978-1-78973-446-1, eISBN: 978-1-78973-445-4

Publication date: 15 August 2019

Citation

Vemuri, S. (2019), "Prelims", Managing Silence in Workplaces, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xii. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78973-445-420191001

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019 Emerald Publishing Limited


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Managing Silence in Workplaces

Title Page

Managing Silence in Workplaces

Sivaram Vemuri

Charles Darwin University

United Kingdom – North America – Japan India – Malaysia – China

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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First edition 2019

Copyright © 2019 Emerald Publishing Limited

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ISBN: 978-1-78973-446-1 (Print)

ISBN: 978-1-78973-445-4 (Online)

ISBN: 978-1-78973-447-8 (Epub)

Dedication

In memory of Dr Danny Kane Economist Extraordinaire 1949–2018

Contents

List of Figures and Tables ix
Preface xi
1. The Silent Killer 1
  The Need to Manage Silence 2
  Costs of Silence 4
  The Significance of Managing Silence in the Workplace 6
2. Paying Attention to Silence 13
  The Importance of Managers Paying Attention to Silence 14
  The Importance of a Transdisciplinary Framework 15
  Silence, Voice and Pluralism 17
  Ethics and Decision Making 20
3. Conceptualising Silence 23
  Silence as a Form of Workplace Communication 23
  In Search of a Conceptual Model 24
  Employee Participation 24
  Models of Employee Participation 28
4. Types of Silence in the Workplace 31
  Employee Participation: Movements in the Workplace 34
  The Management Implications of Silence in the Workplace 40
5. Measuring Silence in the Workplace 45
  Measures of Silence in Decision Making 47
  Possibility of Using Existing Body of Work on Silence 47
  Proposed Changes 53
  Impression Formation 53
  Coping Strategies 55
  Decisions Made 60
  Measurement Framework Based on Hope 64
  Management Implications Based on Framework Underpinning Existing Measures 65
  Suggested Framework for Measuring Silences 66
6. Application in Real-World Contexts 71
  Context of the Workplace and Internal Structure and Process 75
  Public Sector Agency A 75
  Public Sector Agency B 80
  Combined Public/Private Sector Agency Findings 84
  Combined Public Sector Agency Result 86
  Private Sector 88
  Private Sector Results 92
  The Role of Organisational Structure 93
  Commonalities Between Public and Private Sectors 93
  Differences Between Public and Private Sector 94
  Assessment of Management of Silence in Workplaces 95
7. Conclusions 97
References 103
Index 111

List of Figures and Tables

Figures

Figure 3.1 Curve Depicting Combinations of Voice and Silence 29
Figure 4.1 Underlying Dynamics Influencing Employee Participation 37
Figure 4.2 Stages of Employee Participation 38
Figure 4.3 Managerial Responses in Different Silence Zones 41
Figure 5.1 Changing Levels of Hope of Employees in Workplaces65
Figure 6.1 Proposition 1: Staff Expressed a Combination of Voice and Silence in Their Communication Behaviour 75
Figure 6.2 Silence Behaviour and Number of Working Years in Agency A 76
Figure 6.3 Willingness to Express Views and Opinions at the Time of Joining 78
Figure 6.4 Current Behaviour of Silence 79
Figure 6.5 Proposition 5: Staff Moved Through Zones of Silence 79
Figure 6.6 Proposition 1: Agency B Staff Expressed a Combination of Voice and Silence in Their Communication Behaviour 80
Figure 6.7 Willingness to Express Views and Opinions at Time of Joining the Organisation 81
Figure 6.8 Current Silence Behaviour Agency B 81
Figure 6.9 Proposition 5: Staff Movements through Zones of Silence 83
Figure 6.10 Stages of Employee Participation 84
Figure 6.11 Proposition 5: Staff Movements through Zones of Silence 87
Figure 6.12 Proposition 1: Staff Expressed a Combination of Voice and Silence in Their Communication Behaviour 88
Figure 6.13 Willingness to Express Views and Opinions at the Time of Joining 89
Figure 6.14 Current Willingness to Express Views and Opinions 89
Figure 6.15 Staff Movements through Zones of Silence 90
Figure 6.16 Proposition 5: Staff Movements through Zones of Silence 92
Figure 6.17 Comparison of Silence of Private and Public Sector Employees 94

Tables

Table 5.1 Multitude Meanings Assigned to Silences in Workplaces in the Literature 48
Table 5.2 Categories and Sources of Stress in Workplaces 56
Table 5.3 Suggested Occupational Health and Safety 59
Table 5.4 Manager–Employee Interactions to Coping with Stress 60
Table 6.1 Proposition 2: There was Overall Evidence of a Common Reason for Being Silent in the Organisation 76
Table 6.2 Proposition 3: Experienced Staff Responded Differently to Silence than Staff Who Joined Recently 77
Table 6.3 Proposition 4: Evidence of Future Perspective and Present Silence 77
Table 6.4 Changing Future Perspective of Employees Over Time in Years in Employment 78
Table 6.5 Proposition 2: There was an Overall Evidence of a Common Reason for Being Silent in the Organisation 82
Table 6.6 Proposition 3: Experienced Staff Responded Differently to Silence than Staff Who Joined Recently 82
Table 6.7 Proposition 4: Evidence of Future Perspective and Present Silence 83
Table 6.8 Agency B Employee Future Perception 84
Table 6.9 Proposition 2: There was an Overall Evidence of a Common Reason for Being Silent in the Organisation 85
Table 6.10 Proposition 3: Experienced Staff Responded Differently to Silence than Staff Who Joined Recently 85
Table 6.11 Proposition 4: Evidence of Future Perspective and Present Silence 86
Table 6.12 Silence Behaviour Over Time in Agency 86
Table 6.13 Proposition 2: There was an Overall Evidence of a Common Reason for Being Silent in the Organisation 90
Table 6.14 Proposition 3: Experienced Staff Responded Differently to Silence than Staff Who Joined Recently 91
Table 6.15 Proposition 4: Evidence of Future Perspective and Present Silence 91
Table 6.16 Number of Years in the Private Organisation and Silence Behaviour 92

Preface

This book is the outcome of several years of introspection and exposure to silences in workplaces that I witnessed myself and learned about from others who shared their experiences with me. I was interested in exploring how managers can deal with silence in the workplace. It is a very common experience but I soon learned that most managers are themselves quite silent about it. Many ignored it and those who did acknowledge it dismissed it as ‘just an employee who had issues to deal with’. I was sure there was more to it than this and I wanted to explore how silence in the workplace can be appropriately addressed.

I searched in vain for a methodology that would adequately serve the purpose. I needed a framework that could link individuals’ workplace decisions to the role managers can play to create environments based on trust and mutual respect, and that contribute to managing change and improving productivity. It was a tall order. It required an investigation into ethical ways to manage silence. It was clear that the solution to managing silence cannot be prescriptive nor descriptive but has to contribute to the manager’s toolkit. The solution had to lie in understanding the ethics of silence.

I was fortunate to co-author a book with my friend and colleague Nancy Billias on this subject. The book is based on an interdisciplinary (philosophy and economics) framework that we developed; however, as I began researching how to manage silence in the workplace, it became clear that I would need to move from interdisciplinarity to transdisciplinary work. To do justice to the formation of an appropriate management tool, I needed to bring ideas from several disciplines and go beyond to create a comprehensive approach to understanding the management challenges of dealing with silences in workplaces.

Chapters 1–3 are the result of my pursuits in creating a transdisciplinary approach. Chapter 4 explains the several theoretical types of silence that prevail in the workplace. In keeping with the transdisciplinary nature of my exploration, in this chapter I construct the importance of hope to develop the management tool.

Chapter 5 is devoted to measuring silence in the workplace and the measure is then applied to real-world constructs of public agencies and private institutions to examine the relevance of the tool for managers who may wish to use it. As I was interested in treating the management of silence in workplaces in an ethical way, I worked with my colleague Silpi Dhungana Pant to illustrate how it can work without being prescriptive on what managers need to do.

In preparing and writing this book, I was helped by many people. I am grateful to all the leaders, managers and employees at my own workplace, Charles Darwin University (CDU), those at the Institute of Managers and Leaders and fellow NT branch members, as well as fellow Rotarians of the Darwin Sunrise Rotary, who have allowed me insights into silences in their decision-making processes. I am also grateful to the line managers in the public and private sector agencies that allowed me to administer a questionnaire to staff and who encouraged staff to cooperate. It had proved exceedingly difficult to gain access to larger organisations and indeed many small ones, so the fact that we received almost 100% response rates, albeit from small agencies, allowed us to draw valid conclusions.

I have benefited immensely from the knowledge I received from all of them. I also wish to acknowledge the contribution of my friends (too many to mention) and family (Jyoti, Alia, Sidharth, Ed, Ila and Ariki) who willingly and sometimes unintentionally shared their own personal experiences with silence. I am grateful for the support I received from the wonderful Roopali Misra and Amander Dimmock who willingly obliged me to bring to life the graphs of my sketches. I am also very much indebted to the wonderful library staff at CDU, Carolyn and Brenda, whose support made my journey into transdisciplinary work so much more rewarding. I finally wish to thank my very dear friend and colleague June Kane for bringing life into the manuscript. Thank you, June, for doing such a wonderful job.

I hope this book will make a small contribution to making workplaces of the present and the future more inclusive of their employees. People are, after all, at the very core of everything we say and do.