Intricacies of back-office: Forward- and backward-looking recipes as modelling tools in administration
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to examine how back-office service staff cope with the intricacies of administrative work.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper applies the research approach of “at-home ethnography” in a university back-office. The primary method of data collection was participant listening in the field, either in formal interviews or casual conversations. Photography helped the authors to zoom the conversation in to specific artefacts in administrative offices.
Findings
The study identifies both forward- and backward-looking recipes as essential administrative tools that back-office staff develop and use to handle intricacies that emerge in their daily work. Forward-looking recipes are based on anticipatory cognitive representations, whereas backward-looking recipes are based on experiential wisdom. The study elaborates on the different kinds of modelling practices that back-office service staff engage in while building and applying these two different kinds of recipes.
Practical implications
The recipes support administrators in knowledge replication and thus help avoid interruptions, reduce uncertainty, and produce consistency in administrative processes.
Originality/value
In contrast to existing studies of formal bureaucracies, the study provides a unique empirical account to show how back-office service staff cope with the multiple intricacies existing in current office environments. The study shows how recipes as models contribute to stabilizing or even routinizing work processes in complex administrative situations.
Keywords
Citation
Yli-Kauhaluoma, S. and Pantzar, M. (2016), "Intricacies of back-office: Forward- and backward-looking recipes as modelling tools in administration", Journal of Organizational Ethnography, Vol. 5 No. 2, pp. 167-183. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOE-01-2016-0005
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited