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1 – 10 of 30Mark Shevlin, Gary Adamson, Ryanne Colbert, Daniel Boduszek and Philip Hyland
Daniel Boduszek, Gary Adamson, Mark Shelvin and Philip Hyland and Ryanne Colbert
Daniel Boduszek, Mark Shevlin, Gary Adamson and Philip Hyland
Daniel Boduszek, Mark Shevlin, Gary Adamson and Philip Hyland
Gary Adamson, Joe Pine, Tom Van Steenhoven and Jodi Kroupa
The authors advocate making storytelling an integral tool of corporate strategy. Stories create the experience that lets strategy be understood at a personal level. In order to be…
Abstract
Purpose
The authors advocate making storytelling an integral tool of corporate strategy. Stories create the experience that lets strategy be understood at a personal level. In order to be effective, strategy must not just inform, it must. And people are never inspired by reason alone.
Design/methodology/approach
A case study of the development and presentation of a strategic story – one designed to describe the future of San Juan Regional. It became known as “The Raiders of the Lost Art.”
Findings
According the CEO of San Juan Regional: “We learned a whole new way for management and employees to work together to make dramatic new things happen. So we have committed to this type of storytelling and feedback to be done every 18 months.”
Research limitations/implications
Research on the success of companies implementing strategic change using the storytelling tool vs. those that rely on an analytical presentation would be valuable.
Practical implications
If you want your change message to actually take hold – if you want it to transform how things are done in your world – then weave your message about the new strategy into a compelling and memorable story.
Originality/value
When more leaders immerse their employees in compelling and inspirational strategy stories, more companies will achieve their change goals.
Details
Keywords
Daniel Boduszek, Gary Adamson, Mark Shevlin and Philip Hyland
Social Identity Theory proposes that identity and thinking style are strongly related. Research also suggests that the process of depersonalization is responsible for shifting…
Abstract
Purpose
Social Identity Theory proposes that identity and thinking style are strongly related. Research also suggests that the process of depersonalization is responsible for shifting from personal identity to social identity and assimilating group attitudes. The purpose of this study is to investigate the nature of personality in the relationship between criminal social identity and criminal thinking style.
Design/methodology/approach
The Measure of Criminal Attitudes, the Measure of Criminal Social Identity, and The Eysenck Personality Questionnaire was administrated to a sample of recidivistic male prisoners with learning difficulties (n=312).
Findings
Sequential moderated multiple regression analyses indicated the unique main effect of extraversion, psychoticism, in‐group affect, and in‐group ties on criminal thinking style. In terms of the moderating role of personality, the in‐group affect was more strongly associated with criminal thinking for low levels of extraversion, whereas high levels of extraversion moderated the positive relationship between in‐group ties and criminal thinking style.
Originality/value
The findings provide the first empirical support for the moderating role of personality in the relationship between criminal identity and criminal thinking style of offenders with learning difficulties.
Details
Keywords
The author’s thesis is that today we have transitioned from a Service Economy to an Experience Economy, . What customers increasingly want are experiences – memorable events that…
Abstract
Purpose
The author’s thesis is that today we have transitioned from a Service Economy to an Experience Economy, . What customers increasingly want are experiences – memorable events that engage each individual in an inherently personal way. And if companies want to create and consistently offer engagement experience value, then they need to give their employees the wherewithal to design, create and stage such offerings through an employee experience that is equally personal, memorable and of course engaging. 10;
Design/methodology/approach
The author suggests that we think of the customer/employee relationship as the experience profit chain, one that interacts in multiple and complex ways to yield a connected human experience.
Findings
Better employee experience leads to the creation of a better experience for customers, which feeds back to enabling a more engaging employee experience. Separate employee experiences from customer experiences and it will become increasingly hard to create the economic value desired by customers today.
Practical implications
The employee experience depends on how well companies design the time employees spend that creates value for customers.
Originality/value
Seminal article that analyzes and offers guidance on how to formulate the relationship between customer experience and employee experience.