7 Social Media Use in Organizations: Exploring The Affordances of Visibility, Editability, Persistence, and Association
7 Social Media Use in Organizations: Exploring The Affordances of Visibility, Editability, Persistence, and Association
7 Social Media Use in Organizations: Exploring The Affordances of Visibility, Editability, Persistence, and Association
145
Internet and American Life Project has reported that 61% of adults (18 years
and older) have used SNSs and 32% have read a blog (Zickuhr, 2010).
As social media have begun to enter popular consciousness, some scholars
have treated them as just another genre of CMC (Herring, 2004), while others have attempted to define social media, broadly, as a distinct category of
technologies. Following the latter strategy, Kaplan and Haenlein (2010), for
example, refer to social media as Internet-based applications that build on
the ideological and technological foundations of Web 2.0, and that allow the
creation and exchange of User Generated Content (p. 62). In lieu of providing a clear definition of social media, the default approach in many academic
writings has been to define the term social media by pointing toward the types
of technologies that people recognize, implicitly, as social media (e.g., blogs,
wikis, SNSs, social tagging, etc.).
However, a referential approach to a definition of social media focuses
peoples attention on what the technology itself does (or does not do) instead
of the ways the technology becomes mutually constituted with the organizational context in which it is embedded (Leonardi, 2009). Moreover, studies
that focus on the features of specific technologies in organizations provide limited insight into why use of a technology produced particular effects (Nass &
Mason, 1990). In sum, many studies of social media use provide insights about
a specific tool, in a particular organizational context, but they do not develop
theory about the consequences of social media use for organizing. Current
definitions of social media are either too application-focused, preventing generalization across contexts, or too broad, obscuring the ways the technology
may influence behaviors. To aid theory development around social media use
in organizations this paper eschews a definition of social media based on features, and considers the affordances they offer users.
An Affordance Approach
In an effort to explain how animals perceive their environments, James Gibson (1986), a perceptual psychologist, argued that an object like a rock could
be used very differently by distinct animals because each animal perceived a
particular set of activities for which the rock would be useful. He suggested
that animals perceived not what an object is, but rather what kinds of uses it
affords and called such perceptions of an objects utility an affordance. In
Gibsons formulation, people do not interact with an object prior to or without
perceiving what the object is good for. As he suggests, the physical features
of an object exist apart from the people who use them, but those features are
infused with meaning relative to the posture and behavior of the animal being
considered (pp. 127128). Although the features of an object are common
to each person who encounters them, the affordances of that artifact are not.
Affordances are unique to the particular ways in which an actor, or a set of
actors, perceives and uses the object. To this end, Gibson (1986) offers an
explanation of the relationship between materiality and affordances:
147
Facebook
Wordpress,
Blogger,
Delicious
Twitter
Blogs
Social Tagging
Microblogging
AOL Instant
Messenger, GChat
Hotmail, Gmail
Skype
Dropbox
Instant Messaging
(can be recorded, but rarely is)
Teleconferencing
(can be recorded)
Shared Database
Wikipedia
Public
Microsoft Access/
Sharepoint
Webex
Outlook Exchange
Jabber
Yammer
IBMs Dogear;
PARCs SparTag
Socialtext ,
MediaWiki
Organization
Example Applications
Wikis
SOCIAL MEDIA
Technology
Low-High
Low
Low-High
Low
High
High
High
High
High
Visibility
Med.
Med.
High
Med.
High
High
High
High
High
Editability
High
Med.
High
Low
High
High
High
High
High
Persistence
Affordances
Table 7.1 Comparison of Affordances Across across Social Media and Bbetween Social Media and other Organizational CMCs
Low
Med.
Low
Low
High
High
High
High
High
Association
151
Illustration in Literature
Wikis
Social Networking
Sites
Status updates
Pushes activity to connections
Lists of friends or
connections
Personal Profiles
Visible in Search Engines
Allows comments and
opinion expression (e.g., the
like button) on content
Recommender algorithm
shows similar others
Blogs
Social Tagging
Microblogging
Work Behavior. One of the most common and basic features of social media
is that they present content communally, which means contributions can be
easily located and viewed by other employees. Efimova and Grudin (2008)
interviewed 34 employee bloggers at Microsoft regarding the reasons why
individuals maintained organizational blogs and how they perceived readership.
153
dogear social tagging tool regarding the motivations behind the tags chosen.
Results indicated that employees found the visibility of the social media useful for attracting the attention of specific organizational audiences. In another
study conducted at a large communication technology company, Kosonen and
Kianto (2009) held two group interviews to examine how employees were
using wikis to manage information. Employees noted that the open nature of
social media encouraged informal collaboration and supported knowledge
sharing among workers. Many employees liked that the open-source ideology afforded by social media opened communication and eliminated decisions regarding who to include, a choice workers faced when using other
CMCs (p. 27). Work by Damianos, Cuomo, Griffith, Hirst, and Smallwood
(2007), who studied the introduction of a social tagging system at MITRE,
and research by Millen and Feinberg (2006), which examined 8 months use of
the dogear tool at IBM, revealed that despite options to keep tags private, the
overwhelming majority of users chose to make information publicly available
to others. Public tags could be used both to find desired information and to
direct others attention to specific content.
Metaknowledge. The visibility of social media can also provide
metaknowledge about the type of people in the organization and what they
may know. As one example, DiMicco, Geyer, Millen, Dugan, and Brownholtz
(2009) reviewed three months of activity by 285 IBM employees on a internal
SNS named Beehive and interviewed nine participants to determine how
individuals used the tool. Beehive let employees create profile pages that
contained photos, corporate directory information, and a summary of content
contributed by the individual. Findings showed employees used the visible
information contributed to learn more about the backgrounds, interests, and
activities of coworkers (DiMicco et al, 2009). In another instance, Muller,
Ehrlich, and Farrell (2006) investigated user behaviors at IBM following the
implementation of a prototype technology that allowed workers to supplement
corporate directory information with tags that would be visible to others.
Usage data found that 79% of users tagged content about themselves and for
more than half (51%) of users this constituted their only tagging activity. The
authors noted that although this form of overt self-presentation could be seen
as selfish, it might also help inform others of skills available for potential
collaborations (Muller et al., 2006).
Shami, Ehrlich, Gay, and Hancock (2009) surveyed 67 users of an expertise locater system in a global technology company and found that employees
were more likely to contact users of social media for information. Workers felt
social media users were both more knowledgeable in particular domains and
were more likely to respond to inquiries. John and Seligman (2006) discussed
how collaborative tags may be used to identify experts in an organization and
demonstrated how this information could be integrated into a communication
system at the business communication company Avaya. The researchers noted
that an underlying premise of their approach to expertise identification was
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COMMUNICATION YEARBOOK 36
that tags may be presumed to be representative of user interests and expertise (p. 1). This ability to advertise ones areas of knowledge may promote
social media use in organizations. Schondienst, Krasnova, Gunther, and Riehle
(2011) asked survey respondents familiar with microblogging to imagine a
Twitter-like tool was in use at their place of work, and collected responses
regarding expected behaviors and outcomes. Data from 82 individuals found
that workers who believed microblogging use could increase ones reputation
were the most likely to post material or follow others contributions.
Organizational Activity Streams. Social media afford individuals the ability
to see information related to the status of ongoing activities in the organization.
Zhao and Rosson (2009) interviewed 11 Twitter users at a large IT company
and asked how microblogging might influence organizational communication.
Respondents felt microblogging could assist in keeping a pulse on what is
going on in others minds by providing access to streams of comments from
individuals across the organization (p. 249). In another study, Brzozowski
(2009) reviewed the use of social media tools at HP and described the design
of a tool that used contributions to blogs, wikis, and social tagging tools to
help identify novel and popular organizational content. He commented that
employees viewed social media content in the company as a way to orient
themselves in the organization (p. 7).
The ability to see coworker activity through social media use also influenced decisions to actively communicate. To examine what influenced blog
adoption in organizations, Wattal, Racherla, and Mandviwalla (2009) examined log data from 2,667 employees at a multinational electronics corporation.
The study found that blog use by ones manager and others in ones office was
associated with a greater likelihood of individual blog use. Blog participation can also be influenced by the knowledge one has about the viewers of
contributed material. Yardi, Golder, and Brzozowski (2009) analyzed a year
of log data on an internal blog server at a global technology company and
interviewed 96 employee bloggers of various activity levels. Workers expected
posting material to social media to provide increased social recognition in the
organization, and lack of recognition deterred continued participation. In a
related study conducted at the same organization, analysis of log data revealed
that blog authors published more frequently if they saw they received many
comments on prior posts (a visible form of information), but the number of
actual clicks on ones blog (not visible) had no effect (Brzozowski, Sandholm,
& Hogg, 2009).
Farzan et al. (2008) studied the implementation of an incentive system in
IBMs Beehive SNS that was designed to motivate contributions of photographs, lists, comments, and profile updates by providing points and labels to
users for adding information. An experiment comparing employee SNS use in
the incentive condition against that of those in a nonincentive condition found
the visible incentives increased contributions. Additionally, interviews with six
155
employees in the incentive condition found that users monitored and compared
their standing relative to coworkers.
Persistence
Communication is persistent if it remains accessible in the same form as the
original display after the actor has finished his or her presentation (Bregman &
Haythornthwaite, 2001; Donath, Karahalios, & Viegas, 1999). This affordance
of persistence has also been referred to as reviewability (Clark & Brennan,
1991), recordability (Hancock, Toma, & Ellison, 2007), or permanence
(Whittaker, 2003). When a poster to a blog or SNS logs out, that information
remains available to users and does not expire or disappear. In technologies
such as instant messaging or video-conferencing, the conversation is normally
bound in time, and a record of the interaction does not exist beyond what participants remember. Because social media enable conversations that persist
past the time of their initial posts, communicative acts can have consequences
long past the initial point of presentation. For example, an individual who is
given an assignment during a teleconference or over an instant message conversation may later find another coworker claims responsibility for the task,
and have few means by which to clarify the dispute. However, if tasks are
assigned via a team wiki, a communal record persists that is difficult to discount. As Erickson and Kellogg (2000) noted, persistence opens the door to
a variety of new uses and practices: persistent conversations may be searched,
browsed, replayed, annotated, visualized, restructured, and recontextualized,
with what are likely to be profound impacts on personal, social, and institutional practices (p. 68). Table 7.3 provides an overview of which material
features of various social media were shown to afford persistence.
Persistence can aid in the development of common ground in communicative settings, which has been shown to aid the transmission of complex ideas
(Clark & Brennan, 1991). Having a record of previous communication can
allow presentations of information to be properly contextualized and provide
people with the time to better understand conversations (Gergle, Millen, Kraut,
& Fussell, 2004; McCarthy, Miles, & Monk, 1991). If a worker is confused
about the directions a manager gives over an instant messaging system he or
she has little recourse except to ask the manager to clarify. Alternatively, if a
manager gives directions using a microblog tool the individual could review
the original communication in hopes of gaining understanding. Or, because
the information remains over time, another user could later see the original
communication and contribute with further useful information.
In what follows, we summarize three ways in which the literature shows
how the affordance of persistence affects organizational action: (a) sustaining knowledge over time, (b) creating robust forms of communication, and (c)
growing content.
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COMMUNICATION YEARBOOK 36
Features Affording
Persistence
History of activity and
discussion recorded
Entries indexed by
search engines
Illustration in Literature
(Ding et al., 2007; Giordano,
2007; Grudin & Poole, 2010;
Holtzblatt et al., 2010; Kane &
Fichman, 2009; Majchrzak et al.,
2006; Poole & Grudin, 2010;
Rober & Cooper, 2011; Wagner,
2004; White & Lutters, 2007)
Blogs
Social Tagging
Catalogs history of
bookmarking activity
Profiles indexed by
search engines
Contributions searchable
Microblogging
Catalog of entries
Profiles indexed by
search engines
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COMMUNICATION YEARBOOK 36
Social media also afford reuse of organizational content. Mejova, Schepper, Bergman, and Lu (2011) examined instances of presentation reuse in an
internal file repository at IBM to explore why people would choose to reuse
an existing file. Results indicated that workers were significantly more likely
to reuse a presentation created by an employee that they had friended on the
internal SNS tool. The reuse of content in social media also supported the
formation of tighter relationships within organizations. In a set of related studies at IBM, researchers concluded that the use of social tags in the companys
social bookmarking system, over time, coincided with the formation of communities of practice (Muller, 2007a, 2007b). These emergent communities of
practice aided organizational learning by creating pools of knowledge that
could be held and displayed in social media. Similarly, in an investigation of
the use of lists on a SNS inside of IBM, users interviewed by Geyer et al.
(2008) mentioned the lists operated as a template for other workers looking to
contribute information to the site.
Further, unlike other technologies used for organizational knowledge management, social media may not require tremendous investment or maintenance
by organizational officials. Rober and Cooper (2011) presented a case study of
the development of JPL Wired, a Wikipedia-like resource inside NASAs Jet
Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). After tracing the genesis and evolution of the
tool, the authors asserted that the wikis were a bottom-up form of media that
was heavily sustained by lower-level employees. Additionally, the researchers noted that the ability to easily capture and keep employee-contributed
information in social media was particularly attractive to new and early career
employees. Organizational newcomers could access the wiki instead of having
to ask colleagues basic questions such as where to find office supplies or what
were nearby places to eat (Rober & Cooper, 2011). In their study of blog use at
a large IT company, Jackson et al. (2007) also found newer workers used the
social media to gain access to an established community of information and
resources.
Growing Content. The nearly limitless space afforded by social media
such as blogs and wikis facilitates the growth of communication through
the addition of posts and pages. Huh, Bellamy, Jones, Thomas, and Erickson
(2007) interviewed 14 internal bloggers at IBM and found one use of the
technology was as repositories for knowledge that employees brought in from
outside the organization. Poole and Grudin (2010) conducted interviews and
online discussions at a large software company in an attempt to categorize
types of organizational wikis. One way people used wikis was as a personal
information management tool for storing materials, which allowed for the
ongoing addition of relevant information. Riemer and Richter (2010) conducted
a case study of microblog use at the German software company Communardo,
using text analysis and seven interviews to determine if participation could
be separated into different genres of use. Analysis found that organizational
microbloggers who recognized that social media could hold information
159
for future use occasionally used the tool to record knowledge such as login
identifications and meeting minutes. Though this practice was not common,
the authors found that users appropriating the technology for the purpose of
information storage knew information would be indexed by search engines
and could be easily called upon later.
One consequence of this seemingly unlimited storage is that the content
embedded in social media tools can become unwieldy over time. In discussing
the use of wikis in IBMs research group, Ding, Danis, Erickson, and Kellogg (2007) noted that maintenance quickly became an issue, and Grudin and
Poole (2010) found that most wikis at the software company they studied were
quickly abandoned. Giordano (2007) chronicled efforts among public-health
oriented nonprofits in London to use wikis for shared learning and discovered the clutter of content caused users to trip over entries and discouraged
use (p. 271). However, social media also provide individuals with the means
to find content with filters and search tools. Gunther, Krasnova, Riehle, and
Schoendienst (2009) conducted four focus groups aimed at gathering individuals perceptions about microblogging in the workplace and building a model of
adoption of the technology. Comments indicated that though some individuals
were concerned with being overwhelmed by information, others felt microblogging, by allowing users to control who and what information streams they
follow, could be a useful tool with which to manage content.
Editability
Editability refers to the fact the individuals can spend a good deal of time and
effort crafting and recrafting a communicative act before it is viewed by others
(Walther, 1993). Dennis, Fuller, and Valacich (2008) describe a similar affordance, rehearsability, that they assert enables a sender to compose a message
with the exact meaning that he or she intends. Editability is a function of two
aspects of an interaction: communication formed in isolation from others, and
asynchronicity. A speaker need not worry about regulating nonverbal cues or
involuntary reactions when using an asynchronous CMC; instead, they can
focus on the form of the message they hope to convey. When communicating
through a teleconferencing technology people can view the physical displays
and reactions of counterparts. But when using social media tools, users need
not worry about nonverbal cues.
Editability can also refer to the ability of an individual to modify or revise
content they have already communicated (Rice, 1987), including straightforward acts such as editing a spelling error or deleting content. For example,
an individual who includes a typographical error in an e-mail can do little to
fix this mistake, and anyone viewing that e-mail will see the error. Users of a
wiki, blog, or SNS can correct errors they identify and later viewers may never
know a mistake occurred. Thus, the communicator retains some degree of
control over content after the original communicative display. In Table 7.4, we
Illustration in Literature
Wikis
Asynchronous text-based
entries
Previous history of edits
available
Revisions permissible
Social Networking
Sites
Blogs
Asynchronous text-based
entries
Revision of content on own
site permissible
Social Tagging
Asynchronous text-based
entries
Revision of content on own
site permissible
Previous entries of others
recommended for potential
re-use
Microblogging
Asynchronous text-based
(Riemer & Richter, 2010)
entries
Contributions on own site can
be deleted
indicate which material features of various social media were shown to afford
editability.
By offering individuals the time to craft and compose messages, editability
allows for more purposeful communication that may aid with message fidelity
and comprehension. Dennis, Fuller, and Valacich (2008) argue that low synchronicity in a communication medium is particularly useful when the organizations goal is to convey information, or share knowledge that was previously
unknown. Additionally, editability allows communicators to take into consideration the context in which their message is likely to be viewed (or later, after
it was made, view the actual context in which it was viewed) and tailor their
ideas accordingly.
In the sections below, we summarize three ways in which the literature suggests that the affordance of editability is used to shape behavior: (a) regulating personal expressions, (b) targeting content, and (c) improving information
quality.
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COMMUNICATION YEARBOOK 36
163
Illustration in Literature
Wikis
Social Networking
Sites
Blogs
Social Tagging
Microblogging
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COMMUNICATION YEARBOOK 36
Robinson, 2001; Wellman, Haase, Witte, & Hampton, 2001). Contrary to some
arguments that online communication would isolate users, this line of research
has shown that the connectivity afforded by CMC can create a bridge between
individuals, supplement existing relationships, and help build a greater sense of
community. Specific to social media use (but not in an organizational setting),
Ellison, Steinfield, and Lampe (2007) found that use of the SNS Facebook provided college students with increased social capital among peers. Social media
afford a number of different associations through both active connections and
those suggested through the features of the technology.
Below, we outline three outcomes that the literature suggests arise when
social media afford association with other individuals or content: (a) supporting social connection, (b) access to relevant information, and (c) enabling
emergent connection.
Supporting Social Connection. Social media afford individuals a way to
make associations more explicit. One way in which this explicitness is achieved
is through the signaling of relationships with others. For example ThomSantelli et al. (2008) classified different types of social tagging practices in a
large technology organization based on interviews with users and found that
workers are often concerned with using tags to articulate social connections to
others in the group (p. 1042). Additionally, interviews with and log data from
users of an SNS inside of IBM revealed that employees used the technology
to establish associations with individuals about whom they knew little, and,
unlike in nonorganizational contexts, there was less SNS activity among close,
colocated colleagues (DiMicco, Geyer, et al., 2009; DiMicco, Millen, et al.,
2008).
The ability to forge new associations between people and content through
social media influenced the development of social capital in organizations.
Steinfield, DiMicco, Ellison, and Lampe (2009) surveyed users of a SNS
at IBM regarding use of the technology and social capital and found that
increased usage of the tool was correlated with increased social capital among
new and existing relationships. Subsequently Wu, DiMicco, and Millen (2010)
surveyed IBM SNS users regarding their perceived personal and professional
closeness to coworkers. The study looked at the relationship between perceived
closeness and behaviors on the SNS site such as viewing a coworkers page,
contributing content, or friending others. The results of a regression analysis found that explicit friendship connections, recommendations of content to
another person, and time spent viewing anothers content were all associated
with closeness between coworkers. Ferron, Frassoni, Massa, Napolitano, and
Setti (2010) also studied the issue of organizational SNS use and social capital.
The researchers surveyed more than 300 employees at an Italian research institute and found workers with SNS access reported significantly higher levels of
social capital than those without SNS access.
Beyond increasing social capital of individual users, the use of social media
and its support for associations may facilitate the creation of a larger com-
165
167
scholars should take seriously these affordances in their theorizing about various communicative processes that occur within and constitute organizations.
Certainly, other CMC technologies have features that are used to produce
occasions of these four affordances. A database system entry may have the
same visibility of a blog post, a worker may carefully craft an e-mail just as she
would a wiki entry, an employee may record and look back through an instant
message conversation just like a microblog thread, and viewing a teleconference could provide similar insights in association as seeing ones friend list
on an SNS. However, we argue that social media differ in that they afford all
of these four communicative outcomes simultaneously, and consistently in an
organizational setting. The potential presence of all four of these affordances
may offer users greater flexibility in the ways that they employ these communication technologies and enact behaviors with them, which in turn could
influence organizational communication processes.
In the following section we conduct a thought exercise by considering how
these four social media affordances might alter three processes that have, historically, been of great theoretical concern to organizational communication
scholars: socialization, information sharing, and power relations. These three
processes were chosen because, as we will discuss, researchers have already
recognized, either implicitly or explicitly, that the four social media affordances
identified are relevant to these areas of organizational communication theory.
By no means do we attempt an exhaustive theoretical exposition of how social
media affordances alter the dynamics of these three communication processes,
nor do we claim that these are the only constructs affected by social media use.
Rather, we use this thought exercise to show the usefulness of the affordance
typology established above for integrating social media research into existing
organizational communication concerns. In conducting this thought exercise,
we raise a number of potential research questions that scholars might explore
when examining the implications of social media affordances for each of these
three processes (Tables 7.6 to 7.8). As these potential research questions reveal,
there are many ways in which social media use in organizations may alter
dynamics important to organizational processes. Although intended only to be
examples of the utility of adopting an affordance approach, our application of
visibility, persistence, editability, and association makes it clear that seemingly
stable scholarly knowledge may become more volatile as social media enter
into organizational practice. We hope that the exercise conducted below, and
the potential research questions it inspires, will seed ideas for research that
focuses specifically on how social media use is implicated in the accomplishment of organizational communication.
Socialization
Research on socialization has a long history in the field of organizational
communication (Feldman, 1976; Jablin, 1984; Miller & Jablin, 1991; Stohl,
1986; Van Maanen & Schein, 1979). Communication is the primary avenue
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COMMUNICATION YEARBOOK 36
169
Table 7.6 Potential Research Questions Exploring the Relationship between Social
Media Affordances and Organizational Socialization Processes
Affordances
Information Seeking
Relationship
Formation
Visibility
Will newcomers
form relationships
more or less quickly
with individuals who
post content similar
to them than they
will with those who
do not?
Persistence
Under what
conditions will the
persistence afforded
by social media use
result in
individualized
versus collective
socialization
experiences?
Editability
In an attempt to
influence new
members, will
long-tenured
organizational
members edit old
content to re-create
organizational
histories?
When looking to
reduce uncertainty
about organizational
norms, how will
information
providers edit
messages that are
intended for select
newcomers but that
are disseminated to
all organizational
members?
Under what
conditions and how
will individuals edit
their selfpresentations to build
relationships with
others in the
organization and
what effects will the
recognition that
others are doing such
editing have
throughout the
organization?
Association
Under what
conditions does the
development of
online relationships
with experienced
organizational
members undermine
managerial
socialization
tactics?
If content is
associated with
someone whom an
individual trusts,
will that individual
continue to seek out
information, or stop
because of a belief
believes that his or
her trusted friend
has the right
answer?
171
Persistence
Editability
Association
Visibility
Affordances
Identifying Expertise
Overcoming Organizational
Boundaries
Motivating Knowledge
Contributions
Table 7.7 Potential Research Questions Exploring the Relationship between Social Media Affordances and Organizational Knowledge Sharing
Processes
173
organization (DiMicco et al., 2008; Yardi, Golder, & Brzozowski, 2009) then
it stands to reason that users may craft messages in ways that present them
as knowledgeable even if it is not an accurate reflection of their knowledge.
Future research should consider how the editability of social media influences
perceptions of individuals knowledge and whether this matches actual
knowledge.
Motivating Knowledge Contributions. Traditional examinations of
communal information technologies have treated decisions for individuals to
contribute as discretionary (Connolly & Thorn, 1990; Kalman, Monge, Fulk,
& Heino, 2002) and have been largely concerned with how to motivate users to
contribute individually held knowledge (Beenen et al., 2004; Cress, Kimmerle,
& Hesse, 2006). This concern is similar in much of the research on social media
use in organizations, in which scholars discuss a desire amongst progenitors
of these technologies to generate the greatest volume of participation and
contributions possible (DiMicco et al., 2008; Dugan et al., 2010; Farzan et al.,
2008). However, Yardi et al. (2009) note that internal corporate blogs create a
paradox in that the goal is for employees to contribute knowledge, but the more
knowledge that it is contributed the harder it is to find any specific piece of
information. The persistence of content in social media means that there may
come a point of diminishing returns where knowledge contributions produce
more noise than value. Because research on social media in organizations
is largely based on initial adoption, future work should explore whether the
growth of content alters motivations to contribute knowledge.
Additionally, associations afforded by social media may do little to actually contribute to task-related knowledge contributions or organizational goals.
Mirzaee, Iverson, and Khan (2008) concluded in their study of social tagging
that although social media facilitated exploration of knowledge within the
organization, it was not likely to be relied on in task-specific situations. One
reason that social media may not be seen as valuable in task situations is that
communications are often more relationally or personally oriented. For example, Zhao and Rosson (2009) interviewed organizational microbloggers and
found that the medium was largely used to promote informal communication.
Given the ways that social media support relations, motivating contributions
may merely increase social exchanges and not necessarily increase organizational knowledge.
Overcoming Organizational Boundaries. Information and communication
technologies, such as social media, are commonly viewed as a means to
organize knowledge and place it in a form accessible to other organizational
members (Flanagin, 2002). However, individuals often have trouble
understanding communications from other organizational members because
they have different vocabularies and situated understandings of work (Bechky,
2003; Cramton, 2001). This issue has been identified as a problem with social
tagging systems in organizationsempirical research shows tremendous
175
through the enactment and perpetuation of organizational discourse that privileges the interests of some and marginalizes the voices of others (Deetz, 1992;
Deetz & Mumby, 1985; Mumby & Stohl, 1991). Across these two perspectives, three processes are often discussed in the relationship between power
and organizational communication: (a) resource dependencies, (b) discursive
construction, and (c) surveillance. Table 7.8 lists potential research questions
that fall at the intersection of these three power processes and the affordances
of visibility, persistence, editability, and association.
Resource Dependency. The knowledge contained in social media is a
potential source of power for individuals in organizations. By making
information visible to others in the organization, individuals may be able to
subtly signal that they possess knowledge. If that knowledge is then perceived
as valuable, it can be a source of power that can result in increased influence
in decision making (Pfeffer & Salancik, 1974). Research on social media has
revealed that visibility can both consolidate and distribute power. Individuals
who garner increased attention may become influential figures (Efimova &
Grudin, 2007). Alternatively, the ability of any employee to make him- or
herself visible through social media may have a democratizing effect on
knowledge contributions (Hasan & Pfaff, 2006). As an example of the
inclusive potential of technology, the addition of social media to the innovation
process at MITRE, the research and technology organization, resulted in
more comments on proposals from a wider group of employees (Holtzblatt &
Tierney, 2011). Additional research should explore the conditions under which
social media use creates a more inclusive or exclusive knowledge environment.
Another way that individuals may become less dependent on others in an
organization is through the ease of associations made through social media
use. Unencumbered by time and space, workers in organizations can use
social media to expand their networks and build social capital across boundaries (Ferron et al., 2010; Steinfield et al., 2009). These associations can provide access to thought leaders that would be otherwise difficult to obtain, thus
reducing or eliminating the role of gatekeepers who controlled access to these
individuals (Ehrlich & Shami, 2010). Moreover, the use of social media allows
individuals to develop weak ties and create a more robust organizational network (DiMicco et al., 2008). Employees using social media, particularly those
in less powerful organizational positions, may be able to use the ease of associations to garner social resources.
Participation in Discursive Construction. Organizational scholars operating
in the critical-cultural tradition have developed a perspective that views power
as constituted by discursive formations created and reproduced in practice
(Mumby, 1987). Social media, by facilitating visible text, can be viewed as an
inherently discursive space where individuals are able to put forth arguments
and engage in public deliberation. In such studies, researchers are interested
in how everyday talk (discourse with a small d) shapes and sustains broader
Persistence
Editability
Association
Surveillance
Participation in Discourse
Construction
Resource Dependency
Visibility
Affordances
Table 7.8 Potential Research Questions Exploring the Relationship between Social Media Affordances and Organizational Power
Processes
177
ideologies (Discourse with a big D) and how powerful actors marginalize the
contributions of other forms of discourse so as to maintain their positions of
power (Alvesson & Deetz, 1999). Studies of social media in organizations have
noted that the visibility of content is seen as an effective way for employees to
get a feel for what is happening in an organization (Brzozowski, 2009; Jackson
et al., 2007; Zhao & Rosson, 2009). Individuals or groups in the organization
who are able to shape Discourse and participation in this space will wield
power over the narrative around how the social media ought to be used and,
in so doing, will perhaps be able to control the larger Discourse that controls
perception in the organization. However, the visible, informal nature of social
media participation may encourage open communication that may make it
difficult for any individual to dominate discourse (Kosonen & Kianto, 2009;
Zhao & Rosson, 2009).
Additionally, the associations afforded by social media may exert normative pressure for conformity around Discourse. Individuals may use the
medium to coalesce support for the existing organizational discourse and the
persistence of social media may increase inertia to maintain the status quo. For
example, minority voices may be discouraged from communicating because
lack of attention from management deters participation in social media (Yardi
et al., 2009). Evidence also suggests that absent explicit incentives to encounter
diverse content, individuals using SNS in organizations may restrict views to
material in their own network (Farzan et al., 2009).
Surveillance. Scholars have long recognized that technology offered
management new ways to monitor workers (Attewell, 1987). Social media,
by making the practices and contributions of employees more visible, may
increase surveillance of workers. Visible participation via communications
technology carries with it a form of accountability on the part of the
communicator (Brown & Lightfoot, 2002). Research suggests that workers
may recognize the accountability of participation, with findings showing that
individuals who used social media in organizations were reluctant to contribute
works-in-progress because they knew contributions would be viewed by others
(Giordano, 2007; Holtzblatt et al., 2010). Research should explore the processes
by which individuals monitor the social media activity of coworkers.
Additionally, the persistence of social media makes surveillance activities
easier as information is stored, aggregated, and searchable. At one global IT
organization studied, the communications department monitored the activity
of internal bloggers to identify any emerging issues or inaccuracies (Jackson et
al., 2007). Surveillance also emerges from the associations afforded by social
media. This form of surveillance is built into social media through subscriptions such as notification of when an edit has been made on a wiki, or when
a blog author has constructed a new post. For instance, when users logged
on to the SNS site at IBM they were shown a list of activities in which all of
their connections had recently engaged, and the site updated users as statuses
179
tributions or findings of these studies, but rather to argue that the affordances of
social media may have consequences unique to organizational settings.
3. The technologies that constitute social media are often recognized in the literature as Web 2.0 (e.g., Chong & Xie, 2011; Fuchs-Kittowski, Klassen, Faust,
& Einhaus, 2009; Scholz, 2008; Stocker, Dosinger, Saaed, & Wagner, 2007;
Tredinnick, 2006) or social software (e.g., Raeth et al., 2009; Steinhuser et al.,
2011; Warr, 2008). For the sake of consistency we use the term social media
throughout this paper.
4. We recognize, and regret, that a disproportionate number of studies included
in this review are the result of research conducted at IBM and involving that
organizations employees. At this point, researchers at IBM are the most active
in publishing work related to social media use in organizations, in part because
it is related to the development of the companys products. Wherever possible
we tried to include studies from other organizations. It is our hope that future
research will consider social media use in more diverse organizational contexts.
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