Getting involved in change: Enabling distributed change agency through organizational control and trust
Doctoral thesis, 2023
Not enough is known about distributed change agency and how it can be managed. In this dissertation, organizational control and trust are explored to learn more about how the development of change agency can be supported. Both aspects are found to play a role for how organizations can enable the development of distributed change agency. The method of organizational control is of less importance for supporting distributed change agency. However, it needs to make sense to organizational members for them to be supported by it. Thus, there needs to be alignment between control methods, personal, and organizational goals. In order to dare to act and possibly take a risk there needs to be trust present in the organization, trust in both colleagues and organization and in the change per se. I suggest that control and trust can be seen as catalysts with which the organization can enable the development of change agency and manage change agency. Furthermore, practices of involvement are found to be ways an organization can distribute and mange change agency.
In this dissertation, I contribute theoretically by adding to our knowledge about distributed change agency. I also add to research on managing change by suggesting how organizations can manage change agency. Furthermore, I add to the view and tradition of driving change with a greater number of organizational members involved.
The dissertation is based on four papers looking at reactions and practices during changes characterized by involvement and by the implementation of something new – in terms of new ways of working and collaborating around new products or strategy. Two of the papers are based on action research studies and two of the papers are based on multi-case studies.
Change management
Trust
Employee involvement
Organizational control
Distributed change agency
Organizational change
Author
Rita Berggren
Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Entrepreneurship and Strategy
Strategy workshops with wider participation: trust as enabler
Management Decision,;Vol. 59(2021)p. 586-603
Journal article
Change in Tightly Coupled Systems: The Role and Action of Middle Managers
Research on Organization Change and Development; edited by Debra A. Noumair, and Abraham B. (Rami) Shani,;(2020)p. 183-209
Book chapter
Pregmark, J.E., Fredberg, T., Berggren, R. & Frössevi, B. Learning from collaborative action research in three organizations: How purpose activates change agency.
Berggren, R. Enabling the shifts in innovation processes: an issue of timing and collaboration
There is not enough research on distributed change agency and how it can be managed. In this dissertation, organizational control and trust are in focus as two concepts that can support the development of distributed change agency. For organizational control to support the development of distributed change agency, it needs to make sense to organizational members. Thus, there needs to be alignment between control methods, personal, and organizational goals. To dare to act and take a risk, trust must be present in the organization, trust in both colleagues and organization and in the change per se. I suggest that control and trust can be seen as catalysts with which the organization can enable the development of distributed change agency and manage it. Also, practices of involvement are found to be ways an organization can distribute and mange change agency.
The dissertation is based on four papers looking at reactions and practices during changes characterized by involvement and by the implementation of something new – in terms of new ways of working and collaborating around new products or strategy.
Driving Forces
Innovation and entrepreneurship
Subject Categories
Business Administration
ISBN
978-91-7905-894-4
Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5360
Publisher
Chalmers
Vasa A, Vera Sandbergs allé 8
Opponent: Prof. Thomas Kalling, School of Economics and Management, Lund University