Meaning Work: Making Meaning in Low Structure Situations - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 22
About This Presentation
Title:

Meaning Work: Making Meaning in Low Structure Situations

Description:

Our Questions to You. Where does what we're saying seem ... Wrzesniewski, Dutton & Debebe. When does work have meaning? ... Ashforth; Dutton et al. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:29
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: Ruti2
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Meaning Work: Making Meaning in Low Structure Situations


1
Meaning Work Making Meaning in Low Structure
Situations
  • Sue Ashford
  • Ruth Blatt

2
Our Questions to You
  • Where does what were saying seem interesting or
    new?
  • What conversation does this contribute to?
  • Where could we be more clear?
  • Relevant literatures we need to take into
    account?

3
The Meaning of Work A Confusion
  • Work as a life domain what does it mean to a
    person? Ruiz-Quintanilla England, Wrzesniewski
  • Work as an activity what is its content how is
    it evaluated? Wrzesniewski, Dutton Debebe
  • When does work have meaning? Pratt Ashforth
  • Derived from the fit of what Im doing and who I
    am
  • Derived from fit of where Im belonging and who I
    am
  • Us How do people create and use meaning in work
    in service of outcomes?

4
Meaning and Work
  • Organizations help sustain contribution from
    their members by granting meaning
  • Division of labor role definition set the
    premises for decision-making what do I do?
    (March Simon Katz Kahn)
  • Symbolic actions by leaders define a sense of
    purpose why am I doing it? (Barnard)
  • Culture, history, rituals, symbols define what is
    appropriate how should I do it? (OReilly
    Chatman)
  • Organizational membership increases positive
    identity at work who am I? (Pratt Ashforth
    Dutton et al., Tyler)
  • Collective sensemaking about the work in reduces
    ambiguity and uncertainty what do events mean?
    (Weick, Maitlis)

5
But what if meaning is not granted?
  • No role to follow
  • No leaders to grant meaning
  • No organization to feel a part of
  • No norms to adhere to
  • No colleagues with whom to make sense

The ambiguity and lack of structure often raises
the most basic of existential questions do I
matter? - and a host of more specific meaning
questions as the work is engaged.
6
Our Study
  • 41 individuals performing work outside of
    organizations
  • 90-minute interviews about their day-today lives
  • We hope to draw implications for other
    low-structure situations, such as
    entrepreneurship, virtual work, design work and
    research work.

7
Sample
  • N 41
  • What do they do
  • Artist 8
  • Writer 7
  • Graphic Designer 6
  • Consultant 9
  • Hi Tech 6
  • Other 5

8
Sample
  • What is their life situation?
  • Married/Partner 70
  • Kids? 40
  • Male/Female 51/49
  • Years of experience
  • 14 29
  • 3-8 39
  • lt3 32

9
Sample
  • Financial Success
  • High 35 Med 41 Low 24
  • Dependence on Income
  • High 49 Med 29 Low 22
  • In this by choice?
  • 90 had high degree of choice

10
For a NS worker, you need to make meaning yourself
  • However, you have lots of data to use in meaning
    making because in NS work, your actions are
    self-implicating
  • Your choices tell you about you
  • Your reactions and emotions are important
    information about your functioning
  • These realities push you to self examination to
    clarify what matters most
  • And can engage pressures to preserve a positive
    self-concept (which may need to be guarded
    against at times)

11
You need to figure out
  • Who am I?
  • What do I do?
  • How can I do it in a way that is right for me?
  • Why am I doing it?
  • What do various events mean?

12
Meaning Narrative (an plausible story of the
self at work)
Make sense with
Revise
Make sense with
Revise
Realm of Ongoing Action
Interrupt
Interrupt
Make sense with
Institutional society occupations
organizations Economics
Make sense with
Pay attention to
Pay attention to
Vocabularies of Action
Make sense with
Make sense with
Self-knowing values choices self-concept
Create elaborate
Create elaborate
time
13
Narratives
  • Meaning narratives are plausible stories about
    the self at work that answer the questions who
    am I? and why am I doing what I am doing?
  • Clear narratives provide
  • A sense of stability in the face of flux
  • Direction in the moment and for the long-term
  • A framework for making sense of actions already
    taken
  • Motivation
  • Resilience
  • Help in sustaining a positive self-concept
  • An aesthetic

14
Invocation and creation of meanings in the
everyday
  • Meaning Functions. The created meanings help
    these workers to
  • Energize action
  • Direct action
  • Cope with interrupts
  • Modify the narrative
  • In everyday life, people in ambiguous situations
    use a wide variety of resources to create meaning
    in service of sustaining action
  • Their narratives
  • Their experiences
  • Their reactions to their experiences
  • Words pulled from various vocabularies of
    action to make sense of experience

15
Vocabularies of Action
  • Institutional vocabularies
  • Society (ideologies)
  • Occupations (predecessors, norms)
  • Organizations (rules, roles, and structures)
  • Economics (profit, self-interest)
  • Self-knowing vocabularies
  • Values
  • Choices
  • Self-concept

16
Everyday Meaning Making is Created by and Creates
the Narrative
17
Meaning Narrative (an plausible story of the
self at work)
Make meaning with
Revise
Make meaning with
Revise
Realm of Ongoing Action
Interrupt
Interrupt
Make sense with
Institutional society occupations
organizations Economics
Make sense with
Pay attention to
Pay attention to
Vocabularies of Action
Make sense with
Make sense with
Self-knowing values choices self-concept
Create elaborate
Create elaborate
time
18
Interrupts
  • Occasions for meaning-making that happen when
    something disrupts the narrative as a device for
    making sense of work and the self-at-work.

19
Types of interrupts
Actions Actions
Taken
Not taken
Not taken
Taken
No interrupt Diversion challenge
Self-expression challenge Ego challenge
Expectations challenge Authenticity challenge
Performance challenge No interrupt
Doesnt feel valuable
Doesnt feel valuable
Self View
Feels valuable
Feels valuable
Others appear to value
Others do not appear to value
Others View
20
When is meaning-making negative?
  • No coherent narrative
  • Meaning-making becomes a diversion (e.g.,
    nonprofit entrepreneur)
  • Lack of resourcefulness in drawing from
    vocabularies of action
  • Limited sensemaking constrains possible action
    (e.g., independent film producer)

21
Propositions
  • Sustaining effective action in a low-structure
    situation is aided by the development of a
    meaning narrative of the self that is plausible
    to the actor and answers who am I? and Why am I
    doing what Im doing?
  • Meaning narratives help actors cope with and
    respond to interrupts in the ongoing flow of
    action
  • Interrupts stem from discrepancies between
    actors own view of actions taken or not taken
    and evidence they have of others views of these
    actions.

22
Propositions, cont.
  • Meaning-making in low structure situations is
    aided by a competence at observing, analyzing,
    and honoring the self in action.
  • Meaning narratives are revised through time by
    drawing upon meaning vocabularies in response to
    interrupts
  • The broader the meaning vocabularies created and
    used, the better the ability to sustain action
  • Expanding attention to external vocabularies
  • Making usable a preoccupation with the self
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com