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How the public perceives a company can determine whether misconduct becomes scandalized

August 20, 2024
in Bussines
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How the public perceives a company can determine whether misconduct becomes scandalized
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Misconduct can cost a company, but having it scandalized in the media can be disastrous. A new study published in the Strategic Management Journal explores the effects of whether the public evaluates a firm emotionally or rationally on corporate misconduct scandalization. The findings could help companies decide how to address the misconduct publicly — if at all.

Misconduct can cost a company, but having it scandalized in the media can be disastrous. A new study published in the Strategic Management Journal explores the effects of whether the public evaluates a firm emotionally or rationally on corporate misconduct scandalization. The findings could help companies decide how to address the misconduct publicly — if at all.

Jung-Hoon Han of Sungkyunkwan University, Timothy G. Pollock of the University of Tennessee, and Srikanth Paruchuri of Texas A&M University found that little is understood about the scandalization process, which affects how the misconduct’s media coverage unfolds. An incident becoming public knowledge isn’t enough to scandalize it — that requires ongoing media coverage after the issue’s initial disclosure.

“Firms have misconduct all the time and it doesn’t get scandalized,” Pollock says. “It’s not automatically newsworthy. We wanted to understand what role their social evaluations play, and how people are already thinking about them.”

The team chose to evaluate data breaches because they violate implicit and explicit contracts with customers, damaging their cognitive and emotional trust in the firms and undermining perceived procedural fairness. They used the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse database to identify 224 incidents involving 157 publicly traded U.S. firms between 2015 and 2018. They followed each breach for two weeks from the disclosure date to measure the extent to which the media scandalized the breach by using the count of articles covering the focal incident each day during the two-week period.

They identified two factors about data breaches: the amount of the accumulating media coverage about them and the objective severity of the size of the breach, and how that would interact with a firm’s reputation and celebrity in different ways. They defined reputation as the “broad public recognition of the quality of a firm’s activities and outputs” and celebrity as the “high level of attention and…positive emotional responses from stakeholder audiences.”

They found that a high-reputation firm, one whose capabilities are rationally assessed, will see a higher likelihood objectively severe misconduct is scandalized. Meanwhile, celebrity’s influence, which comes from the public’s emotional resonance with a company’s unconventional traits and behaviors, will weaken as objective severity increases. The researchers also found that reputation’s influence weakens, and celebrity’s influence strengthens, as media “availability cascades” — a self-reinforcing process of collective belief formation — grow and increase perceived severity.

“If you have a high reputation, people’s interest in your misconduct is likely to be really rational,” Han says. “So in that case, you may want to provide as detailed information as possible about your assessment of the misconduct’s cause and what you’re going to do about it. You may want to explain in detail that it’s not that you lack capabilities, or you may want to reassure them that it’s not going to harm their performance much.”

But to take this action, the misconduct must be objectively severe, because if it’s a small breach involving a high-reputation firm, people will be more likely to give the company the benefit of the doubt. Say nothing and the smaller incident is likely to blow over. If there’s a big breach that creates an expectancy violation, a company should try to get ahead of it.

In contrast, celebrity firms likely don’t need to get into the details of the misconduct with the public. Their approach should be focused on managing people’s perceptions. Leaders in these organizations could temper the emotional buzz created by their misconduct and offer condensed messages on their plan.

“Understand how you create value, why people like you, and that affects how you respond in different ways,” Pollock says.

To read the full context of the study and its methods, access the full paper available in the Strategic Management Journal.

About the Strategic Management Society

The Strategic Management Society (SMS) is the leading global member organization fostering and supporting rigorous and practice-engaged strategic management research. SMS enjoys the support of 3,000 members, representing more than 1,100 institutions and companies in more than 70 countries. SMS publishes three leading academic journals in partnership with Wiley: Strategic Management Journal, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, and Global Strategy Journal. These journals publish top-quality work applicable to researchers and practitioners with complementary access for all SMS Members. The SMS Explorer offers the latest insights and takeaways from the SMS Journals for business practitioners, consultants, and academics.

Click here to subscribe to the monthly SMS Explorer newsletter.

Click here to learn more about the programs and opportunities SMS has to offer.



Journal

Strategic Management Journal

DOI

10.1002/smj.3638

Method of Research

Data/statistical analysis

Subject of Research

Not applicable

Article Title

Public enemies? The differential effects of reputation and celebrity on corporate misconduct scandalization

Article Publication Date

8-Jul-2024

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