The results of analysing the interview responses are presented via six headings or stages, in combination with quotes from the interviewees and references to similar findings in the literature. Together they should clarify what is expected or recommended to happen at the stage. They may be interpreted as constraints or rules to channel employees’ behaviour. The stages construct a ‘meta-story’ from what the responses appear to tell, that of individuals ‘increasing presence’. The first stage identifies the starting point of the story. Its previous stage is of course what may be called the ‘normal’ stage of the company’s development—before it attempts to change or has any reason to change.
Stages in employees’ experiences
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Experiencing the need to change
The first stage refers to managers and employees becoming aware of the challenges their…
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Drawing the boundaries
In the second stage, managers introduce additional discipline and stricter measures to control the…
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Reinforcing change
The third stage refers to the development of new strategies: managers starting to emphasise higher
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Fuzziness over roles and personal life
Managers start to identify with their (harsh) strategies, and blur the boundary between the…
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Transferring initiative
The fifth stage sees employees starting to communicate with fellow victims of the managerial…
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Developing actor-presence
Non-managers increasingly behave like independent actors in their company, fully aware of their…