Reputation Shocks and Recovery in Public-Serving Organizations: The Moderating Effect of Mission Valence

Jurgen Willems, Lewis Faulk, Silke Boenigk

Publikation: Wissenschaftliche FachzeitschriftOriginalbeitrag in FachzeitschriftBegutachtung

Abstract

This study investigates the impacts of negative and positive signals on public-serving organizations’ reputations. We draw on socio-cognitive perspectives to test how organizations’ breaches of stakeholders’ trust are repairable over time as well as the moderating effect of organizational mission valence on this forgiveness process. Multilevel data from two slope-shift experiments (n = 304; n = 582) show that mission valence, or individuals’ affinity with an organization’s mission, intensifies the effects of both negative and positive signals in organizations’ reputation building processes. Negative signals have stronger negative effects on intentions to support the organization for individuals with high mission valence. However, the effect of successive positive signals is also stronger for individuals with high mission valence, suggesting greater forgiveness following a stronger breach of trust among these stakeholders.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)311 - 327
FachzeitschriftJournal of Public Administration Research and Theory
Jahrgang31
Ausgabenummer2
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2021

Österreichische Systematik der Wissenschaftszweige (ÖFOS)

  • 505027 Verwaltungslehre
  • 211903 Betriebswissenschaften
  • 502023 NPO-Forschung
  • 605005 Publikumsforschung

Schlagwörter

  • Experiment
  • Mission Valence
  • Multilevel
  • Public-Serving Organizations
  • Recovery
  • Reputation
  • Reputation Shocks
  • non-profit
  • nonprofit
  • slope-shift experiment
  • social enterprise
  • socio-cognitive perspective

Zitat