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What is Organisational Behaviour

Handbook of Research on Web 2.0, 3.0, and X.0: Technologies, Business, and Social Applications
OB is a scholarly discipline aimed at maximising organisational effectiveness. However, OB scholars tend to view work organisations as separate entities to broader societal activity. As a consequence of a narrow focus, interests of employees can end up marginalised or explained in the context of the dominant parties to the employment relationship.
Published in Chapter:
How Employees Can Leverage Web 2.0 in New Ways to Reflect on Employment and Employers
James Richards (Heriot-Watt University, UK)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-384-5.ch049
Abstract
How and why businesses can and should exploit Web 2.0 communication technologies for competitive advantage has recently become the focus of scholarly attention. Yet at the same time, one key organizational actor in the business equation–the employee as an individual and collective actor with distinct interests from that of the employer, has been given scant attention. Using media accounts, questionnaire and interview data, this chapter seeks to map out early trends in employee interests in Web 2.0. The findings point towards three distinct, yet interconnected employee uses for Web 2.0–collaborative practices that extend employee abilities to exchange a wide-range of ‘insider information,’ express conflict, and ‘take action’ against employers. Due to the nature and size of cyberspace, however, more research is required to gauge the popularity and effect of these emergent trends.
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