6533b7ddfe1ef96bd1273e3f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Conflict as it happens

Risto PuutioVirpi-liisa Kykyri

subject

Value (ethics)Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementConflictStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectGeneral Decision Sciences050109 social psychologyProsodySingle-subject designconsultant-client relationshipkonsultointiruumiillisuusConstructiveEmbodimentNonverbal communicationhoitosuhdeLiiketaloustiede - Business and managementOriginalityManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businesskonsultti-asiakas yhteistyösuhde0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesConversationdiskursiivinen tutkimuskonfliktitiKonfliktimedia_commonprosodiikkaProcess consultantDiscursive approach05 social sciencesProcess consultingConsultant–client relationshipprosodiaFeelingprosessikonsultaatioPsychologySocial psychology050203 business & management

description

PurposeAlthough emotions are relevant for conflicted interactions, the role of emotions in organizational conflicts has remained understudied. The purpose of this paper is to contribute to this by looking at the role of nonverbal affective elements in conversations.Design/methodology/approachBringing together organizational “becoming” and embodiment approaches, the study focused on a conflict which emerged during a multi-actor consulting conversation. The episode in question was analyzed via a detailed, micro-level discursive method which focused specifically on the participants’ use of prosodic and nonverbal behaviors.FindingsChanges in prosody were found to have an important role in how the conflict between a consultant and an employee client emerged and was handled. Nonverbal and prosodic means had a central role in creating legitimate space for the employees’ feelings: they helped to validate the feelings and thus led the interlocutors to act in a more constructive manner in their handling of the conflicted situation.Research limitations/implicationsFindings are based on a single case study. Multi-modal analysis proved effective in capturing the relevant interactions in a comprehensive manner.Practical implicationsConversational “traps” may be observed by becoming alert to interactional patterns involving repeated chains of actions. A nonverbal response, validating the interlocutor as someone who is entitled to her/his feelings, can be sufficient in providing emotional help in consultancy.Social implicationsNonverbal elements of interactions are important in handling delicate issues in conflicts.Originality/valueTo the authors’ knowledge, no previous organizational research has provided a detailed description of a conflicted interaction “as it happened” between clients and a consultant.

https://doi.org/10.1108/jocm-10-2016-0222