6533b857fe1ef96bd12b4e35

RESEARCH PRODUCT

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subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management060106 history of social sciencesbusiness.industryStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences06 humanities and the artsPublic relationsRetail industryManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businessObservational learning0601 history and archaeologyStrategic managementIdeologySociologybusiness050203 business & managementBusiness historymedia_common

description

Organizations often learn vicariously by observing what other organizations do. Our study examines vicarious learning–related communication through which individuals share their observations with other organizational members. Most students and members of present-day organizations would expect that this communication is driven by a prodevelopment logic—that communication serves the purpose of organizational improvement and competitiveness. Our unique historical evidence on learning-related communication over multiple decades shows that the subjective and collective attitude toward prodevelopment communication may be ideologically conditioned. Prodevelopment communication is the norm in capitalist organizations, but competing ideologies may emphasize other goals higher than organizational development. Consequently, increasing challenges to capitalism as the ideological basis of economic organization can have deep impacts on how organizations learn and produce innovations in the future.