Self-Presentation and Self-Praise in the Digital Workplace
By Anna Danielewicz-Betz
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About This Book
Self-Presentation and Self-Praise in Open Communication Digital Enterprises presents the findings of an interdisciplinary study of the ‘self-entrepreneurial self’ and, in particular, the rationale behind its need to self-present under the current socio-economic and business conditions. It addresses the complex landscape of the levels, typologies, categories, triggers, as well as both internal and external factors impacting self-praise in the context of a digital workplace (with the focus on enterprise social media) and professional networking platforms.
In order to reflect the complexity of the topic at hand and interconnectivity of the constructs addressed, insights from such fields as socioeconomics, sociology, social psychology (specifically identity studies), software and services (IT sector), business intelligence and business analytics, digital media communication, organisational behaviour or corporate communication are thus combined with a mixed qualitative-quantitative methodological approach utilised to provide an in-depth exploration of the evolving constructs.
From the broader socio-economic perspective of hyper globalisation, the impact of the neoliberalism economy on workplace relations, and ultimately on employee behaviour, are considered first to lay the background and introduce the relevant concepts.
Self-presentation and in particular self-praise are considered in their multiple forms against the backdrop of precarious work relations dictated by neoliberalism, leading, among other things, to self-exploitation, but also to putting self-interest above anything else.
The focus is placed on the triggers and manifestations of the social self (how a person thinks the others perceive them) and the situational self (a person’s self-image in a specific situation) in the digital workplace, where individual (cultural) values are frequently overridden by those dictated by a given corporate culture, as aligned with the prevailing market conditions. These in turn impact workplace or employee identity.
This exploratory and explanatory study contributes to a rather limited number of research endeavours on self-praise, conducted within narrow disciplines and specific frameworks, with the particular research gap being a lack of studies on self-presentational and self-praise activities in the corporate environment, which can primarily be observed in the virtual context of enterprise social media (ESM) and such tools of remote communication as conference calls or collaboration software, but also on professional networking platforms. Here situational antecedents (broadly what occurred before) and the audience (with their reactions) to such self-promotional activities serve as main prerequisites, thus completing the frame of analysis.
Reviews
Self-presentation and Self-praise in the Digital Workplace by Anna Danielewicz-Betz focuses on self-presentation and self-praise in the digital corporate setting. It not only adds to the growing body of research on these topics by adopting a mixed methodological approach, but also contributes to the existing knowledge of self-praise by putting forward a multilayered typology of self praise tailored to the business context —Journal of Pragmatics.
Author Information
Anna Danielewicz-Betz, PhD, is an experienced educator and interdisciplinary researcher with a sound track record of working in tertiary education and In Coventry University Kazakhstan as full-time senior faculty member (Business Department).
Series
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations; Preface; 1. Putting the ‘Self ’ First; 2. Enterprise Social Media Aff ordances as Drivers of Self-Presentation; 3. Self-Presentation and Self-Praise on Enterprise Social Media; 4. Going beyond Self-Presentation and Self-Praise in the Corporate Environment: Academia and LinkedIn; Bibliography; Index.
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