Authors
Meredith Woehler, Theresa M Floyd, Neha Shah, Joshua E Marineau, Wookje Sung, Travis J Grosser, Jesse Fagan, Giuseppe Joe Labianca
Publication date
2021/12
Journal
Journal of Applied Psychology
Volume
106
Issue
12
Pages
1939
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
The upheaval created by a merger can precipitate voluntary employee turnover, causing merging organizations to lose valuable knowledge-based resources and competencies precisely when they are needed most to achieve the merger’s integration goals. While prior research has shown that employees’ connections to coworkers reduce their likelihood of leaving, we know little about how personal social networks should change to increase the likelihood of staying through the disruptive post-merger integration period. In a pre–post study of social network change, we investigate over 15 million email communications between employees within two large merging consumer goods firms over 2 years. We use insights from network activation theory to posit and find that employees with high formal power (rank) and high informal status (indegree centrality) react to the merger’s general uncertainty and threat by …
Total citations
20212022202320241562
Scholar articles
M Woehler, TM Floyd, N Shah, JE Marineau, W Sung… - Journal of Applied Psychology, 2021