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Communicating for success: A quantitative analysis of the mediating effect of enacted complexity on the relationship between communication and team performance

Hovda, Even Lømo; Giachino, Axel Flavio
Master thesis
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2039049.pdf (1.531Mb)
Preliminary Thesis.pdf (248.2Kb)
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2578506
Utgivelsesdato
2018
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Samlinger
  • Master of Science [1117]
Sammendrag
Building on recent theoretical and methodological developments in

organizational studies focusing on organizational routines (Hærem, Pentland and

Miller, 2015; Hansson, 2018), this thesis aim to explore how three aspects of team

communication; Frequency, distribution of communication and use of

achievement-oriented language, influence team performance, and if enacted

complexity mediates this relationship. The study relies on data gathered from 106

teams, solving a team task in the crisis simulator MindLab. The results of our

analysis indicate a positive relationship between the frequency of communication

and team performance, and that this relationship is fully mediated by enacted

complexity. Further, achievement-oriented language was found to positively

correlate with team performance, but this relationship was not mediated by

enacted complexity. These findings suggest that we have identified two separate

mechanisms governing the relationship between communicative aspects and team

performance as we find support for the mediating role of enacted complexity

between communication frequency and performance, while achievement oriented

language and performance are correlated, but seems uncorrelated with enacted

complexity. We found no statistical support for a relationship between team

members’ distribution of communication, enacted complexity and team

performance. Due to the findings, this study extends the organizational routines

literature by supporting earlier findings of a positive link between enacted

complexity and team performance, in uncertain task environments. Further, this

research identifies enacted complexity as a mediator of the relationship between

communication frequency and performance, and strengthens the argument for

routines as a potential source of flexibility and advantage when performing tasks

in uncertain environments.
Beskrivelse
Masteroppgave(MSc) in Master of Science in Leadership and Organizational Psychology - Handelshøyskolen BI, 2018
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Handelshøyskolen BI

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