Fischer-Preßler, Diana; Marx, Julian; Bunker, Deborah; Stieglitz, Stefan; Fischbach, Kai:
Social media information governance in multi-level organizations : How humanitarian organizations accrue social capital
In: Information & Management, Jg. 60 (2023), Heft 7, Artikel 103838
2023Artikel/Aufsatz in ZeitschriftOA Hybrid
Angewandte Kognitionswissenschaft
Damit verbunden: 2 Publikation(en)
Titel in Englisch:
Social media information governance in multi-level organizations : How humanitarian organizations accrue social capital
Autor*in:
Fischer-Preßler, Diana
;
Marx, JulianUDE
LSF ID
59862
Sonstiges
der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
;
Bunker, Deborah
;
Stieglitz, StefanUDE
GND
1020953853
LSF ID
56892
ORCID
0000-0002-4366-1840ORCID iD
Sonstiges
der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
korrespondierende*r Autor*in
;
Fischbach, Kai
Erscheinungsjahr:
2023
Open Access?:
OA Hybrid
Scopus ID
Sprache des Textes:
Englisch
Schlagwort, Thema:
Dynamic and co-evolutionary process management ; Information governance ; Social capital ; Social media

Abstract in Englisch:

Strategic social media use positively influences organizational goals such as the long-term accrual of social capital, and thus social media information governance has become an increasingly important organizational objective. It is particularly important for humanitarian nongovernmental organizations (HNGOs), whose work relies on accurate and timely information regarding socially altruistic behavior (donations, volunteerism, etc.). Despite the potential of social media for increasing social capital, tensions in governing social media information across an organization's different operational levels (regional, intermediate, and national) pose a difficult challenge. Prominent governance frameworks offer little guidance, as their focus on control and incremental policymaking is largely incompatible with the processes, roles, standards, and metrics needed for managing self-governing social media. This study offers a notion of dynamic and co-evolutionary process management of multi-level organizations as a means of conceptualizing social media information governance for the accrual of organizational social capital. Based on interviews with members of HNGOs, this study reveals tensions that emerge within eight focus areas of accruing social capital in multi-level organizations, explains how dynamic process management can ease those tensions, and proposes corresponding strategy recommendations.