TY - JOUR
T1 - Institutional Predictors of the Adoption of Employee Social Media Policies
AU - El Ouirdi, Asma
AU - El Ouirdi, Mariam
AU - Segers, Jesse
AU - Pais, Ivana
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - The importance of employee social media policies is recognized in today’s increasingly connected organizations. Yet these
policies are adopted at varying rates in different sectors and geographical regions. In the present study, an institutional
approach was employed to investigate the predictors of the adoption of employee social media policies by organizations.
Six predictors were examined, namely, organizational size, industry, and the national culture dimensions of power distance,
individualism, masculinity, and uncertainty avoidance. Results of a logistic regression analysis of 558 online survey responses
from human resource professionals worldwide showed that all six predictors were associated with the adoption of employee
social media policies. These findings have implications for multinational companies, as well as for policy makers in the
legal, human resources, information technologies, and public relations departments who are the primary parties involved in
establishing employee social media policies. Study limitations are presented and future research avenues are suggested.
AB - The importance of employee social media policies is recognized in today’s increasingly connected organizations. Yet these
policies are adopted at varying rates in different sectors and geographical regions. In the present study, an institutional
approach was employed to investigate the predictors of the adoption of employee social media policies by organizations.
Six predictors were examined, namely, organizational size, industry, and the national culture dimensions of power distance,
individualism, masculinity, and uncertainty avoidance. Results of a logistic regression analysis of 558 online survey responses
from human resource professionals worldwide showed that all six predictors were associated with the adoption of employee
social media policies. These findings have implications for multinational companies, as well as for policy makers in the
legal, human resources, information technologies, and public relations departments who are the primary parties involved in
establishing employee social media policies. Study limitations are presented and future research avenues are suggested.
KW - employee social media policies, employee social media guidelines, social media governance, institutional theory, national culture, cultural dimensions theory
KW - employee social media policies, employee social media guidelines, social media governance, institutional theory, national culture, cultural dimensions theory
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/250802
U2 - 10.1177/0270467615623885
DO - 10.1177/0270467615623885
M3 - Article
SN - 0270-4676
VL - 35
SP - 134
EP - 144
JO - BULLETIN OF SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY & SOCIETY
JF - BULLETIN OF SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY & SOCIETY
ER -