Brands at Work: The Search for Meaning in Mundane Work

Matthew J. Brannan, Elizabeth Parsons, Vincenza Priola

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

53 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Brand scholarship traditionally resides within the marketing literature and focuses on organizations’ external relationships with customers. However, increasing critical attention in organization studies has focused on the brand in order to understand its impact on the internal dynamics of employment relations in contemporary organizations. Drawing on an ethnography of frontline service work in an IT consultancy call centre, we explore the brand as an internal organizational resource sustaining the process of employee meaning-making activities. Documenting the ‘work of the brand’, we outline what the brand offers both employees and employers and, in doing so, we theorize the brand at work as a connecting mechanism between processes of identity formation/re-formation and regulation. While employees are encouraged to internalize particular brand meanings (in this case prestige, success and quality), we found that they often willingly buy into these intended brand meanings as a palliative to ‘cope’ with mundane work. In this way brand meanings are central to producing a self-disciplining form of employee subjectivity.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)29-53
Number of pages25
JournalOrganization Studies
Volume36
Issue number1
Early online date12 Dec 2014
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2015
Externally publishedYes

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