From event management to managing events: A process perspective on organized and unexpected field-level events
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Chapter › peer-review
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Organisation von Temporalität und Temporärem . ed. / Jochen Koch; Jörg Sydow. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, 2013. p. 193-226 (Managementforschung; Vol. 23).
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Chapter › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - From event management to managing events
T2 - A process perspective on organized and unexpected field-level events
AU - Müller-Seitz, Gordon
AU - Schüßler, Elke
PY - 2013/8/26
Y1 - 2013/8/26
N2 - In social sciences, events are researched typically as unplanned occurrences rather than as the outcome or target of deliberate management activities. Even though a number of streams of management research have examined how events influence organizations and organizational fields, the notion of event management is often equated with project management and mainly debated in professional publications. In the present paper, we propose a strategic perspective of managing events by connecting the vast body of research on unexpected environmental events such as crises or risks with emerging research on organized, sometimes field-configuring events such as trade fairs and conferences. By understanding events as sequences of overlapping activities and processes that affect organizations and fields as much as being (re)produced by them, we compare and contrast these two strands of literature in order to evaluate the role of management in different phases of an event’s course. We find that both strands discuss similar dimensions of event enactment and consequences, but that each strand neglects certain aspects of how events can be managed because of its specific theoretical foundations. We argue that the literature on organized events should cover the possibilities for participating organizations to prepare for and learn from these venues, whereas research on unexpected events should become more sensitive to the micro-political dimension of event enactment.
AB - In social sciences, events are researched typically as unplanned occurrences rather than as the outcome or target of deliberate management activities. Even though a number of streams of management research have examined how events influence organizations and organizational fields, the notion of event management is often equated with project management and mainly debated in professional publications. In the present paper, we propose a strategic perspective of managing events by connecting the vast body of research on unexpected environmental events such as crises or risks with emerging research on organized, sometimes field-configuring events such as trade fairs and conferences. By understanding events as sequences of overlapping activities and processes that affect organizations and fields as much as being (re)produced by them, we compare and contrast these two strands of literature in order to evaluate the role of management in different phases of an event’s course. We find that both strands discuss similar dimensions of event enactment and consequences, but that each strand neglects certain aspects of how events can be managed because of its specific theoretical foundations. We argue that the literature on organized events should cover the possibilities for participating organizations to prepare for and learn from these venues, whereas research on unexpected events should become more sensitive to the micro-political dimension of event enactment.
KW - Management studies
KW - Crisis Management
KW - Event Management
KW - Field-Configuring Events
KW - Project Management
KW - Rare Events
KW - Risk Management
KW - Crisis Management
KW - Event Management
KW - Field-Configuring Events
KW - Project Management
KW - Rare Events
KW - Risk Management
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/7258cb7a-75b8-362d-bba8-c1f819fa3652/
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-658-02998-2_6
DO - 10.1007/978-3-658-02998-2_6
M3 - Chapter
SN - 978-3-658-02997-5
T3 - Managementforschung
SP - 193
EP - 226
BT - Organisation von Temporalität und Temporärem
A2 - Koch, Jochen
A2 - Sydow, Jörg
PB - Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH
ER -