Post-failure impression management: A typology of entrepreneurs’ public narratives after business closure
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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In: Human Relations , Vol. 74, No. 2, 01.02.2021, p. 286-318.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Post-failure impression management
T2 - A typology of entrepreneurs’ public narratives after business closure
AU - Kibler, Ewald
AU - Mandl, Christoph
AU - Farny, Steffen
AU - Salmivaara, Virva
N1 - The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. We gratefully acknowledge the financial support received from the Academy of Finland.
PY - 2021/2/1
Y1 - 2021/2/1
N2 - What are the strategies entrepreneurs apply to present business closure to public audiences? Most entrepreneurs choose to communicate venture failure publicly so as to foster a favorable impression of failure, in effect engaging in impression management to maintain and/or repair their professional reputation for future career actions. To date, however, the focus of most research has been on managing failure within organizational settings, where organizational actors can interact closely with their audiences. We know little about entrepreneurs’ strategies in presenting failure to public audiences in cases where they have limited opportunities for interaction. In response to this, we present an analysis of public business-closure statements to generate a typology of five venture-failure narratives—Triumph, Harmony, Embrace, Offset, and Show—that explains entrepreneurs’ distinct sets of impression-management strategies to portray failure in public. In conclusion, we theorize from our public venture-failure typology to discuss how our work advances understanding of the interaction between organizational failure, impression management, and entrepreneurial narratives.
AB - What are the strategies entrepreneurs apply to present business closure to public audiences? Most entrepreneurs choose to communicate venture failure publicly so as to foster a favorable impression of failure, in effect engaging in impression management to maintain and/or repair their professional reputation for future career actions. To date, however, the focus of most research has been on managing failure within organizational settings, where organizational actors can interact closely with their audiences. We know little about entrepreneurs’ strategies in presenting failure to public audiences in cases where they have limited opportunities for interaction. In response to this, we present an analysis of public business-closure statements to generate a typology of five venture-failure narratives—Triumph, Harmony, Embrace, Offset, and Show—that explains entrepreneurs’ distinct sets of impression-management strategies to portray failure in public. In conclusion, we theorize from our public venture-failure typology to discuss how our work advances understanding of the interaction between organizational failure, impression management, and entrepreneurial narratives.
KW - Business closure
KW - entrepreneurs
KW - impression management
KW - latent semantic analysis
KW - organizational failure
KW - typology
KW - Management studies
KW - Entrepreneurship
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85078113340&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0018726719899465
DO - 10.1177/0018726719899465
M3 - Journal articles
AN - SCOPUS:85078113340
VL - 74
SP - 286
EP - 318
JO - Human Relations
JF - Human Relations
SN - 0018-7267
IS - 2
ER -