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Boards and social media: the institutionalization of corporate social media policy

Shawna Porter (School of Management, Economics and Mathematics, King's University College, London, Canada)
Trevor Hunter (School of Management, Economics and Mathematics, King's University College, London, Canada)

Journal of Communication Management

ISSN: 1363-254X

Article publication date: 10 June 2022

Issue publication date: 2 August 2022

451

Abstract

Purpose

The authors' work examines whether coercive forces in the general regulatory environment lead to similarity in social media policy across industries and if memetic forces of industry-specific values and norms lead to greater similarity of social media policy within industries.

Design/methodology/approach

Corporate social media policies were analyzed using a convergent parallel mixed method design to assess and identify themes and similarities. Using an institutional theory lens, this paper examines whether coercive forces in the general regulatory environment lead to similarities in social media policies across industries, and if mimetic forces from industry-specific norms lead to greater similarity of social media policies within industries. Findings suggest that industry-specific, institutional field-level mimetic forces have a greater effect on social media policy isomorphism than environmental-level coercive forces. This study represents the first assessment of corporate social media policies across organizations and industries.

Findings

Findings suggest that industry-specific, institutional field-level mimetic forces have a greater effect on social media policy isomorphism than environmental-level coercive forces.

Research limitations/implications

Limitations related to sampling were primarily related to policy collection. To deal with these limitations, the sample was planned to allow for the inclusion of both randomly selected North American companies from the Fortune 500 list and another random selection of 35 companies from within a convenience sample of 100 North American firms who had a publicly available social media policy online.

Practical implications

The authors' research speaks to management, directors and researchers who work with policy, governance or risk management as the authors demonstrate the effect regulatory and normative institutions have on social media policies: stakeholders within and without given industries are forcing firms to develop legitimacy-providing social media policies by penalizing those that do not. The authors' findings demonstrate that firms respond to the 21st Century potential corporate risk of unsanctioned social media communications by developing corporate social media policies with similar themes. By identifying the themes common in corporate social media policies, the authors have identified best practices constituting a risk mitigation tool for boards.

Originality/value

The authors' approach is innovative in focus and approach. First, using an institutional theory lens, the authors assess the influence of regulatory and memetic forces on social media policies as a formal structure within an institutional field. Second, the authors' approach includes the first major assessment of North American social media policies across a wide array of organizations and industries, adding to understanding about approaches currently used to manage increased social media use in the workplace.

Keywords

Citation

Porter, S. and Hunter, T. (2022), "Boards and social media: the institutionalization of corporate social media policy", Journal of Communication Management, Vol. 26 No. 3, pp. 254-270. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCOM-06-2021-0066

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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