Virtually Even: Status Equalizing in Distributed Organizations

成果类型:
Article; Early Access
署名作者:
Hinds, Rebecca; Valentine, Melissa; Decelles, Katy; Berg, Justin M.
署名单位:
Stanford University; University of Toronto; University of Michigan System; University of Michigan
刊物名称:
ORGANIZATION SCIENCE
ISSN/ISSBN:
1047-7039
DOI:
10.1287/orsc.2021.15846
发表日期:
2025
关键词:
status DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION Remote work QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
摘要:
In distributed organizations, perceived status differences between workers are ubiquitous and harmful. Yet research suggests that once they are formed, status beliefs in organizations become entrenched in hierarchies and are hard to dismantle. In an inductive qualitative study, we observed how established status differences between remote and in-person workers in distributed organizations dissolved during the initial stages of the COVID-19 pandemic when everyone began working remotely. We use these data to theorize a novel status-equalizing process through which remote workers came to see themselves on an equal playing field with their in-person peers. We theorize how this status equalizing occurred through workers' changing their in-person default use of technology-that is, their new behavior challenged embedded cultural practices that had treated the in-person workplace experience as the standard, normal, and valued perspective, implicitly guiding how employees used technology. Workers adopted new and more inclusive technology practices-including the use of asynchronous communication, greater codification of work, and virtual socializing-which resulted in remote workers perceiving new and more equal communication standards, access to information, and opportunity for social connection. As a result, these workers reported feeling less negatively stereotyped and treated more fairly in their virtual interactions with colleagues, fostering feelings of inclusion and deepening relationships across the previously established status divide. At a time when many organizations are grappling with the challenges of distributed, remote, and hybrid work, our research illuminates how inclusive technology practices can help nullify entrenched status imbalances.