Summary
Defensiveness is often implicated in systemic organisational failures to explain why early warning signs were ignored and organisational resilience was compromised. But how does an organisation become defensive? The authors of this study propose that defensiveness can arise as a response to contradictory work demands.
Content
The research focuses on UK hospital staff tasked with responding to criticism online (herein complaint handlers). It examines these responses to criticism using a mixed methods explanatory sequential design. Six defensive tactics were reliably identified: redirecting patients to other channels, evading issues, psychologising concerns, invalidating concerns as incomplete, closing the feedback episode, and individualising concerns with bespoke workarounds. These defensive tactics were generally associated with less organisational learning and were sometimes viewed as unhelpful.
To explain these results, the authors introduce the complaint handler’s bind: staff are tasked with responding to complaints without a viable pathway for organisational learning and an implicit injunction against voicing this dilemma. This demand-control double bind unwittingly gives staff little alternative but to be defensive. Future research, the authors conclude, needs to conceptualise defensiveness as sometimes a symptom rather than a cause of problems in organisational learning.
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