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The dynamics of organisational silence: silence creation, transmission, and sustenance in project-based organisations

The dynamics of organisational silence: silence creation, transmission, and sustenance in project-based organisations
The dynamics of organisational silence: silence creation, transmission, and sustenance in project-based organisations
Despite a growing interest in understanding organisational silence across various professional contexts, extant literature reveals no empirical examination of how organisational silence is transmitted and sustained. Studies have focused on examining antecedents to organisational silence and its relationship with other organisational variables, predominantly in the education, health, and service sectors. This study, however, adopts a holistic approach to studying organisational silence by examining how silence is created, transmitted and sustained in project-based organisations. A qualitative analysis of transcripts was conducted, from 35 professionals working in D1K1 construction firms in Ghana. The study found twelve major themes of contextual factors that created organisational silence, which were broadly categorised into social, cultural, and management factors. Employees’ socioeconomic circumstances, institutional and structural barriers, and cultural factors, both national and organisational culture, sustained organisational silence. The results also showed that silence is a learned behaviour, transmitted to new employees through the process of ‘Assimilation’ or as new employees adapt to organisational systems that constrained their behaviour. Broadly, organisational systems, cultural, and social factors accounted for creating, transmitting, and sustaining organisational silence. These overlapping results imply that contextual factors that create silence may also sustain it. This study provides a holistic investigation of organisational silence, examining how it is created, transmitted and sustained in an underexplored context of project-based organisations. Examining organisational silence in all three aspects is not only novel but can shed a new perspective in understanding the recurring problem of poor knowledge transfer and management in project-based organisations.
Silence, Organisational silence, Project-based organisations
Amponsah-Asante, Leonora Nana Adwoa
cd67b51d-b6d6-4b43-bdf3-d36ee47543be
Ashleigh, Melanie
f2a64ca7-435b-4ad7-8db5-33b735766e46
Dawson, Ian
dff1b440-6c83-4354-92b6-04809460b01a
Amponsah-Asante, Leonora Nana Adwoa
cd67b51d-b6d6-4b43-bdf3-d36ee47543be
Ashleigh, Melanie
f2a64ca7-435b-4ad7-8db5-33b735766e46
Dawson, Ian
dff1b440-6c83-4354-92b6-04809460b01a

Amponsah-Asante, Leonora Nana Adwoa, Ashleigh, Melanie and Dawson, Ian (2025) The dynamics of organisational silence: silence creation, transmission, and sustenance in project-based organisations. Academy of Management Annual Meeting 2025, , Copenhagen, Denmark. 25 - 29 Jul 2025.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Poster)

Abstract

Despite a growing interest in understanding organisational silence across various professional contexts, extant literature reveals no empirical examination of how organisational silence is transmitted and sustained. Studies have focused on examining antecedents to organisational silence and its relationship with other organisational variables, predominantly in the education, health, and service sectors. This study, however, adopts a holistic approach to studying organisational silence by examining how silence is created, transmitted and sustained in project-based organisations. A qualitative analysis of transcripts was conducted, from 35 professionals working in D1K1 construction firms in Ghana. The study found twelve major themes of contextual factors that created organisational silence, which were broadly categorised into social, cultural, and management factors. Employees’ socioeconomic circumstances, institutional and structural barriers, and cultural factors, both national and organisational culture, sustained organisational silence. The results also showed that silence is a learned behaviour, transmitted to new employees through the process of ‘Assimilation’ or as new employees adapt to organisational systems that constrained their behaviour. Broadly, organisational systems, cultural, and social factors accounted for creating, transmitting, and sustaining organisational silence. These overlapping results imply that contextual factors that create silence may also sustain it. This study provides a holistic investigation of organisational silence, examining how it is created, transmitted and sustained in an underexplored context of project-based organisations. Examining organisational silence in all three aspects is not only novel but can shed a new perspective in understanding the recurring problem of poor knowledge transfer and management in project-based organisations.

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More information

Published date: 25 July 2025
Venue - Dates: Academy of Management Annual Meeting 2025, , Copenhagen, Denmark, 2025-07-25 - 2025-07-29
Keywords: Silence, Organisational silence, Project-based organisations

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506239
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506239
PURE UUID: 1fa37713-cb17-4e5e-b8e8-7eac01eacfce
ORCID for Leonora Nana Adwoa Amponsah-Asante: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4001-6723
ORCID for Melanie Ashleigh: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0583-0922
ORCID for Ian Dawson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0555-9682

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 30 Oct 2025 17:52
Last modified: 31 Oct 2025 03:01

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Contributors

Author: Leonora Nana Adwoa Amponsah-Asante ORCID iD
Author: Ian Dawson ORCID iD

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