Richness, power cues and email text

The paper presents a study that assesses the level of richness in electronic-mediated communication by taking into account its text-based attributes. Though a key feature of email, only limited research has focused on the text-based attributes of email messages. The underlying assumption is that there is an organisational context that intertwines with email message texts. The study explores the extent to which these attributes differ among senders at different organisational layers. Using textual and deconstruction analysis, it analysed a series of email messages distributed within two academic departments over a period of several months, and found that email, as a communication medium, signals rather than alleviates hierarchical differences. Therefore, even though email is often presented as a lean medium, the way text-based messages are constructed may convey the social cues that are traditionally used to determine status differences in organisations. The study argues that email is a richer communication medium than is reflected in the scale of information richness theory.

[1]  R. Daft,et al.  Media Symbolism, Media Richness, and Media Choice in Organizations , 1987 .

[2]  M. Spitzer,et al.  Writing style in computer conferences , 1986, IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication.

[3]  Joanne D. Martin Deconstructing Organizational Taboos: The Suppression of Gender Conflict in Organizations , 1990 .

[4]  Allen S. Lee Electronic Mail as a Medium for Rich Communication: An Empirical Investigation Using Hermeneutic Interpretation , 1994, MIS Q..

[5]  G. DeSanctis,et al.  Electronic Communication and Changing Organizational Forms , 1995 .

[6]  Richard L. Daft,et al.  Organizational information requirements, media richness and structural design , 1986 .

[7]  Russell Spears,et al.  COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION, DEINDIVIDUATION AND GROUP DECISION-MAKING , 1991 .

[8]  John F. Affisco,et al.  Task and technology fit: a comparison of two technologies for synchronous and asynchronous group communication , 1999, Inf. Manag..

[9]  Lee Sproull,et al.  Computers, Networks and Work. , 1991 .

[10]  Janet Fulk,et al.  Organizational Colleagues, Media Richness, and Electronic Mail , 1991 .

[11]  J. Sherblom Direction, Function, and Signature in Electronic Mail , 1988 .

[12]  M. Lynne Markus,et al.  Technological or Social Utility? Unraveling Explanations of Email, Vmail, and Fax Use , 1993, Inf. Soc..

[13]  Naomi Craft,et al.  Talking from 9 to 5 , 1995 .

[14]  Cynthia Mathis Beath,et al.  The Contradictory Structure of Systems Development Methodologies: Deconstructing the IS-User Relationship in Information Engineering , 1994, Inf. Syst. Res..

[15]  Lee Sproull,et al.  Connections: New Ways of Working in the Networked Organization , 1991 .

[16]  Nava Pliskin,et al.  The impact of e-mail on the evolution of a virtual community during a strike , 1997, Inf. Manag..

[17]  Nava Pliskin,et al.  Diffusion of E-mail: An organisational learning perspective , 1996, Inf. Manag..

[18]  Russell Spears,et al.  Computer-Mediated Communication, De-Individuation and Group Decision-Making , 1991, Int. J. Man Mach. Stud..

[19]  Barrett S. Caldwell,et al.  Social isolation and integration in electronic environments , 1993, Behav. Inf. Technol..

[20]  M. Markus Electronic Mail as the Medium of Managerial Choice , 1994 .

[21]  I. A. Rudy,et al.  A critical review of research on electronic mail , 1996 .

[22]  JoAnne Yates,et al.  Knee-jerk Anti-LOOPism and other E-mail Phenomena: Oral, Written, and Electronic Patterns in Computer-Mediated Communication , 1993 .

[23]  Lee Sproull,et al.  Reducing social context cues: electronic mail in organizational communication , 1986 .

[24]  Sara B. Kiesler,et al.  The Equalization Phenomenon: Status Effects in Computer-Mediated and Face-to-Face Decision-Making Groups , 1991, Hum. Comput. Interact..

[25]  S. Kiesler The hidden messages in computer networks , 1986 .

[26]  Douglas E. Shook,et al.  RELATIONSHIPS OF JOB CATEGORIES AND ORGANIZATIONAL LEVELS TO USE OF COMMUNICATION CHANNELS, INCLUDING ELECTRONIC MAIL: A META-ANALYSIS AND EXTENSION* , 1990 .

[27]  Richard E. Yellen,et al.  Extraversion and introversion in electronically-supported meetings , 1995, Inf. Manag..