DET SKA VARA LÄTT ATT GÖRA RÄTT
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Date
2022-08-01
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Abstract
Internal communication within public organizations is a vital part in making them function 
and to reach organizational strategic goals, however it is also somewhat forgotten. This is 
partly due to the glorification of external communication, but also beacuse external 
communication being easier to measure and its visibility outside of the organization.
Our aim was to explore how first line managers regard their communicative responsibilities 
and how they view the conditions they are working under to fulfill this responsibility. The 
questions we’ve aimed to answer are how first line managers' knowledge and presumptions 
revolving internal communication and their communicative responsibility, how first line 
managers work with internal communication in their operations and if the managers 
experience any need of support to be able to improve their internal communication.
We have conducted five semi-structured interviews with first line managers in Gothenburg 
elderly, health, and social care. The main results of the study were that the managers do have 
quite the understanding of the importance of internal communication although they 
sometimes struggled to put it into words. They struggled to achieve sensemaking 
communication in an organization that still clings on to a view of communication as a transfer 
of information, especially higher up in the organizational hierarchy. Of course the managers 
did not provide uniform answers, we believe that factors such as age and years in managerial 
position affects their view of communication in general and internal communication in 
particular.
Our results can provide future researchers with a basic understanding of the challenges first 
line managers face in trying to achieve dialogue and sensemaking communication, and trying 
to turn the headwind they are sometimes working in into tailwind.
We propose researching how the CVC model might be used to expose the complexity of 
communication, and if that might contribute to a higher status in the technostructure. Another 
interesting field of research would be on how to design educations in communication for first 
line managers in the elderly care.
We can conclude that there is a long way to go until our studied organization truly becomes a 
communicative organization, but as more and more first line managers climb up in the 
organizational hierarchy this might change in a not too distant future.
Keywords: Internal communication, communicative organization, first line managers, elderly 
and social care.
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Keywords
Internkommunikation, äldreomsorg, kommunikativ organisation,  första linjens chefer, enhetschefer