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Branded Lives explores the increasingly popular concept of employee
branding as a new form of employment relationship based on brand
representation. In doing so it examines the ways in which the
production and consumption of meaning at work are increasingly
mediated by the brand. This insightful collection draws on
qualitative empirical studies in a range of contexts to include
services, retail and manufacturing organizations. The contributors
explore the nuances of employee branding from various disciplinary
standpoints such as: organization studies, marketing, human
resource management and industrial relations. They take a critical
perspective on work and organizations and document the lived
experience of work and employment under branded conditions. In
investigating the extent to which a variety of organizational
strategies seek to mould workplace meanings and practices to
further build and sustain brand value and the effectiveness of
these in terms of employee responses, the authors question whether
the attempt to brand workers lives actually enhances or diminishes
the meaning and experience of work. Based on in-depth qualitative,
ethnographic and case study research this compendium will prove
essential for researchers working within the general area of
employment studies and specifically on branded employment and work.
Students in marketing, human resource management and management as
well as HR and marketing practitioners interested in employee
branding will also find this book relevant and stimulating.
Contributors include: S. Bennett, M. Buchanan-Oliver, J. Cushen, M.
Edwards, S. Hurrell, E. Kelan, C. Land, S. Russell, D. Scolarios,
M. Simms, V.V. Tarnovskaya, S. Taylor, H. Willmott
Branded Lives explores the increasingly popular concept of employee
branding as a new form of employment relationship based on brand
representation. In doing so it examines the ways in which the
production and consumption of meaning at work are increasingly
mediated by the brand. This insightful collection draws on
qualitative empirical studies in a range of contexts to include
services, retail and manufacturing organizations. The contributors
explore the nuances of employee branding from various disciplinary
standpoints such as: organization studies, marketing, human
resource management and industrial relations. They take a critical
perspective on work and organizations and document the lived
experience of work and employment under branded conditions. In
investigating the extent to which a variety of organizational
strategies seek to mould workplace meanings and practices to
further build and sustain brand value and the effectiveness of
these in terms of employee responses, the authors question whether
the attempt to brand workers lives actually enhances or diminishes
the meaning and experience of work. Based on in-depth qualitative,
ethnographic and case study research this compendium will prove
essential for researchers working within the general area of
employment studies and specifically on branded employment and work.
Students in marketing, human resource management and management as
well as HR and marketing practitioners interested in employee
branding will also find this book relevant and stimulating.
Contributors include: S. Bennett, M. Buchanan-Oliver, J. Cushen, M.
Edwards, S. Hurrell, E. Kelan, C. Land, S. Russell, D. Scolarios,
M. Simms, V.V. Tarnovskaya, S. Taylor, H. Willmott
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