TY - JOUR
T1 - Putting the Spotlight on 'Tech Theater'
T2 - A Model for Unmasking Protagonist Tech Companies
AU - Pedersen, Carsten Lund
AU - Hartmann, Rasmus Koss
N1 - Epub ahead of print. Published online: 16 August 2024.
PY - 2024/8/16
Y1 - 2024/8/16
N2 - Drawing on the concept of “techwashing”, i.e. claiming to be more technologically proficient than you really are, we here conceptualize and explain a marked tendency in practice for firms to expand on this label, attempting to describe themselves as good tech companies , i.e. technology companies that serve a greater good and act in accordance with ethical values and societal norms . Our conceptual framework introduces the ‘ tech theater’ label and describes the good tech company role that is being played and how it is being perceived by the outside world. We explicate how the so-called “tech theatre” plays out, i.e. the disconnect between a communicated and enacted corporate identity, the mismatch of which is grounded in exaggerated ‘good tech company’ aims and claims . We posit that this helps us to understand the behavior of many leading tech companies, as the narrative of good tech companies comprises an important explanatory mechanism of their behavior. In so doing, we seek to contribute to the burgeoning literature on the theatrics of tech companies, and help guide technical managers out of the theater.
AB - Drawing on the concept of “techwashing”, i.e. claiming to be more technologically proficient than you really are, we here conceptualize and explain a marked tendency in practice for firms to expand on this label, attempting to describe themselves as good tech companies , i.e. technology companies that serve a greater good and act in accordance with ethical values and societal norms . Our conceptual framework introduces the ‘ tech theater’ label and describes the good tech company role that is being played and how it is being perceived by the outside world. We explicate how the so-called “tech theatre” plays out, i.e. the disconnect between a communicated and enacted corporate identity, the mismatch of which is grounded in exaggerated ‘good tech company’ aims and claims . We posit that this helps us to understand the behavior of many leading tech companies, as the narrative of good tech companies comprises an important explanatory mechanism of their behavior. In so doing, we seek to contribute to the burgeoning literature on the theatrics of tech companies, and help guide technical managers out of the theater.
KW - Tech theater
KW - Teachwashing
KW - Ethicswashing
KW - Hypocrisy
KW - Tech theater
KW - Techwashing
KW - Ethicswashing
KW - Hypocrisy
U2 - 10.1109/EMR.2024.3443338
DO - 10.1109/EMR.2024.3443338
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0360-8581
JO - IEEE Engineering Management Review
JF - IEEE Engineering Management Review
ER -