Impression management and the use of procedures at the Ritz-Carlton: Moral standards and dramaturgical discipline

This article uses Goffman's work on moral standards and dramaturgical discipline to inform a case study featuring a hotel's procedures for guaranteeing reliable impression management. Through an analysis of archival material and 18 interviews at two sites, we developed four categories of i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCommunication studies Vol. 51; no. 4; pp. 404 - 414
Main Authors Dillard, Courtney, Browning, Larry D., Sitkin, Sim B., Sutcliffe, Kathleen M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published West Lafayette Taylor & Francis Group 01.12.2000
Central States Communication Association
Central States Speech Association
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Summary:This article uses Goffman's work on moral standards and dramaturgical discipline to inform a case study featuring a hotel's procedures for guaranteeing reliable impression management. Through an analysis of archival material and 18 interviews at two sites, we developed four categories of impression management behaviors. Viewing our analysis through Goffman's lens, we argue that procedures codify moral standards thereby offering employees specific means by which they can enact dramaturgical discipline. In our discussion we suggest several ways in which our case study reinforces and expands Goffman's original concepts. Our findings are (a) procedures can function as codified moral standards within the organizational setting, (b) procedures can serve as the basis for employee enactment of dramaturgical discipline, (c) the use of databases in collecting and storing information offers a new wrinkle to impression management theory, and (d) the use of incentives to pacify guests expands the defensive practices available to those engaging in impression management.
ISSN:1051-0974
1745-1035
DOI:10.1080/10510970009388534