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http://hum.sagepub.com/ Human Relations
http://hum.sagepub.com/content/58/12/1545
The online version of this article can be found at:
DOI: 10.1177/0018726705061317 2005 58: 1545Human Relations
Joep P. Cornelissen, Mario Kafouros and Andrew R. Lockdevelop and select organizational metaphors
Metaphorical images of organization: How organizational researchers
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time define and characterize the field (e.g. Barley & Kunda, 1992; Morgan,
1980); the development of interest in the process of theorizing, particularly
in those cognitive processes underlying it (Weick, 1989); and the develop-
ment of interest in the nature of language for (re)presenting organizational
life, particularly the incidence and function of metaphor (Daft & Wiginton,
1979; Oswick et al., 2002). Although these trends overlap in various regards,
the article tightens their association by explicating the role of metaphor in
the thinking and behavior of organizational theorists and researchers. More
specifically, the article clarifies how metaphor, and the imagination that
follows from it, is used within organizational theorizing and what this
implies for its continued use within organization theory and research.
Specifically, the purpose of our analysis is 1) to clarify how organiz-ational researchers circumscribe and understand the world of organizations
through the use of metaphor, 2) to document the heuristics of metaphor that
they use in doing so, and 3) to suggest, on the basis of this documentation,
how metaphor can be used to its fullest effect. The latter suggestion is
evidently more prescriptive in nature and moves beyond the descriptive data
presented to discuss missed opportunities and potentialities in the heuristic
inferences used by researchers in order to probe more deeply and generate
new insights into the world of organizations. This is not, however, the central
thrust of our analysis. Rather, our major emphasis is on providing a histori-cal and empirical overview of the past and contemporary metaphors in use
over the period 1993–2003, and to delineate the heuristics (i.e. the judg-
mental rules in producing and selecting metaphors) that have guided their
development, selection and use. We focus particularly on the dominant
metaphors within organizational theorizing and research and by looking at
their heuristics attempt to explain their prevalence and continued use.
In what follows, we will first contextualize the role of metaphor in
organizational theorizing, before moving on to a more specific and detaileddiscussion of prior work that has speculated on the heuristics of metaphor.
From this discussion the article then proceeds with a survey of the use of
metaphor in organizational theorizing and research over the past period
(1993–2003) in order to infer and document empirically the heuristics-in-use
in organizational theorizing and research. The results of the empirical survey
and the uncovered heuristics-in-use are discussed and are also used to formu-
late a number of governing rules for the selection, adoption and continued
use of metaphor in organizational theorizing and research. We conclude with
a discussion of theory and research implications, positioning the suggestedgoverning rules for the use of metaphor within the wider realm of organiz-
ation theory and suggesting research applications.
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Metaphor in organization theory
The trends indicated at the beginning of this article suggest a marked increase
of interest in recent years in the paradigms, schemes and metaphors thatorganizational theorists and researchers work from in their theorizing and
research endeavors (Bacharach, 1989; Morgan, 1980; Weick, 1989).
Although this interest comes in various forms (see Gioia & Pitre, 1990) and
reflects wider meta-theoretical issues around theorizing and research, our
concern in this regard is with the specific use of metaphor within the process
of organizational theorizing. This concern is given in by previous work
(Morgan, 1980, 1983; Weick, 1989) which has suggested that metaphors
play a crucial role within theorizing, that theorists cannot really surpass themand that theorists and researchers therefore need to be more mindful of their
use and the images that they evoke in such a way that they become ‘more
deliberate in the formation of these images and more respectful of represen-
tations and efforts to improve them’ (Weick, 1989: 529). This view stands
in sharp contrast to an earlier view of metaphor as a derivative issue of only
secondary importance. That is, metaphor was thought to be either a deviant
form of expression or a nonessential literary figure of speech (e.g. Pinder &
Bourgeois, 1982). In either case, it was generally not regarded as cognitively
fundamental. This denial of any serious cognitive role for metaphor was prin-cipally the result of the longstanding popularity of strict ‘objectivist’ assump-
tions about language and meaning. The objectivist view suggests that the
world has its structure, and that our concepts and propositions, to be correct,
must correspond to that structure. Metaphors, then, may exist as cognitive
processes of our understanding, but their meaning must be reducible to some
set of literal concepts and propositions (Bourgeois & Pinder, 1983; Pinder
& Bourgeois, 1982).
In marked contrast with this ‘objectivist’ view, Morgan (1980, 1983)forcefully demonstrated that metaphors involve a cognitively fundamental
way of structuring our understanding of organizations as a new meaning is
created through the creative juxtaposition of concepts (e.g. ‘organization’
and ‘machine’) that previously were not interrelated. Ever since, a whole
range of theories and frameworks have been proposed (e.g. the ‘transfor-
mational’ model, Tsoukas, 1991, and the ‘domains-interaction’ model,
Cornelissen, 2004, 2005) that have both advanced and challenged Morgan’s
characterization of metaphor as proceeding ‘through assertions that subject
A is, or is like B, the processes of comparison, substitution and interactionbetween the images of A and B acting as generators of new meaning’
(Morgan, 1980: 610). Tsoukas (1991, 1993), for example, suggests that a
metaphor, as a figurative play of words, can be used in a creative manner to
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reveal ‘literal’ structural similarities between concepts that were not salient
before, and may as such provide for ‘enriching’ and ‘insightful’ new under-
standings of organizations. Cornelissen (2004, 2005) argued that metaphor-
ical language sets up a creative and novel correlation of two concepts which
forces us to make semantic leaps to create an understanding of the infor-
mation that comes off it. The notion of semantic leaps, then, points to certain
‘non-compositional’ processes that are at work in metaphor, that evoke the
imaginative capacities of meaning construction, and that eventually lead to
the production of a new, emergent meaning (see also Fauconnier & Turner,
1998; Tourangeau & Rips, 1991). Accordingly, in Cornelissen’s view,
metaphors are cognitively fundamental in themselves – a metaphor creates
new, emergent meaning that is not compositional; instead, there is newmeaning constituted in and through the metaphor (e.g. ‘an organization
having certain identity traits in its strategies, values and practices that give
it its specificity, stability and coherence’ in case of the ‘organizational
identity’ metaphor) that is not a composition of meanings that can be found
in either the target or source concepts per se.
Beyond this discussion of how metaphors ‘work’, the organizational
literature on metaphors has also drawn attention to further analytical
distinctions; primarily between ‘live’ and ‘dead’ metaphors, and between
‘root’ metaphorical schemata versus specific ‘surface’ metaphoricallanguage and concepts (Alvesson, 1993; Morgan, 1980; Oswick et al.,
2002). Tsoukas (1991), for example, pointed to the difference between
‘novel’ or what are sometimes understood as ‘live’ metaphorical word
combinations (e.g. ‘organizational identity’) versus ‘conventionalized’ or
‘dead’ metaphors (e.g. ‘organizational structure’); language and concepts
that have become so familiar and so habituated in theoretical vocabulary
that scholars have often ceased to be aware of the metaphorical underpin-
nings (see also Hunt & Menon, 1995; Inns, 2002; Sandelands & Srivatsan,1993). Alvesson (1993) and Morgan (1980) have drawn a distinction
between ‘root’ or ‘second-order’ metaphorical schemata as schools of
thought that filter and structure a researcher’s perceptions of the subject of
study (e.g. ‘social phenomena as information processing systems’) (e.g. Daft
& Weick, 1984) which then pre-structure and give rise to more specific ‘first-
order’ metaphorical concepts (e.g. ‘organizational memory’) (e.g. Walsh &
Ungson, 1991) with the latter serving as more concrete frameworks for
scholarship and analysis. Inns (2002), finally, in her review of writings on
metaphor within organization theory, suggested that many authors not onlyexplore and use metaphors differently (for example as a qualitative research
tool, as a generative tool for creative thinking, as a pedagogical or
communicative tool) but also differ in terms of whether they critically
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engage with them. At the level of organization theory, then, Inns’ review
suggests that organizational researchers primarily appear to use metaphors
in their theory building as ways of ‘making the unfamiliar familiar’ (akin to
Inns’s view of metaphor as an explicatory teaching or communicative tool)
or as a means of generating novel understandings that push the boundaries
of the body of knowledge on organizations (cf. Inns’s view of metaphor as
a generative tool for creative thinking) (see also Oswick et al., 2002; Schön,
1993, for a similar discussion). The latter generative capacity of metaphor
to create new ways of seeing, conceptualizing and understanding organiz-
ational phenomena is indeed widely acknowledged within the scholarly
organizational community (Alvesson, 1993; Chia, 1996; Cornelissen, 2004,
2005; Grant & Oswick, 1996; Inns, 2002; Morgan, 1996; Tsoukas, 1991,1993).
In the present study, we accommodate the aforementioned analytical
distinctions (between ‘live’ and ‘dead’ metaphors, between ‘root’ metaphor-
ical schemata and ‘surface’ metaphorical language, and between ‘explicatory’
and ‘generative’ uses of metaphor) and define metaphor as a linguistic utter-
ance in which the combination of words is literally deviant in the sense that
terms that have originally or conventionally been employed in relation to a
different concept or domain are applied and connected to a target term or
concept within organization theory (cf. Cameron, 1999; Gibbs, 1996; Steen,1999). We also assume that metaphors as linguistic utterances reflect and
intimate cognitively fundamental meanings about organizations and organiz-
ational life; and that these meanings can be traced and inferred through a
cognitive linguistic analysis. In other words, we consider metaphor as ‘a
salient and pervasive cognitive process that links conceptualization and
language’ (Fauconnier, 1997: 168). Within our study, we focus as mentioned
on the extent to which metaphorical language features within organization
theory and on the concepts and referent domains (e.g. economics, sports,machines, systems) that have cognitively been connected within organiz-
ational metaphors. Our underlying aim here is to reveal whether the develop-
ment of metaphorical language within organizational theory reflects certain
heuristics by which metaphors in organization theory are developed, selected
and accommodated within the practice of organizational theorizing and
research.
Focusing on the heuristics of metaphor
The little, if any, research so far into the heuristics of metaphor is particu-
larly problematic for, as Weick (1989) already suggested, an understanding
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of the judgmental rules or heuristics in relation to metaphor would aid theor-
ists and researchers in their selection and use of them. Armed with such
heuristics organizational researchers would be able to select those metaphors
that not only guide them towards plausible paths to follow (and away from
implausible paths), but also generally break new ground (rather than scout
old ground for neglected gems) and lead to conceptual advances that were
inconceivable before.
Heuristics are compiled hindsight: they are nuggets of wisdom which,
if only we’d had them sooner, would have led us to our present state
much faster. This means that some of the blind alleys we pursued
would have been avoided, and some of the powerful discoveries wouldhave been made sooner.
(Lenat, 1982: 223)
The word ‘heuristic’ is often used in two senses: as a cognitive judg-
mental or inferential process, and as a cognitive effect whereby it refers to a
conceptual advance or improved decision-making (cf. Kahneman, 2002). In
our usage here, the word ‘heuristic’ refers to the cognitive judgmental process
that researchers engage in when they conjoin concepts in metaphor, judging
them as fitting and as potentially revelatory of the organizational subjectunder investigation. The purpose of our survey of the organizational litera-
ture (in the following section) is to elicit the heuristics that have so far been
used by researchers in developing and selecting metaphors, and in doing so
we attempt to answer, through our metaphorical lens, the fundamental
question of how and on what grounds organizational researchers choose to
represent and circumscribe the world of organizations.
In other words, uncovering these heuristics may give us an insight into
why certain past and contemporary metaphors as ‘organizational identity’,‘organization as theatre’ and ‘organization as machine’ have found their way
into organizational theory, and have sparked off further inquiry, whereas
other metaphors have not (e.g. ‘organization as chocolate bar’ or ‘organiz-
ation as soap bubble’) (Cornelissen, 2002; Tsoukas, 1991) or have lost
appeal after initial popularity (e.g. ‘organizational decision-making as
garbage can’). Previous work on metaphor in the organizational literature
has only paid scant attention to these questions.
In the stream of literature where metaphor is conceptualized as a
comparison – that is, where metaphor is seen as a comparison in which thefirst term A (i.e. the target) is asserted to bear a partial resemblance (i.e. the
ground) to the second term B (i.e. the source) (Alvesson, 1993; Oswick et
al., 2002; Tsoukas, 1991) – it is speculated that the heuristic used by
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researchers is to search for two concepts that bear an exact and literal simi-
larity or sameness (that is implicit in the metaphor), and can then be
compared. In this comparison model, metaphor interpretation is assumed to
involve a comparison of concepts to determine, or rather extract , what
discrete properties or relations applying to one concept can also apply to the
other concept in the same or a similar sense, and accordingly the suggested
heuristic within such an account is to judge the aptness of a metaphor on the
basis of the similarity of the concepts conjoined within it. Alvesson (1993:
116) articulated this heuristic by saying that:
a good metaphor means the right mix of similarity and difference
between the transferred word [i.e. the source concept] and the focalone [i.e. the target concept]. Too much or too little similarity means
that the point may not be understood and no successful metaphor will
have been created.
An alternative stream of literature (Cornelissen, 2004, 2005; Morgan,
1980, 1983) suggests that metaphor does not work by comparing or likening
the target to the source as the comparison model assumes. Rather, metaphor
is seen to involve the generation or creation of new meaning through an inter-
active process of ‘seeing-as’ or ‘conceiving-as’, effectively moving beyond anantecedently existing similarity between the concepts conjoined within it
(Table 1). Metaphor, in this so-called domains-interaction view (Cornelissen,
2005), involves the conjunction of whole semantic domains in which a corre-
spondence between terms or concepts is constructed rather than extracted or
deciphered, and the resulting image and meaning that comes off it is creative
with the features of importance being emergent. The heuristics in this model
for selecting metaphors and for judging them as apt follow from this position
that the distinction between higher-order semantic domains and lower-levelinstance specific information of the target and source concepts is central to
metaphor production and comprehension. Cornelissen (2004, 2005),
Morgan (1980) and Tourangeau and Sternberg (1982) have proposed in this
respect that metaphors are more apt and fitting and create strong and mean-
ingful imagery when they relate concepts from more diverse or distant
semantic domains (between-domains similarity) and when the correspon-
dence between the target and the source concepts is conceived as more exact
(within-domains similarity).
The suggested heuristics from both the comparison and domains-inter-action camps have so far been only speculative, as more broad-based empiri-
cal research into metaphors-in-use in organization theory and their
antecedent heuristics has been non-existent. The present article, as
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Human Relations 58(12)1 5 5 2
T a b l e 1
T h e
c o m p a r i s o n a n d d o m a i n s - i n t e r a c t i o n m o d e l s o f m e t a p h o r
T h e o r e t i c a l a s s u m p t i o n s
P r i n c i p l e s o f m e t a p h o r
S u g g
e s t e d h e u r i s t i c
C o m p a r i s o n m
o d e l
D o m a i n s - i n t e r
a c t i o n
m o d e l
M e t a p h o r w o r k s b y l i k e n i n g t h e s o u r c e
t o t h e t a r g e t c o n c e p t . T h e c o m p a r i s o n
p a r a d i g m s
u g g e s t s t h a t a n a n a l o g y o r
s i m i l e n o t o n l y e x i s t s
a s a n e c e s s a r y
c o n d i t i o n f o r m e t a p h
o r b u t a l s o p r o v i d e s
t h e g r o u n d f o r i t s c o
m p r e h e n s i o n ( a f t e r
a m e t a p h o r h a s b e e n
r e c o g n i z e d a s f a l s e
a n d p a r a p h r a s e d i n t o
a c o m p a r i s o n
s t a t e m e n t ) .
M e t a p h o r c r e a t e s a n
e m e r g e n t m e a n i n g
s t r u c t u r e t h a t c a n n o
t b e r e d u c e d o r
e x p l a i n e d b y r e f e r r i n
g t o i t s c o n s t i t u e n t
p a r t s ( i . e . t h e t a r g e t
a n d s o u r c e
c o n c e p t s ) . A
d i s t i n c t i o n b e t w e e n
h i g h e r - o r d e r c o n c e p
t u a l d o m a i n s a n d
l o w e r - l e v e l , i n s t a n c e -
s p e c i fi c i n f o r m a t i o n
( a t t h e l e v e l o f t h e t a r g e t a n d s o u r c e
c o n c e p t s ) i s i m p o r t a
n t t o m e t a p h o r , a s
d o m a i n - l e v e l k n o w l e
d g e i s a u t o m a t i c a l l y
e n g a g e d o n e n c o u n t e r i n g a m e t a p h o r
a n d g u i d e s f u r t h e r p r o c e s s i n g .
E x t r a c t i o n : M
e t a p h o r c o m p r e h e n s i o n
i n v o l v e s a c o
m p a r i s o n o f ( t a r g e t a n d
s o u r c e ) t e r m
s o r c o n c e p t s t o
d e t e r m i n e ( e x t r a c t ) w h a t d i s c r e t e
p r o p e r t i e s o
r r e l a t i o n s a p p l y i n g t o o n e
t e r m c
a n a l s
o a p p l y t o t h e o t h e r t e r m
i n t h e s a m e
o r a s i m i l a r s e n s e .
C o n s t r u c t i o
n : M e t a p h o r c o m p r e h e n s i o n
i n v o l v e s c o n
s i d e r i n g ( c o n s t r u c t i n g ) i n
w h a t s t r u c t u
r a l s e n s e t w o c o n c e p t s a r e
a l i k e ( a t t h e
d o m a i n l e v e l ) , w h i c h
p r o v i d e s a f r a m e f o r t h e f u r t h e r
b l e n d i n g o f i m p l i c a t i o n s a n d t h a t l e a d s
t o a n e m e r g
e n t m e a n i n g .
A p t
a n d i n s i g h t f u l m e t a p h o r s a r e t h o s
e
m e t
a p h o r s o f w h i c h t h e c o n c e p t s a r e
j u d g e d a s
d i s s
i m i l a r i n s o m e r e s p e c t s , w h i l e s i m i l a r i n
t h e o r e t i c a l l y i m p o r t a n t r e s p e c t s .
A p t
a n d i n s i g h t f u l m e t a p h o r s a r e t h o s
e
m e t
a p h o r s t h a t a r e j u d g e d t o r e l a t e c o n c e p t s
1 ) b
e t w e e n w h i c h a c o r r e s p o n d e n c e ( i n a n
s t r u
c t u r a l s e n s e ) c a n b e c o n s t r u c t e d , a n d 2 ) t h a t
a r e
d r a w n f r o m d
o m a i n s t h a t a r e i n t h e fi r s t
i n s t a n c e s e e n a s d i s t a n t .
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mentioned, addresses this void through a survey of past and contemporary
metaphors in organization theory.
Method
Data collection
In order to answer the main research questions, we set out to collect data
that, first, inform us of the range of metaphors-in-use and, second, allow us
to provide a motivated explanation of the heuristics used in their develop-
ment and selection. We selected the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI)
database and the subsection of ‘management’ journals within it as the sourcefor our data. The subsection of ‘management’ journals includes the major
theoretical and empirical journals within management and organization
studies in general, and as such incorporates work in organization theory.1
We specifically selected these journals on the ‘management’ list within the
SSCI database as the source for our data for a number of reasons. First, we
wished to have a database of published articles within management and
organization studies that is in a sufficiently formal form through coded field
tags (e.g. keywords, title, source) and allowed us to perform searches and
retrieve data. Second, we wanted to have a database that spans a consider-
able period of time (the SSCI database covers ‘management’ journals since
1956), so that we could retrieve data on the spread and use of different
metaphors over time. Third, we required a database containing publications
of journals that would be largely representative of the body of theoretical
and empirical work within organization theory. The ‘management’ list within
the SSCI database provides for such a representative sample, although, of
course, it is by no means exhaustive of all theoretical and empirical work
that is carried out within management and organization studies.The data that we collected were sourced from the academic publi-
cations within the journals listed under ‘management’ in the SSCI database
over the period 1993–2003. The period 1993–2003 was chosen for two
reasons. First, this period provided us with a sufficient time series for data
collection and analysis. Second, there are substantial gaps within the SSCI
records for many ‘management’ journals prior to 1993 and only from 1993
onwards are the records for the Topic (title, abstract and keywords)
complete.
Data were obtained through a number of steps. As a first step, wescreened the list of journals under ‘management’ within the SSCI database,
and selected those journals with 1) a weighted impact factor of more than
0.5 for the period 2001–3, and 2) a weighted number of citations above 500
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for the period 2001–3. The motive for doing so was that by using these
criteria we would arrive at a set of journals (Table 2) that are reflective of
the general body of knowledge within organization theory and its advance-
ment over time. As a second step, we performed searches for the publications
of each of these journals, entering the adjective ‘organizational’ and the noun
‘organization’ as target terms into the Topic (title, abstract or keywords) field
tag. Here, we set out to identify metaphorical word combinations involving
a source term being compared to the target terms ‘organizational’ and
‘organization’. The two mentioned terms were chosen as target terms as they
constitute part of word combinations, including metaphorical ones, within
the organizational field. Each of the searches then produced the co-
occurrence of words related to these two terms. We printed the full abstracts
Human Relations 58(12)1 5 5 4
Table 2 Journal publications selected for the database
Journal title Three-year Three-year
average average
impact cites
factor (2001–3)
(2001–3)
1 Academy of Management Review 3.757 4460
2 Administrative Science Quarterly 3.110 4630
3 Academy of Management Journal 2.906 5115
4 Strategic Management Journal 2.699 4683
5 MIS Quarterly 2.493 1662
6 Sloan Management Review 2.367 1197
7 Organization Science 2.012 2166
8 Harvard Business Review 1.955 3826
9 Human Resource Management 1.631 776
10 Journal of Management 1.567 171311 Research Policy 1.440 1597
12 Management Science 1.440 6576
13 Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 1.417 2993
14 Information & Management 1.414 743
15 Organization Studies 1.253 844
16 Journal of International Business Studies 1.240 1563
17 California Management Review 1.192 1057
18 Journal of Product Innovation Management 1.182 788
19 Human Relations 0.926 1887
20 Journal of Management Studies 0.865 102521 Decision Sciences 0.731 1105
22 International Journal of Operations and Production Management 0.550 739
23 Interfaces 0.539 681
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for all of these word combinations, and excluded the book reviews from our
database and further analysis. As a third step, the words that we retrieved
were entered into a database as source terms together with the mentioned
adjective and noun (‘organizational’ and ‘organization’) as target terms and
we recorded the occurrence of each combination of words over the time
period (1993–2003) surveyed.
Data analysis
The data that we collected included 969 different word combinations involv-
ing the target term ‘organizational’ and 262 word combinations including
the term ‘organization(s)’ that were mentioned at least twice over the period(1993–2003) surveyed. For our data analysis, we used a definition of concep-
tual metaphor as a linguistic utterance in which the combination of words
is literally deviant in the sense that terms that have originally or conven-
tionally been employed in relation to a different concept or domain are
applied and connected to a target term or concept within organization theory
(cf. Cameron, 1999; Gibbs, 1996; Steen, 1999). This definition is intention-
ally broad so that it includes both ‘novel’ or what are sometimes understood
as ‘live’ metaphorical word combinations (e.g. ‘organizational identity’), as
well as ‘conventionalized’ or ‘dead’ metaphors (e.g. ‘organizational struc-ture’); word combinations that have become so familiar and so habituated
in theoretical vocabulary that scholars have often ceased to be aware of their
metaphorical precepts. The definition is also sufficiently formal in specifying
metaphor as a conceptual combination involving the composition of features
of the target and source concepts or terms compared, with the source concept
coming from a domain that is distant to the subject of organizations and
organizational behavior within organization theory. Hence, it enabled us to
identify and map metaphorical word combinations and to distinguish themfrom other word combinations that involve any of the specified target terms
but are not metaphorical such as ‘organization analyst’ (i.e. fails the compo-
sition criterion) or ‘organization work’ (i.e. fails the distance criterion).
Using this definition, two of the authors acted as coders and indepen-
dently screened the entire database to identify and code the word combina-
tions that qualified as conceptual metaphors in this sense and to exclude
non-metaphorical word combinations. A total of 861 metaphorical word
combinations remained, including 786 ‘organizational’ metaphors and 75
‘organization’ metaphors. These metaphorical word combinations were thenfurther analyzed by each of the two authors independently. Both authors read
the abstracts involved and coded the identified source term for the conceptual
metaphor, as well as the larger source domain (e.g. economics, biological
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evolution) that the source term was sourced from, and then ordered and
named the coded material into categories. We grouped these source terms
according to the domains (i.e. the organization of knowledge, such as our
knowledge of ‘clockworks’) that these are sourced from, and then further
grouped these into meaningful larger root metaphorical categories (i.e. the
underlying root metaphor, such as ‘machine’). Where more than one root
category might apply, we used the central features of the conceptual
metaphor to select among alternatives. If two categories seemed equally
applicable, we assigned the construct in question to the most specific of them.
This issue arose, for example, in respect of the ‘organizational monitoring
strategies’ compound, which incorporates features from both the ‘image’
(monitoring) and ‘warfare’ (strategies) root metaphors. Once all of theabstracts were read, interpreted and roughly ordered, each of us took time
to integrate, refine and arrange categories so that these began to come
together as a more conceptual whole. Here, each of us compared and
contrasted interpretations of conceptual metaphors into coherent and signifi-
cant categories. The individually identified categories were then laid next to
one another, compared, discussed and integrated. These categories of
metaphors-in-use that we identified by our own reading were informed and
further refined by existing lists of root and conceptual metaphors (Morgan,
1980, 1986, 1996; Putnam et al., 1996) in order to increase the reliabilityand validity of our final categorization. The final product involves a
categorization of metaphorical theoretical constructs central to the field of
organization theory, classified according to the root metaphorical schemes
upon which they are each formulated and understood. We then elaborated
upon the different ‘root metaphorical schemes’ and the set of ‘organizational’
and ‘organization’ conceptual metaphors that according to the first stage of
our analysis are prominent within organization theory; that is, metaphors
that are frequently mentioned and used, and on that basis occupy a centralplace within organization theory. Within this elaboration, we aimed to
retrace and reconstruct the heuristics that organizational researchers have
used in developing and selecting certain metaphors in their theorizing and
research.
The specific analyses and methods that we employed to answer our
research questions are a direct outcome of our cognitive linguistic perspec-
tive on conceptual metaphor as a cognitive process that links cognitive
conceptualization with the specific use of language. In line with much other
work in cognitive linguistics (see Coulson, 2001; Gibbs, 1996; Lakoff, 1993),our methodological approach is therefore aimed at inferring conceptual
knowledge based on the analysis of systematic patterns of linguistic struc-
ture. Such analyses of systematic patterns in language suggest a variety of
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conceptual structures including metaphorical mappings and noun–noun
compounds (see Gibbs, 1998). This emphasis on the content of what people
know and the linguistic behavior that corresponds with it is quite different
from the major focus in cognitive science on the general architectural form
of human thought and language (Murphy, 1996, 1997). One result of this
difference in emphasis is that a cognitive linguistic analysis is by definition
post hoc; the focus lies on conceptual metaphors as existing linguistic utter-
ances that reflect certain conceptualizations and patterns of thinking. Cogni-
tive psychologists instead focus on individuals’ conceptual knowledge and
aim to predict how that influences the existence of different linguistic
behavior, not that an individual’s linguistic behavior can be explained post
hoc by inferring conceptual knowledge, including metaphorical mappings.
Past and contemporary metaphors in use
The data that we collected included 969 different word combinations involv-
ing the target term ‘organizational’ and 262 different word combinations
with the term ‘organization(s)’; 786 of the 969 ‘organizational’ word combi-
nations qualified as metaphorical. Only 75 of the 262 ‘organization’ word
combinations were identified as metaphorical. One explanation for thisdifference between the number of metaphorical ‘organizational’ and
‘organization’ word combinations is that a metaphor is more directly cued
or evoked with ‘organizational’ combinations; in these combinations an
organization is seen to have certain features or characteristics which presup-
poses a metaphorical lens of what an organization is conceived to be. Nouns
like ‘organization’, on the other hand, function primarily referentially
(Cameron, 1999; Hopper & Thompson, 1984). To illustrate this point, 96
different word combinations involving an adjective with the nouns ‘organiz-ation’ and ‘organizations’ were identified, with only 18 of these combina-
tions qualifying as metaphorical. The large majority of these adjective–noun
combinations are of a simple predicate-subject form with the adjective predi-
cating the nouns that they modify. For example, ‘Japanese organization’
simply predicates the location of the organization involved. Such predicat-
ing adjectives specify one of the predicated object’s attributes. The large
majority of these predicating adjectives appear to have a referential purpose
in that they specify the location (e.g. ‘Japanese organization’), size (e.g. ‘large
organization’, ‘small organization’) or the nature (e.g. ‘economic organiz-ation’, ‘industrial organization’, ‘multinational organization’) of the organiz-
ation involved. In other words, word combinations of this kind have a
referential rather than metaphorical or indeed generative function.
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Tables 3 and 4 outline the different categories of ‘root metaphors’ that
we identified for both the ‘organizational’ and ‘organization’ metaphorical
word combinations. Here, as mentioned, we categorized each conceptual
metaphor (a metaphorical word combination involving either ‘organiz-
ational’ or ‘organization’) according to the larger root metaphorical scheme
upon which they are each formulated and understood. Twenty-five signifi-
cant categories for the ‘organizational’ conceptual metaphors and 10
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Table 3 Root metaphorical categories of ‘organizational’ conceptual metaphors
Root Conceptual metaphors (examples) Frequency
metaphorical (counts)category 1993–2003
Animate being Creativity, character, behavior, identity, reputation, learning 1457
Machine Control, restructuring, resources, performance, design, 851
capacity
Flow-change Change, renewal, development, transformation 419
Evolution Growth, functions, fit, decline, demography, life 249
Architecture Level, form, model, architecture 242
System Environment, contingencies, barriers, inertia, responses 207
Culture Culture, subculture, cultural climate 203Geographical space Domain, world, setting, landscape 195
Economics Innovation, returns, efficiency, assets, dividends 97
Image Vision, image, perspective, focus, myopia, outlook 85
Institutionalized Codes, rules, guidelines, styles, accountability 78
norms
Language Communication, names, discourse, rhetoric, message 78
Interpersonal Alliance, partners, cooperation 73
relationships
Society Citizens, community, prosperity, citizenship, social cohesion 71
Warfare Strategy, plans, ranks, mission, competitive tactics 69Politics Governance, imperialism, power, political regimes 63
Law Liability, (in)justice, (il)legality 59
Mathematics Factors, covariate, correlate 51
Space Niches, dimension, span, container, buffer 51
Environment/ecology Sustainability, greening 46
Symbolism Brand, symbols, myths, dramas 23
Linkage Network, link 18
Time Future, trend, momentum, schedule, time 15
Chaos Complexity, emergence, bifurcation 11
Sports Arenas, athletes, team, tournament 8
Note: Root metaphorical categories with five or fewer counts are treated as inconsequential and are not
displayed in the table.
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categories for ‘organization’ conceptual metaphors were identified. As Tables
3 and 4 reveal, the dominant root metaphorical categories for ‘organiz-
ational’ and ‘organization’ conceptual metaphors are ‘animate being’,
‘machine’, ‘flow-change’, ‘evolution’, ‘architecture’, ‘culture’, ‘system’,
‘warfare’ and ‘geographical space’. The root category of machine metaphors
likens organizations to mechanical systems and suggests an integrated picture
of corporations as comprised of a series of mechanically structured inter-
connected parts and resources. This category of metaphors lends its promi-
nence to its roots in early organization theory, including the contributions of
Max Weber and Frederick Taylor, the themes and subjects (e.g. ‘organiz-ational structure’ , ‘capacity’ , ‘control ’ , ‘design’) that emerged on the back of
it, and the concrete mechanical concepts with which the subject of an
‘organization’ is compared. Animate being metaphors liken aspects of
‘organizations’ to living organisms, specifically humans. These are sometimes
direct descriptions of organizations as acting beings, as when organizations
are seen as carrying out certain behaviors or as trying to impress groups
within their environments, but in other cases specific human properties such
as ‘learning ’, ‘creativity’ , ‘character’ , and ‘involvement ’ are employed to
conceptualize and explain organizations and the behavior and eventsinvolved.
Besides the observation that the ‘animate being’ and ‘machine’
categories assume the dominant position in both Tables 3 and 4, the
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Table 4 Root metaphorical categories of ‘organization’ conceptual metaphors
Root Conceptual metaphors (examples) Frequency
metaphorical (counts)category 1993–2003
Machine Design, structure, control, size 117
Animate being Learning, self, success, ability, knowledge, behavior 117
Culture Culture 32
Warfare Strategy 22
System Environment, fit 19
Linkage Network, networked 17
Family Parent 7
Symbolism Storytelling 7
Space Context 7
Architecture Level 7
Note: Root metaphorical categories with five or fewer counts are treated as inconsequential and are not
displayed in the table.
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categorization in Tables 3 and 4 also points to additional dominant root
metaphorical categories. One of these additional root metaphorical
categories, the category of flow-change, likens organizations to processes and
forces that are constantly in flux and transformation. Conceptual metaphors
in this category such as ‘organizational change’ are typically seen as an
‘ongoing process, a stream of interactions, and a flow of situated initiatives,
as opposed to a set of episodic events’ (Tsoukas & Chia, 2002: 569) or other
fixed reference points of ‘stability’ and ‘routines’ within organizations. The
root category of evolution metaphors is modeled upon Darwinian thought
and likens organizations and their activities to evolutionary patterns and
processes. There is an extensive literature discussing the different ‘species’ of
organizations and their development around concepts as ‘demography’, ‘fit ’and ‘decline’ and also evolutionary principles such as ‘variety–selection–
retention’ have made their way into much organizational theorizing. The root
category of architecture metaphors likens organizations to general physical or
morphological structures, often in terms of ‘models’, ‘levels’, or ‘forms’. A
common feat of these metaphors is that they are spatial and structural in form,
and their use leads to a view of organizations as erected structures, frame-
works or edifices. Within the category of culture metaphors, organizations are
seen as cultural phenomena and as manifestations of cultural morals, values,
rituals and symbols. The root category of systems metaphors likens organiz-ations to simple systems interacting and adapting to an ‘environment ’. An
organization is seen to consist of various interdependent subsystems and its
behavior is said to be emitted and then selected by environmental ‘contin-
gencies’ in much the same way that variations among individuals have been
selected by the environment during the course of evolution. This notion of
simple systems and environmental selection is thus itself metaphorical
although may not always strike us as highly metaphorical as it is based on
the now familiar Darwinian metaphor of natural selection. The systemsmetaphor entered organizational thought at around 1955 (Barley & Kunda,
1992), and has since led to such dominant and well-known conceptual
metaphors as ‘contingency’, ‘open systems’, ‘environment ’, and ‘loose
coupling ’. In recent years, systems thinking has been connected to the root
categories of animate beings and evolution more generally and also adapta-
tions and extensions of systems thinking including ‘chaos’ and ‘complex
adaptive systems’ have entered the theoretical vocabulary of organizational
researchers (see, for example, Thiétart & Forgues, 1995). Warfare metaphors
liken organizations and related behaviors to war-like activities and eventsincluding ‘strategies’, ‘competitive tactics’, and ‘competitive wars’.
Geographical space metaphors , finally, have as their source domain the distri-
bution of objects or places in space (Lakoff & Johnson, 1980), particularly
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geographical locations and places. This root metaphorical category includes
such metaphors as ‘domain’, ‘world ’, ‘setting ’ and ‘landscape’, whereby
organizations are represented in terms of geographical spaces and locations.
The image of organization as an ‘organizational domain’, for example, repre-
sents the scope and nature of organizational activities as confined to an
enclosed space (see, for example, Stapel & Koomen, 1998).
Together, these dominant root metaphorical categories subsume much
of the theorizing and research in relation to organizations within the field of
organization theory. As such, there is value in trying to explain the domi-
nance of these root categories in terms of the heuristics underlying their
development, selection and continued used by organizational researchers.
Previous explanations of the development of organization theory have tendedto approach the topic from primarily a sociological perspective; emphasiz-
ing the uptake of a certain theoretical concept or larger school of thought as
the result of sociological and political factors (e.g. whether a particular
concept resonates with the preoccupations and interests of the stakeholders
in organizational research at a particular point in time; pressures to focus on
certain theories and concepts) (see, for example, Barley & Kunda, 1992;
McKinley et al., 1999; Tsoukas & Knudsen, 2003). Here, we suggest an
alternative and potentially complementary explanation for the root
metaphorical categories that we identified; one that is rooted in our cogni-tive linguistic method of metaphorical analysis and in a view of theorizing
as ‘disciplined imagination’ (Weick, 1989, 1995). Specifically, we argue that
organizational researchers theorize by designing, conducting and interpret-
ing imaginary experiments where they rely upon metaphors to provide them
with vocabularies and images to theoretically represent and express organiz-
ational phenomena (cf. Weick, 1989). In this process, organizational
researchers use certain heuristics in selecting and retaining a metaphorical
combination of concepts, either for reasons of making the unfamiliar familiaror of generating new insights that were inconceivable before. The range of
metaphors-in-use points to particular dominant ways of thinking by
researchers about the world of organizations, and to certain heuristics that
they use in doing so. For example, a particularly striking observation in
relation to Tables 3 and 4 is that very little attention has been given to time
metaphors, a point also raised by Hassard (2002), while these metaphors
have found their way into virtually all other social scientific disciplines
including economics (McCloskey, 1995) and psychology (Leary, 1990). In
other words, the question that this evokes is why certain metaphors havebeen imagined and chosen whereas others have not, or at least to a lesser
degree? And what have been the thought processes, or rather heuristics, that
have guided this imagination and choice?
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Heuristics-in-use
Informed by the overview of metaphors-in-use presented in Tables 3 and 4,
we subsequently reconstructed the heuristics used by organizationalresearchers in developing and selecting these metaphors. In this reconstruc-
tion exercise, we have dwelled upon cognitive scientific and cognitive linguis-
tic research into the principles of metaphor production and comprehension
(e.g. Fauconnier & Turner, 1998; Gentner & Markman, 1997; Gibbs, 1996;
Katz, 1992; Tourangeau & Sternberg, 1982). One of the main ideas that has
emerged out of this body of research is a constructive conception of
metaphor comprehension and judgment. According to this view, the meaning
of a metaphor is constructed through the creative juxtaposition of words orconcepts – and not merely revealed (as the comparison model suggests) –
and, as such, judgment of its aptness is also based on this construction. This
conception is entailed by findings that judgments of the aptness, ‘fit’ and
revelatory value of a metaphor are based on a relational conjoining or
blending of the target and source concepts into a newly constructed metaphor-
ical image (e.g. Fauconnier & Turner, 1998; Gentner & Markman, 1997;
Gibbs, 1996; Tourangeau & Rips, 1991). Furthermore, such judgments of the
value and use of a metaphor rest in the context of organizational theorizing
and research, as in the world at large, on a limited number of simplifyingheuristics rather than extensive algorithmic processing (Gilovich & Griffin,
2002). These judgmental heuristics can be seen as automatic, often intuitive,
and sensible estimation procedures of the aptness and potential of the
metaphorical image construed and feature as a response to uncertainty; when
the full measure of a metaphor’s value for organizational theorizing and
research is not yet known. Another important point is that such judgments
relate to estimations of the ‘aptness’, ‘goodness of fit’ or (potential) ‘revela-
tory value’ of a metaphor, and not to criteria specifying validity or truthconditions. As our remarks in earlier sections of this article already indicated,
a metaphor is judged through and in the construed image that it evokes, not
on the basis of a certain correspondence to reality as is the case with more
formal models that may however be derived from them (see Beyer, 1992;
Tsoukas, 1991). In a recent article, Von Ghyczy (2003) remarks to this effect:
Like the model, the metaphor bridges two domains of reality. For it to
be effective, those domains must clearly share some key and compelling
traits. But this correspondence differs from the direct mapping of amodel. Rather than laying claim to verifiable validity, as the model
must do, the metaphor must renounce such certainty, lest it become a
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failed model. Metaphors can be good or bad, brilliantly or poorly
conceived, imaginative or dreary – but they cannot be ‘true’.
(Von Ghyczy, 2003: 90)
This means that the judgment of a metaphor’s aptness, and thus also
the heuristics underlying it, hinges upon the components of the metaphor in
question, and the metaphorical image thus construed, rather than external
appraisal through correspondence to a material or lived reality as envisaged
by organizational researchers. In other words, the heuristics used center
around, and are indeed confined to, perceptions of the relation or match of
the target and source concepts of a metaphor and the larger semantic
domains that they are drawn from. In all, we identified the following sixheuristics on the basis of our survey. Together, they provide a motivated
explanation for how predominantly metaphors are developed and selected
within organization theory.
1) The integration heuristic; that representations in the metaphorical
image can be manipulated as a single unit;
2) The relational heuristic; that relations in the metaphorical image
should match the relations of their counterparts in other semantic
domains;3) The connection heuristic; that the representation in the metaphorical
image should maintain a relationship to the input target and source
concepts;
4) The availability heuristic; that, given a metaphorical image, the inter-
preter should be able to infer the structure in relation to other subjects
and applications;
5) The distance heuristic; that the target and source concepts need to
come from semantically distant semantic domains;6) The concreteness heuristic; that the source concept compared to the
target is sufficiently concrete (rather than abstract) to be understood
and manipulated.
Despite their poetic names, most of these heuristics are derived from
standard pressures obtained in all mapping situations, including metaphori-
cal mappings (see Hofstadter, 1995, for a review). The integration heuristic,
first of all, refers to the pressure to bring partial structure from different
concepts and domains together in such a way that it produces a fully inte-grated image with an easily manipulable representation (Fauconnier &
Turner, 1998, 2002). In research on metaphorical mappings, the integration
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principle is embodied in the observation that metaphors are more apt and
fitting when they relate target and source concepts that are more exact of
one another (e.g. Katz, 1992; Tourangeau & Sternberg, 1981, 1982).
Morgan (1980), in his earlier writings, equally emphasized that the most
powerful use of metaphor arises where concepts are correlated that carry
significant differences between them (i.e. the distance principle discussed
below) but are nonetheless representative of one another, and can therefore
be connected and integrated in a meaningful way. Most of the conceptual
metaphors within the dominant root metaphorical categories of ‘animate
being’, ‘machine’, ‘culture’, ‘system’, and ‘evolution’ in Tables 3 and 4 are
examples of the application of the ‘integration principle’. For each of these
conceptual metaphors, a frame for a source concept (e.g. ‘learning’ within‘animate being’, see Table 3) has been mapped onto the target concept of
‘organization’. Such mappings are normally guided by perceived relation-
ships of identity, similarity or analogy between the target and source (i.e. the
integration heuristic), where these perceived commonalities provide the
semantic rationale for the metaphorical correlation of the concepts involved
(Gentner et al., 2001; Oakley, 1998).
The relational heuristic exerts normative pressure to construct and
maintain metaphorical mappings in such a way as to preserve relational
structure (Coulson & Oakley, 2000; Fauconnier & Turner, 1998, 2002). Inresearch on metaphorical mappings, this pressure has been referred to as the
invariance hypothesis; the observation that the underlying mappings in
metaphoric expressions are almost always based on shared image-schematic
structure (see Lakoff, 1990; Turner, 1987). Gentner and Clement (1988) have
found in this respect that relational metaphors (i.e. those whose interpret-
ation is based on relational properties) are also judged more apt than attribu-
tive metaphors (i.e. those metaphors whose interpretation is based on
non-relational properties, namely common object attributes, and are there-fore mere-appearance matches) (see also Gentner et al., 2001; Tsoukas, 1993,
for this point). The following two examples illustrate this distinction between
relational and attributive metaphors: ‘managerial cognition is captured in
cognitive maps’ and ‘managerial cognition includes blind spots’. Clearly, a
relational metaphor is expressed with the first example since its interpret-
ation has to do with a relational property (e.g. ‘managers operating on
environments under the guidance of a map that structures cognition and
provides managers with the ground for hypotheses of action that may then
be confirmed or disconfirmed when acted upon’, which, according toGentner and Clement’s notation, is a relation between entities in the relevant
domain: managers, their thoughts, and the environments that they act upon)
(e.g. Reger & Palmer, 1996). In contrast, an attributive metaphor is
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expressed in the second example since its interpretation involves non-
relational properties, namely, a ‘missing element’ and/or ‘unnoticed event’.
Many of the identified conceptual metaphors in Tables 3 and 4 satisfy the
relational heuristic including those in the ‘animate being’ (e.g. ‘organizational
identity’), ‘flow-change’ (e.g. ‘organizational change’) and ‘evolution’ (e.g.
‘organizational decline’) categories. However, attributive metaphors are also
being developed and selected including the machine metaphor of ‘organiz-
ational structure’ and the ‘animate being’ metaphor of ‘organizational
memory’. The metaphor of ‘organizational memory’, for example, provides
a now well-established lens for examining the distributional aspects of
organizational cognition. The metaphor projects above all the attribute of
‘knowledge repositories’ or ‘storage bins’ onto organizational cognition, andin doing so it has provided a framework of ‘storage bins’ for researching how
knowledge is conserved and retrieved by the socialization and control
systems that constitute organizational cognition (i.e. routines, rules, appren-
ticeships) (Walsh & Ungson, 1991).
The connection heuristic suggests that the representation in the
metaphorical image should maintain its links to the input target and source
concepts. Satisfaction of the connection heuristic is what allows one to access
elements in the metaphorical image with names and descriptions from the
input concepts, as well as what allows the projection of structure from theimage to other applications and subjects, including the input target and
source concepts. This heuristic is at work in many conceptual metaphors in
the root metaphorical categories of ‘animate being’, ‘machine’, ‘system’, and
‘evolution’; the conceptual metaphors in these categories tap into and are
connected to a rich body of knowledge on animate being and human
behavior, machine structures and operations, and so forth. The dominant
conceptual metaphor of ‘organizational learning’, as one example, likens
organizations to animate beings with thinking and learning capacities of theirown. More specifically, it likens the thinking capacities of organizations to
the behavioral responses of organisms and makes further connections with
the body of work on behavioral evolution. The metaphor can be traced back
to Skinner’s (1935, 1938) operant conditioning, where the behavior of an
individual is said to be emitted, then selected by environmental contingen-
cies in much the same way that variations among individuals have been
selected by the environment during the course of evolution. Learning theory,
and its embodiment in ‘organizational learning’ is an obvious example of this
metaphorical line of thinking tracing back to Skinner; learning is conceptu-alized as the acquisition of discriminating responses to an environment , with
the environment posing as the stimulus. ‘Organization learning’, then, is
completed and elaborated to an image of organizations as organisms that
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can think and learn by acquiring discriminating responses to an environment ,
with the environment posing as the stimulus. The thinking or learning capaci-
ties of organizations are framed as behaviors that are adaptive to the environ-
ment and inferred, corrected and made routine on the basis of past
experience (Crossan et al., 1999).
The availability heuristic refers to the ease with which general domains
or classes of ideas can be brought to mind (e.g. Gilovich & Savitsky, 2002;
Tversky & Kahneman, 1974) and are then metaphorically combined with
the concept and domain of ‘organization’. In other words, the heuristic
‘refers to a tendency to form a judgment on the basis of what is readily
brought to mind’ (Medin & Ross, 1997: 522) which, over the period
1993–2002 includes such general ideas and semantic domains as ‘evolution’(e.g. Betton & Dess, 1985), ‘animate being’ or ‘actor’ (e.g. DiMaggio &
Powell, 1983), ‘culture’ (e.g. Hofstede, 2002) and ‘machine’ (e.g. Morgan,
1996) that are salient for this period and are the source for specific concep-
tual metaphors. Barley and Kunda’s (1992) historical study of the surges of
managerial and organizational rhetorics provides further support for the
availability heuristic in that it suggests certain historical patterns in the
uptake of language, including metaphorical language, for the study of
organizations. One particularly interesting observation made by Barley and
Kunda (1992) is that the ‘systems’ root metaphor entered organizationalthought and became rather dominant at around 1955 (and effectively
triggered such dominant conceptual metaphors as ‘contingency’) as ‘systems’
thinking as a whole was salient at that time and pervaded intellectual and
social scientific thinking. The availability heuristic can also be thought of as
a pressure to use conventional mapping schemas that facilitate comprehen-
sion. Thus construed, the heuristic applies pressure to use common and well-
known root and conceptual metaphors, such as the link between seeing and
knowing (e.g. ‘managerial scanning’), organizational development andevolution (e.g. ‘population ecology’), or between organizational perfor-
mances and theater (e.g. ‘organizational theater’).
The distance heuristic is rooted in findings from empirical research
which clearly suggest that for a metaphor to be apt and effective, the
conjoined target and source concepts need to come from distant domains in
our semantic memory. Tourangeau and Sternberg (1981, 1982) conceptual-
ized this pressure as the search for ‘between-domains distance’, which must
be fairly large for the metaphor to be effective because close distances provide
little interaction or surprise (see also Blasko & Connine, 1993; Katz, 1989,1992; McGlone & Manfredi, 2001; Trick & Katz, 1986). The premise in
this regard is that when the distance between the semantic domains is high;
it shocks researchers into conceiving of a subject in a completely new way.
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Discussion: Heuristics, metaphors and theory construction
Weick (1989) noted that organizational researchers, like scientists in other
social scientific fields, not only direct themselves the imagination process butalso subsequently select the theoretical representation(s) for the target subject
under consideration. In one sense, this artificial selection process, to para-
phrase Weick (1989), is reflected in the huge variety of ways in which the
subject of organization itself has been thought of and represented. Organiz-
ational researchers have over the years likened organizations to, for example,
anarchies, seesaws, space stations, garbage cans, orchestras, savage tribes,
octopoids, market places, data processing systems, athletic teams, organic
systems, theaters, human beings, and machines, to name but a few (e.g.Cornelissen, 2004, 2005; Morgan, 1980, 1996; Oswick et al., 2002; Putnam
et al., 1996; Tsoukas, 1991, 1993; Weick, 1979). The artificial, and there-
fore in part subjective, nature of the imagination process has been interpreted
by some commentators (e.g. Morgan, 1980, 1996) as suggesting that a
continuous process of ‘imaginization’ – fully free and creative metaphorical
thinking – is satisfactory enough to be a substitute for ‘organization’ (see also
Tsoukas, 1993). We have shown, however, that this is a flawed inference,
particularly when one considers the select range of animate being, systems,
evolutionary, warfare, culture and machine metaphors that prevail inorganization theory (see also Baum & Rowley, 2002). Thus, it appears that
there must be certain heuristics at work which, ceteris paribus (e.g. political
pressures), suggest which organizational metaphors are developed and
selected; that is, are deemed most effective.
In other words, metaphorical imagination processes are not uncon-
strained, and the six identified heuristics embody the rules and constraints
by which metaphors are developed and selected. We suggest therefore that
these heuristics are important determinants of the aptness of a metaphor (inthe judgment of organizational scholars), and, as a corollary, of whether a
metaphorical image resonates with organizational researchers and is subse-
quently used within theorizing and research. We also discussed metaphors-
in-use which embodied one or more of these principles, although, it needs to
be mentioned, satisfaction of these heuristics is selective, and satisfying one
heuristic may be inconsistent with satisfying another. To illustrate this point,
the metaphorical image of ‘organizational mind’ – the idea that behaviors of
organizational members are connected in such a way that they are in them-
selves ‘mental’ in the sense of being capable or reflective of intelligent andcreative thought (e.g. Sandelands & Stablein, 1987; Weick & Roberts, 1993)
– fulfills the distance heuristic as it likens connected behaviors within
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organization to neurological patterns in the brain (that produce an emergent
effect and is then seen as ‘intentional’, ‘heedful’ or ‘mindful’). However, it is
at odds with the concreteness heuristic as it is unclear what kind of neuron-
like relationships from the notion of ‘mind’ are projected onto organizational
behaviors. This is primarily due to the ongoing disagreement and debate on
the workings of the mind in the neuropsychological source domain; in
particular between those championing a computational connectionist or
associative model of the mind (see, for example, Rumelhart & McClelland,
1986) as opposed to a neuropsychological view that considers the mind as
a combinatorial architecture (see, for example, Dupuy, 2000). This
confusion, in turn, has led to difficulties for organizational researchers in
understanding and manipulating the metaphor for theorizing and researchpurposes. ‘Organizational mind’ is therefore often only referred to in a
cursory way in academic writings (see, for instance, Orlikowski, 2002), and
hardly figures directly in empirical research, if at all.
We argue that metaphorical images are often selective in the heuristics
that they embody, and that the most apt and effective metaphors are the ones
that satisfy multiple heuristics rather than a single one. We also suggest,
following Weick (1989), that the creative use of metaphors is facilitated
and/or constrained by practical factors and considerations before they are
worked out into theoretical representations. Metaphorical thinking, inorganization studies as elsewhere, can hardly be treated as some sort of
disembodied or radically free play of the mind, limited (if at all) only by the
past experiences, cognitive habits, and biases of individual researchers (e.g.
Chia, 1996; Cornelissen, in press; Weick, 1989). That such treatments are
sometimes proposed has been sufficient reason for Knorr-Cetina’s (1981)
well-known and repeated insistence that metaphorical theories of theory
construction and scientific innovation are incomplete. It is certainly true, as
she argues, that scientists must ‘work out’ or ‘realize’ metaphorical conceptsin the tangible, nitty-gritty process of ‘knowledge production’ that takes
place in the field before any truly consequential innovations can be brought
about (see also Beyer, 1992). Consequently, ‘the process of research produc-
tion and reproduction is more complex than the equation of metaphor and
innovation suggests’ (Knorr-Cetina, 1981: 66), which suggests that rather
than viewing metaphorical imagination as the imposition of static images it
actually involves a more evolving process or activity in which metaphorical
images (as organizing structures) partially order and form a research
community’s perspective and are modified by their embodiment in concreteexperiences of research and further experimentation.
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Governing rules
Given this important distinction between metaphorical images on the one
hand and more fully formed theoretical representations (and their embodi-ment within the practice of organizational theorizing and research) on the
other, we believe that the identified heuristics are important within ‘disci-
plined imagination’ in providing heuristics at the level of the metaphorical
image for considering whether an image is apt and effective (i.e. a fully inte-
grated, meaningful and sufficiently rich image). Each of these heuristics has
been used in isolation or in combination and to varying degrees. On this
account, each of them has been found useful in simplifying and guiding the
task of constructing metaphors and models for research, but, importantly,
they may also lead to characteristic errors or biases (cf. Kahneman &Tversky, 1996). For example, use of the availability heuristic may lead to
bias whenever memory retrieval is a biased cue to actual frequency because
of the broader world’s tendency to call attention to examples of a particular
restricted type. Similarly, a mere focus on the exactness heuristic as is the
case with the ‘organization’ as ‘theater’ metaphor, instead of combining this
heuristic with the distance heuristic, provides for ‘apt’ yet cognitively limited
metaphors. That is, when concepts are related from not too distant domains
a metaphor often fails to break any new ground or generate new insightsthat were inconceivable before (cf. Cornelissen, 2004; Oswick et al., 2002).
Thus, organizational researchers need to be more conscious and aware of the
heuristics that they use in developing and selecting metaphors, to a greater
extent than before (Weick, 1989), and of the possible biases and errors
involved. This is an important point, as even ‘experienced researchers are
also prone to the same biases – when they think intuitively’ (Tversky &
Kahneman, 1974: 1130).
While each of the mentioned heuristics has characteristic biases and
errors attached to it (as indicating departures from a normative rationaltheory or probability accounts) (Gilovich & Savitsky, 2002), particularly
important from the vantage point of organizational theorizing and research
is that these heuristics and the metaphors that they produce lead to concep-
tual advances and breakthroughs. This means that the choice and use of new
metaphors (beyond existing ones), and thus the heuristics underlying them,
needs to transcend the mere illustrative-cum-rhetoric level (at which
metaphors have a communicative or rhetorical effect, lead to mere clarifi-
cation, or scout out old ground) and rather provides for creative and cogni-tively profound new insights and conceptual advances that were
inconceivable before. Against this criterion, two of the abovementioned
heuristics are particularly important: the relational and distance heuristics.
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Both these heuristics, on their own account and in combination, have the
potential to produce conceptual advances, thus going beyond mere similarity
matches between the target and source concepts of a metaphor. Two govern-
ing rules in relation to these two heuristics are therefore proposed; to aid
organizational researchers in their search for novel categorizations and
deeper insights through metaphor.
Governing rule #1: relational metaphors are preferred over attributive
metaphors. This first governing rule, related to the relational heuristic,
is based upon the evidence (see Gentner & Clement, 1988; Gentner et
al., 2001) that there is a marked difference between the effect of an
attributive metaphor (which may provide conceptual clarification andframeworks through perceived common object-attributes between the
target and source concepts) and a relational metaphor. The relational
metaphor, through its projection and mapping of interconnected
relations between previously unrelated concepts, has the potential to
produce novel cognitive categorizations and new frames for research-
ing the world of organizations.
Governing rule #2: it is preferred in metaphor to conjoin concepts from
semantic domains that are in the first instance seen as distant from oneanother. This second governing rule, related to the distance heuristic,
implies that relating concepts from distant semantic domains has
potentially a greater cognitive effect than juxtaposing concepts from
semantic domains that are perceived as close. The guiding premise here
is as mentioned that distance provides for strong and cognitively
profound metaphorical imagery and that without perceived (sufficient)
distance a metaphor fails to shock organizational researchers into
conceiving of a subject in a completely new way. That is, in such cases,a metaphor may have conjoined two concepts that are conceived of as
in some sense alike (in either an attributive or relational sense), but
because the semantic domains are seen as not too distant it has little
further cognitive effect. In effect, such a metaphor may then just lead
into a re-labeling of the targeted subject with concepts and terms from
the source domain, but at a rather superficial, nominal level and
without offering any new and truly profound insights.
Together, these governing rules encourage organizational researchersto search for creative and new ways of conceptualizing organizations. This
is particularly important when considering that organizational researchers
may at times have been conservative in selecting mere similarity matches in
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and through metaphor (Oswick et al., 2002). Oswick et al. (2002) have
recently argued in this respect that many organizational researchers remain
in the ‘cognitive comfort zone’ when they develop and select metaphors,
primarily focusing on the similarities or overlapping ground between closely
related concepts, and not on the dissimilarities or ‘tension’ that may exist
when comparing more distant concepts and semantic domains. In these
instances, metaphors are best seen as a means of elaborating and explicating
already existing knowledge, as in their focus on similarities and resemblances
between closely related concepts they merely make ‘the familiar more
familiar’ (Oswick et al., 2002: 295). The two governing rules cater instead
for a more progressive and advanced use of metaphor with metaphor being
used to reveal deeper and more profound insights into the world of organiz-ations. When used in such a way, we believe that metaphors can prove enor-
mously productive of further theoretical advances and empirical observations
within organization studies; by sparking off inquiry and directing researchers
to explore links that would otherwise remain obscure.
Limitations
Our study of metaphors-in-use within organization theory depends on a
specific cognitive linguistic conception of metaphor production, comprehen-sion and use. This theoretical conception, as we have suggested, is particu-
larly effective in providing an account of how metaphorical reasoning
underlies, in a cognitive sense, much organizational theorizing and research.
That is, our empirical study was grounded in a theoretical framework that
attempts to explain how conceptual structure is invoked in metaphor use.
No single theory, however, provides a comprehensive account of how people
understand all kinds of metaphorical language, given all the temporal
moments of understanding that are discussed by metaphor scholars (compre-hension, recognition, interpretation, appreciation, use). Theories based in
cognitive linguistics best explain metaphor comprehension, interpretation
and use, whereas other theories such as speech act theory and rhetorical
theory may be better at explaining metaphor recognition and appreciation.
As is the case with all research methods, there are also limitations to
the strategy of trying to infer something about conceptual structure from a
systematic analysis of linguistic structure and behavior. The primary limi-
tation is one shared by most linguistic research, namely, the problem of
making conclusions about phenomena based on the analysts’ own moti-vated explanations. Psychologists have often argued that there is some
circularity in how cognitive linguists argue for the psychological reality of
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conceptual metaphors (Murphy, 1996, 1997). Thus, trying to infer aspects
of conceptual knowledge from an analysis of systematic patterns of linguis-
tic structure results in theories that seem post hoc. For instance, the claim
that ‘every large corporation needs to have a corporate strategy’ is due to
the presence of an independent, preexisting conceptual metaphor (i.e. the
warfare strategy metaphor) provides only a motivated explanation for
linguistic behavior. What psychologists seek is empirical, objective evidence
that people’s conceptual knowledge somehow predicts the existence of
different linguistic behavior, not that people’s linguistic behavior can be
explained post hoc by positing conceptual metaphors (Gibbs, 1996, 1998).
Within our research, we indeed assumed that metaphors as linguistic utter-
ances reflect and intimate cognitively fundamental meanings about organiz-ations and organizational life; and that these meanings can be traced and
inferred through a cognitive linguistic analysis. This assumption was guided
by our research objectives of mapping and documenting the past and
contemporary metaphors-in-use within organization theory, and of provid-
ing a motivated explanation for the heuristics underlying their development,
selection and use. Our research design was therefore justifiably post hoc.
We inferred the ‘disciplined imagination’ and heuristics used by organiz-
ational researchers from the identified patterns of linguistic data. Further
experimental psychological research is worthwhile to corroborate ourresearch findings and in particular for testing and refining this motivated
explanation of the heuristics governing the development and selection of
metaphors by organizational researchers.
A further limitation is that we only focused on word combinations
involving the adjective ‘organizational’ and the noun ‘organization’ as target
terms within a select set of management journals. This was essential to focus
the research study. Nonetheless, there is scope for further research that
focuses on other adjectives like ‘corporate’ or nouns such as ‘business’ astarget terms and explores the extent to which such adjective–noun and
noun–noun combinations (e.g. ‘corporate strategy’, ‘business domain’) are
metaphorical. A final limitation is that we inferred the conceptual
metaphors-in-use by mapping the direct reference of a combination of
words (e.g. ‘organizational structure’) within the abstracts of publications
within the SSCI database, rather than tracing the genealogy of certain word
combinations and their appropriation in different schools of thought and
within different communities of researchers (cf. Cornelissen, in press;
Danziger, 1990) although, of course, this is also a subject warranting furtherresearch.
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Note
1 Organization theory is defined here as the academic enterprise concerned with the
study of organizational phenomena; and as such includes studies at both the micro(e.g. research into organizational behavior) and macro levels of analysis (e.g.
research into organizational populations and organizational fields) (cf. Tsoukas &Knudsen, 2003) and specialist research areas such as strategic management, human
resources, operations management and international business.
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Joep P. Cornelissen is Senior Lecturer in Corporate Communications
at Leeds University Business School. He previously worked at the Amster-
dam School of Communications Research, University of Amsterdam. Hisresearch interests include the management of corporate communications
and the use of metaphor in management and organization theory and
practice. He is author of Corporate communications: Theory and practice
(Sage). He teaches mainly on MBA and MA programs in the areas of
corporate communications.He is currently principal investigator on a UK
Economic and Social Research Council project on the use of metaphors
in organization theory. His research articles on metaphor have appeared
in Academy of Management Review , Organization Studies, British Journal of
Management, Psychology and Marketing and the Journal of Management
Studies.
[E-mail: J.Cornelissen@leeds.ac.uk]
Mario Kafouros is currently an ESRC Research Fellow at Leeds
University Business School. He is an electronic engineer by first degree,
and also holds a degree in economics and a PhD in management.He has
extensive industrial and academic experience in the field of innovation.
His publications include articles in journals of management but also in journals of economics.His research interests include the effects of knowl-
edge spillovers, the impact of innovation on productivity performance,
and the role of metaphors in organization theory.
[E-mail: mk@lubs.leeds.ac.uk]
Andrew R. Lock is Professor of Marketing and Business Administration
and Dean of the Business School at the University of Leeds. He holds a
Masters and PhD from London Business School. He was previously Pro-
Vice-Chancellor and Dean of Faculty at Manchester Metropolitan
University and has also held lecturing posts at the University of British
Columbia and Kingston Polytechnic (now Kingston University). He is a
past Chair of the Association of Business Schools. His work has been
published in the Journal of Marketing Management, the European Journal of
Marketing , the Journal of Advertising Research, the Journal of the OR Society ,
the Journal of Public Affairs and Management Learning .
[E-mail: arl@lubs.leeds.ac.uk]
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