dc.description.abstract |
Organisational crises have become synonymous with the financial sector in Ghana
in recent times, notably from 2012. Owing to many reasons, the Bank of Ghana
merged Royal Bank, uniBank, Sovereign Bank, Beige Bank and Construction Bank
into the Consolidated Bank Ghana (CBG) in 2018. There appears to be paucity on
issues of internal communication from the perspectives of sense-making theory and
situational crisis communication theory within the social constructivist perspective.
The study sought to explore the gap within this area by studying the role of internal
communication as a form of organisational crisis response strategy in the banking
sector of Ghana, emphasising on the sense made of the communication processes,
the communication channels employed and the response strategies of the banks.
Using a case study design, interviews, focus group discussions and document
analysis were conducted. The data gathered were thematically analysed. The
findings were that the banks’ staff picked cues about the crisis from both internal
and external sources, the banks employed face-to-face, electronic mails, intranet,
social media, telephones and durbars to communicate the crisis internally, the
banks employed the non-existing, distance and suffering communication strategies,
whilst the sense made out of the crisis is that management and the BoG should both
be blamed for the crisis that happened. The conclusions drawn from the findings
are that internal communication was relatively poor in the banks. Management
failed to communicate to staff about the crisis on time. This created a knowledge
gap where management knew almost everything while staff knew very little.
Finally, politics and mismanagement played a major role in the collapse of the
banks. |
en_US |