Determinants of perceived effectiveness in crisis management and company reputation during the COVID-19 pandemic

COVID-19 pandemic is a newness to various aspect of life, including
business sector. In this high uncertainty, business still need to deliver
effective crisis management in order to safeguard organization reputation.
Literature state that there are three important elements in crisis management
which are leader, team of crisis management, and organizational
communication. What type of leader and communication are the most
suitable during crises? This study aims to confirm the influence of the
transformational leadership style, communication quality, and team crisis to
organization reputation mediated by the effectiveness of crisis management.
During crisis innovation also influences the survival of organization during
crises. A new type of innovation, frugal innovation type, still has limited
empirical evidence. This study also aims to see how the implementation of
the frugal innovation type is influenced by the transformational leadership
style and influences the effectiveness of crisis management. A descriptive
quantitative study was conducted in May 2020 with 293 participants from
the various organizations in Indonesia. SEM-LISREL was used for data
analysis. The findings show that transformational leader, crisis management
team, quality of communication and frugal innovation type positively
influenced the effectiveness of crisis management which will lead to
corporate reputation. The main contribution of this paper is providing the
body of evidence the effectiveness of transformational leadership during
crisis with high uncertainty. This study is also among the first empirical
study on frugal innovation type.

 


David Tjahjana (2021). Determinants of perceived effectiveness in crisis management and company reputation during the COVID-19 pandemic. , 8(1) .doi:doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2021.191252
Keyword
Communication quality, company reputationfrugal type innovationtransformational leadership
Volume
8
Issue
1
DOI
doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2021.191252