Article

The Decline of Cooling Out Applicant Failure: Some Adaptations to Organizational Changes by Self-Regulating Groups

Details

Citation

Hallier J & James P (2000) The Decline of Cooling Out Applicant Failure: Some Adaptations to Organizational Changes by Self-Regulating Groups. Employee Relations, 22 (1), pp. 13-37. https://doi.org/10.1108/01425450010310789

Abstract
Goffman's concept of cooling out the mark (Goffman, E., "On cooling the mark out: some aspects of adaptation and failure", Psychiatry: Journal of the Study of Interpersonal Relations, Vol. 15 No. 4, 1952, pp. 451-63) is proposed as helpful for understanding self-regulating groups' attempts to pacify transferring colleagues who are facing admission failures. A longitudinal study of an air traffic control company is used to examine what happens to the status and operation of a long-standing group-regulated cooling out process when the rejection of applicant colleagues suddenly increases following the onset of mass job moves. Groups saw the tradition of using cooling out to obscure trainee complaints about admission decisions as less important than publicising failure by pressing management to address their new staffing problems. The pressures surrounding the decline of cooling out were also found to weaken the common basis of these groups' established occupational identity. Specialized occupational and group constructions emerged that linked identity and task on the basis of unit location, specialist operational skills, and even desirable age profiles. The conclusion drawn is that while the very act of turning away from the cooling out tradition may undermine the process of self-regulation, it may, paradoxically, represent a necessary step in the transformation of the group from one type of self-regulated identity to another.

Keywords
Air transport; Autonomous work groups; Employee relations; Group dynamics; Organizational change; Identity

Journal
Employee Relations: Volume 22, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/01/2000
Date accepted by journal01/10/1999
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/11759
PublisherMCB UP Ltd/ Emerald
ISSN0142-5455