TY - JOUR
T1 - Governing the paradox of success in a hybrid supporter-owned professional football club
AU - Adams, Andrew
AU - Morrow, Stephen
AU - Thomson, Ian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2024/9/27
Y1 - 2024/9/27
N2 - Research question: Using insights from success paradoxes and hybrid institutional logics, we analyse the institutional work undertaken to construct a novel governance structure in a supporter owned professional football club. Research methods: A single exploratory case study design was adopted, focusing on the transition from existential crisis to supporter ownership. A mixed method strategy involved collecting participative observation, primary interview and secondary documentary data. Results and findings: We observed a shared understanding of the overlapping priorities for the Club and (supporter) Foundation that formed the basis for collaboration. Ambiguity as to what constituted success, and awareness of latent paradoxes contributed to the institutional work necessary to develop a resilient governance structure. A distinctive aspect arose from harnessing the productive friction between the corporate and professional logics of the Club, and the community and family logics of the Foundation. Implications: Institutional work undertaken in creating a new governance structure shows the potential within clubs for cooperation between different actors, demonstrating the mediating influence arising from mutual dependency between actors. When there is a high level of co-dependencies between the club and stakeholders, and contestation over what constitutes success, tensions between logics can be leveraged to benefit the hybrid organisation. While any governance solution needs to reflect a club’s specific context, the adopted governance structure should integrate resilience, mutual dependencies, business acumen, inclusion, emotion, engagement and accountability.
AB - Research question: Using insights from success paradoxes and hybrid institutional logics, we analyse the institutional work undertaken to construct a novel governance structure in a supporter owned professional football club. Research methods: A single exploratory case study design was adopted, focusing on the transition from existential crisis to supporter ownership. A mixed method strategy involved collecting participative observation, primary interview and secondary documentary data. Results and findings: We observed a shared understanding of the overlapping priorities for the Club and (supporter) Foundation that formed the basis for collaboration. Ambiguity as to what constituted success, and awareness of latent paradoxes contributed to the institutional work necessary to develop a resilient governance structure. A distinctive aspect arose from harnessing the productive friction between the corporate and professional logics of the Club, and the community and family logics of the Foundation. Implications: Institutional work undertaken in creating a new governance structure shows the potential within clubs for cooperation between different actors, demonstrating the mediating influence arising from mutual dependency between actors. When there is a high level of co-dependencies between the club and stakeholders, and contestation over what constitutes success, tensions between logics can be leveraged to benefit the hybrid organisation. While any governance solution needs to reflect a club’s specific context, the adopted governance structure should integrate resilience, mutual dependencies, business acumen, inclusion, emotion, engagement and accountability.
KW - Football club governance
KW - institutional logics
KW - performance paradoxes
KW - supporter ownership
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205038000&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/16184742.2024.2406871
DO - 10.1080/16184742.2024.2406871
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85205038000
SN - 1618-4742
JO - European Sport Management Quarterly
JF - European Sport Management Quarterly
ER -