TY - JOUR
T1 - How workplace identities and team management practices affect distributed team auditors' willingness to speak up
AU - Proell, Chad A.
AU - Ricci, Michael A.
AU - Trotman, Ken T.
AU - Zhou, Yuepin
N1 - We thank Julia Ariel-Rohr, Shana Clor-Proell, Emily Griffith, Kathryn Kadous, Mark Nelson, and Dan Rimkus for helpful comments and suggestions. We gratefully acknowledge financial support from a Fisher School of Accounting Summer Research Grant, the Gies College of Business Competitive Research Grant, the UNSW Sydney Centre for Laws, Markets and Regulation, and UNSW Sydney BizLab. Open access publishing facilitated by University of New South Wales, as part of the Wiley – University of New South Wales agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians.
PY - 2024/3/1
Y1 - 2024/3/1
N2 - Distributed, rather than co-located, teams increasingly perform audit work, raising regulator concerns that distributed team communication issues may affect audit quality. We investigate upward communication (i.e., raising issues to supervisors), a key communication dimension related to audit quality. In Study 1, we survey 69 senior auditors to establish that distributed team upward communication suffers. Furthermore, distributed team auditors identify less with their teams and struggle to know when and how to speak up. Because both are linked to inhibited upward communication, we next experimentally test firm practices with the potential to attenuate these problems. Study 2, an experiment with 128 staff auditors and interns, reveals that making auditors' professional identities salient improves upward communication on co-located teams with strong team identities but not on distributed teams with weak team identities. Study 3, an experiment with 58 staff auditors, replicates a key Study 2 finding with a design that makes no reference to team identity strength. Specifically, in the presence of a salient professional identity, upward communication is significantly higher for co-located relative to distributed team auditors. Study 4, an experiment with 69 staff auditors, focuses solely on distributed teams. It indicates that several distributed team management practices, including one-on-one and standing daily meetings, encourage upward communication. Finally, Study 5, informal interviews with eight audit seniors, corroborates key survey and experimental findings. Combined, our results provide insights into why distributed team communication suffers, refine audit voice theory, and provide regulators, practitioners, and researchers with multiple paths to improve audit quality.
AB - Distributed, rather than co-located, teams increasingly perform audit work, raising regulator concerns that distributed team communication issues may affect audit quality. We investigate upward communication (i.e., raising issues to supervisors), a key communication dimension related to audit quality. In Study 1, we survey 69 senior auditors to establish that distributed team upward communication suffers. Furthermore, distributed team auditors identify less with their teams and struggle to know when and how to speak up. Because both are linked to inhibited upward communication, we next experimentally test firm practices with the potential to attenuate these problems. Study 2, an experiment with 128 staff auditors and interns, reveals that making auditors' professional identities salient improves upward communication on co-located teams with strong team identities but not on distributed teams with weak team identities. Study 3, an experiment with 58 staff auditors, replicates a key Study 2 finding with a design that makes no reference to team identity strength. Specifically, in the presence of a salient professional identity, upward communication is significantly higher for co-located relative to distributed team auditors. Study 4, an experiment with 69 staff auditors, focuses solely on distributed teams. It indicates that several distributed team management practices, including one-on-one and standing daily meetings, encourage upward communication. Finally, Study 5, informal interviews with eight audit seniors, corroborates key survey and experimental findings. Combined, our results provide insights into why distributed team communication suffers, refine audit voice theory, and provide regulators, practitioners, and researchers with multiple paths to improve audit quality.
KW - audit teams
KW - audit voice
KW - distributed teams
KW - group audits
KW - information sharing
KW - professional identity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85177886805&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85177886805&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1911-3846.12909
DO - 10.1111/1911-3846.12909
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85177886805
SN - 0823-9150
VL - 41
SP - 562
EP - 590
JO - Contemporary Accounting Research
JF - Contemporary Accounting Research
IS - 1
ER -