Abstract

Among the most-read corporate documents are chief executive officers' (CEOs') shareholder letters. Using institutional isomorphism as lens, this study examines the extent to which the narrative styles used by South African CEOs in their shareholder letters are similar to the styles used by CEOs at leading international companies. The study also explores the degree to which impression management techniques are present in the South African CEOs' shareholder letters. The study uses DICTION software to conduct a narrative analysis of South African CEOs' shareholder letters for a single financial year, and compares the findings with those drawn from the Craig and Amernic (2018) study of the shareholder letters of CEOs from samples of international Fortune 500 and FTSE 100 companies. The study finds that optimism and realism are the two most-used narrative styles in South African CEOs' shareholder letters, and that these findings are markedly similar to those generated by the Craig and Amernic (2018) study of international companies. The study contributes to the understanding of normative institutional isomorphism in corporate reporting by providing empirical evidence that the narrative styles employed by CEOs of companies in a developing economy with high corporate governance standards conform to the same norms as those of CEOs of large international companies. The study also finds that the South African CEOs' dominant communication styles in the shareholder letters lend themselves to being tools of impression management.

Highlights

  • Until recently, the focus of most accounting research was on quantitative information disclosed by companies

  • Applying an institutional isomorphism lens, the study investigates the extent to which the narrative styles deployed by South African chief executive officers (CEOs) in their shareholder letters follow the communication styles of their counterparts, as studied by Craig and Amernic (2018), in Fortune 500 and FTSE 100 international companies

  • The final document count totalled 50 chief executive officers’ (CEOs)’ shareholder letters with the average length being approximately 2,000 words. (See Appendix for a listing of the 50 companies, each company’s industry, each CEO’s name and gender, and the word count of each shareholder letter.) Since this was an exploratory study, we considered the sample size of 50 letters from JSE companies to be sufficient for a determination of narrative styles in South African corporate shareholder letters

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Summary

Introduction

The focus of most accounting research was on quantitative information disclosed by companies. Narrative styles, CEO shareholder letters, institutional isomorphism, South Africa

Results
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