Events management as a community of practice

Author:

Brown TimORCID,Stokes PeterORCID

Abstract

PurposeThis paper examines events management as a Community of Practice (CoP) and to demonstrate that knowledge management and practice within events operate as a CoP. The paper adds to the events management literature which is currently superficial in considering events conceptually as a CoP.Design/methodology/approachAn interpretive and inductive approach was adopted for the research which incorporated quantitative and qualitative methods undertaken in a United Kingdom setting. Twenty-five in-depth semi-structured interviews with event professionals were conducted and this was complemented by a survey of 215 event professionals.FindingsThe findings demonstrate that within the evolving events industry, as well as reflected in aspects of the academic literature, events can be depicted as a “domain” which connects event professionals to a “community”. The themes emerging revealed that there are modes of working, shared values and practices, a shared identity and a desire to work as a wider collective in order to maintain and enhance knowledge and practice, which are in keeping with a CoP framework.Research limitations/implicationsThis study provides new insight on an under-researched area concerning knowledge and practice development within events management.Originality/valueThis is a novel study that considers how the emergent field of events management should be considered as a CoP. It addresses a gap in the literature pertaining to knowledge and practice creation within events management from a CoP perspective.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management

Reference46 articles.

1. Knowledge preservation through community of practice,2015

2. Communities of practice? Varieties of situated learning,2006

3. Snowball sampling in business oral history: accessing and analyzing professional networks in the Australian property industry;Enterprise and Society,2019

4. Systemic intervention with communities of practice: a conceptual framework,2013

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