Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages 118-127Publisher
EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/09596110910930223
Keywords
Tacit knowledge; Perception; Managers; Restaurants
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Purpose - This paper aims to explore tacit knowledge and managers' supervision styles in a sample of Edinburgh's Indian restaurants. Design/methodology/approach - The paper reports a qualitative fieldwork of managers' perceptions of their role in directing tasks, supervising operations and staff recruitment. Findings - The research findings describe tacit knowledge contexts derived from restaurant owner-managers directing operations. Research limitations/implications - This is an exploratory study of views and perceptions of a small sample of ethnic managers. It asks questions of tacit knowledge within Scottish-based Indian restaurants, and attempts to place these within a cultural context of kinship networks. Practical implications - The research questions how academic researchers may make nebulous concepts such as tacit knowledge accessible to practical hospitality managers, policy-makers, students and teachers. Originality/value - The research findings describe the context to relationships in small ethnic hospitality businesses. Conceptual development emerges from deductions made from literature, fieldwork, shadowing, interviews, and by asking questions.
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