“…One could perhaps add a further complicating circumstance: The content of messages issued by the corporate senders is possibly loosely coupled to the reality that these messages purport to describe. As discerned by Jauernig and Valentinov (), corporate messages could in principle broadly correspond to corporate reality, as stakeholder theorists tend to assume (Eccles, Ioannou, & Serafeim, ; Freeman, Dmytriyev, & Strand, ), but they can also lag behind reality, as suggested the work on organizational hypocrisy (e.g., Brunsson, ; Cho, Laine, Roberts, & Rodrigue, ) or stay ahead of reality if they present “aspirational talk” (Christensen, Morsing, & Thyssen, ). In view of these difficulties, one may wonder whether corporate communication, or systemic communication more generally, could at all be a reliable instrument for the control of “critical dependencies” problematized by Valentinov's () complexity–sustainability trade‐off.…”