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Introduction to organisational culture

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Title: Introduction to organisational culture


1
Introduction to organisational culture
  • Lecture
  • Frida Wikstrand
  • 2003-11-05

2
Culture - examples
  • Professional culture
  • Organisational culture
  • National culture
  • etc

3
Definition
  • Culture . . . is that complex whole which
    includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law,
    custom, and any other capabilities and habits
    acquired by man as a member of society.
  • learned behaviour
  • ideas in the mind
  • a logical construct
  • a statistical fiction
  • a psychic defence mechanism

4
What is culture not then?
  • Culture
  • Combined system of meanings and symbols. A system
    where meaning is articulated
  • References like conceptions, meaningful symbols
    and values that helps the individual understand
    its context, express feelings etc
  • Process of meaning that helps I to understand its
    experiences and show the way to its actions
  • Social constructions
  • Pattern of activities that social interplay leads
    to
  • A continuous process of interplay that leads to a
    pattern of relations
  • The form that the action takes or the network of
    social contacts that exists in a given situation

5
Organisational culture 1
  • Issue fore debate during 1980 1990
  • Tried to identify the qualities in successful
    companies in the US (Peter and Waterman (1982))
    and to understand the secrets behind the Japanese
    success companies (Ouchi (1981))
  • Pheffer (1194) argues that traditional sources to
    value in the organisations (production,
    technology etc) are not that important anymore.
    Stresses that organisational culture and ability
    to change whish is lead by the employees has
    increased in value.
  • Knowledge is the key factor to lasting success.
    Knowledge in the organisation is connected to
    culture (Davenport Prusak (1998))

6
Organisational culture 2
  • Related to history and tradition
  • They have a certain depth, hard to get a grip of,
    hard to explain and must therefore be interpreted
  • It is collective and is shared among members of a
    group or groups
  • It is primary on an idea level wish means that it
    is related to meaning, conceptions, faith etc
  • It is holistic, inter-subjective and emotional
    rather than rational and analytic
  • It is expressed in symbols and are available
    through interpretation of symbols

7
Organisational culture 3
  • To handle knowledge becomes an issue of handle
    the organisational culture (Alvesson
    Kärreman(2001), McDermott (1999))
  • Culture is of great importance when understanding
    how the organisation works regarding
  • Strategically change
  • Management
  • Meeting the costumer
  • How knowledge is created, divided, maintained and
    used (Alvesson 2001)
  • Organisational culture can also be a way of
    controlling the employee

8
Why is OC interesting now? (and to KM?)
  • The interest is different in different industries
  • Great interest in knowledge intensive companies
    where innovation is important.
  • Often in young companies such as in the
    IT-business
  • The interest for Km usually raise an interest for
    organisational culture
  • During periods of organisational change the OC is
    of new and great interest
  • During the 1980s there are an overwhelming
    belief in OC as a way to organisational success
    (consultant and management literature)

9
Why is OC interesting now? (and to KM?) 2
  • OC has given science and organisational theorists
    a new tool to work with in the understanding of
    organisational behaviour
  • New ways of production (lean production etc)
    breeds a need for flexibility in the organisation
    and a need to motivate people in a new way
  • Old professions is weakening whish gives
    management a new reason to give meaning in work
    and strengthen the identification with the
    organisation.
  • Culture becomes an important component in trying
    to keep the organisation together

10
Why is OC interesting now? (and to KM?) 3
  • A changing world and workplace
  • Important to engage the employees in the
    workplace
  • We can see a shift from control over behaviour
    and measuring results toward controlling values,
    attitudes that affect the employees service mind
    and in the long run the costumers satisfaction

11
Good organisational culture?
  • Good culture is distinguished by norms and
    values that support team working, profitability,
    honesty, orientation toward service mind, pride
    over once work and devotion toward the
    organisation. It support adaptability, the
    ability to be successful in the long run, despite
    new competitors, new laws and rules, new
    technology and the burden of growth. (Baker
    198010)

12
Good organisational culture? 2
  • Can you say that there is good and bad values?
    Who decides what is what?
  • Statements about a right and a wrong culture
  • A culture has a good/positive affect on the
    organisation when it is working in the right
    direction.
  • But can have a negative/bad affect on the
    organisation when it leads the organisation in
    the wrong direction

13
Problems with using culture to understand the
organisation
  • One problem can be to reduce the complexity of
    the culture
  • Or see everything as culture
  • It is often seen as the values by the top
    managers without any connection to the employees

14
Aspects on organisational culture
  • Can see the organisation as a system where the
    members share curtain ideas, conceptions and
    interpretations that are important to the
    activity in the organisation (Smircich (1985))
  • Culture does not exist in the mind of the
    individual but in between individuals
  • OC and the managers goals are not always (if
    ever) the same
  • The real culture is spontaneous and grows from
    below.

15
Aspects on organisational cultureCultural
engineering
  • Sees OC as one part of the building of the
    organisation
  • Socialisation when employed
  • Kick of etc
  • Sees norms, values and attitudes as something
    that can be disconnected from other issues in the
    organisation

16
OC affect on organisations result
  • A common culture helps to coordinate the
    organisational goals and agree on what resources
    to use to reach the goals. A flexible way to
    manage org.
  • Good results leads to a strong, good culture. Can
    create a certain spirit in the organisation that
    not to question the way we do things around
    here. The culture can also reproduce itself with
    good results.
  • Certain cultures are more affective during
    certain times.
  • Situated cultures is the way to good results.
    Adjustable environmental changes.

17
OC can also be seen as
  • Terms of antagonism / opposition and (hidden)
    conflicts, dominating ideologies, class, gender,
    one-sidedness etc
  • OC is the most far-reaching control (Ray (1986))
  • A systemised way of establishing a conception of
    the world and feelings within the employee

18
OC and powerGender
  • In our (and most) society there is ideas that
    certain educations, choices of career, work and
    positions is connected with certain sexes /
    gender
  • Most jobs are sex-typed
  • Either male or female
  • Gender is constructed in the workplace
  • Different works sex-typing has changed over time.
    It is not fixed!

19
Why culture important when talking about KM?
  • Knowledge sharing assists in organisational
    learning.
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