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Title: Cross-Cultural Knowledge Management at Virtual Interfaces


1
Cross-Cultural Knowledge Management at Virtual
Interfaces
2
Cross-cultural Management
  • Cross-cultural management describes
    organizational behaviour within countries and
    cultures compares organizational behaviour
    across countries and cultures
  • seeks to understand and improve the interaction
    of co-workers, (team members) managers,
    executives, clients, suppliers, and alliance
    partners from countries and cultures around the
    world. (Adler, 2002 Pg. 11)

3
Taking CCM a step further
  • The core task of cross-cultural management is to
    facilitate and direct synergistic interaction and
    learning at interfaces, where knowledge, values
    and experiences are transferred into
    multicultural domains of implementation (Holden,
    2002)
  • Greatest challenge is in internationally-distribut
    ed work environments, i.e. global (and
    multi-cultural) virtual teams

4
Cross-Cultural Management as Knowledge Management
  • Interactive Global Networking
  • Teamworking
  • Organizational Learning

5
Networking
  • Networks as pathways to resources
  • Human
  • Special knowledge
  • Rare competencies
  • Sources of finance
  • Forms of influence
  • How does this relate to Knowledge Management?

6
Networking as a Cross-Cultural Activity
  • Internationally-distributed work environment
  • Sharing (K) across organizations, webs of
    enterprise and arrays of networks for use years
    ahead (Holden, 2002p.43)

7
The Challenge
  • How will we develop new ways to understand,
    manage and downplay cultural differences while
    creating and working with new kinds of
    cross-cultural interactions such as
    geographically-distributed electronically-mediated
    multi-cultural project teams?
  • Why downplay cultural differences?

8
Culture
  • something older members of the group pass on to
    younger members of the group
  • something (as with language, laws, customs,
    values, beliefs, attitudes) that shapes behavior
    or shapes ones perception of the world
  • something shared by all members of some social
    group
  • culture changes and adapts based on the needs of
    the members and the environment

9
Managing Culture in Virtual Teams
  • Global (multicultural) Virtual Teams require
    cultural sensitivity re
  • culturally biased technology
  • different rules
  • different languages
  • different concepts of time
  • different assumptions
  • different values

10
A Values-Based View of National Culture
  • Four Dimensions of Difference (Hofstede, 1980)
  • Individualism vs Collectivism
  • Power Distance High vs Low
  • Uncertainty Avoidance High vs Low
  • Career Success vs Quality of Life
  • (Masculine vs Feminine)
  • And later 5
  • Confucian Dynamism
  • Devotion to work ethic and respect for tradition

11
Culture as Context in Cross-cultural
Communication as developed by Edward Hall
  • Context refers to the amount of information
    imbedded in a message
  • It plays a crucial role in intercultural
    communication

12
Characteristics of High/Low Context Cultures
High-context Cultures Low-context Cultures
  • Covert implicit
  • Messages internalized
  • much non-verbal coding
  • Reactions reserved
  • Distinct ingroups and outgroups
  • Strong interpersonal bonds
  • Commitment high
  • Time open and flexible
  • Overt Explicit
  • Messages plainly coded
  • Details verbalized
  • Reactions on the surface
  • flexible ingroups and outgroups
  • Fragile interpersonl bonds
  • Commitment low
  • Time highly organized

13
Reliance on Verbal Communication
High Context Low Context
  • Reliance on words low high to
    communicate
  • Reliance on nonverbal high low
    communication
  • View of silence respected, anxiety -
    communicative producing
  • Attention to detail low high
  • Attention to intention high low
  • Communicative indirect, direct,explicit
    approach inferential

14
Context and Cultural Differences
Information implicitly contained
High Context Cultures
Japanese
Arabic
Latin American
Italian
sender
receiver
English
French
Low Context Cultures
North American (Canadian and USA)
Scandanavian
Information explicitly conveyed
German
Swiss German
15
The Basic Differences Leading to Conflict
  • Values, attitudes, behaviors
  • Language
  • Non-verbal communication
  • Context
  • Time
  • Ethnocentrism

16
One result of Contexted/Value-Based Views of
Culture Cultural Scare-mongering
  • C1 C2 Culture Clash, Culture Shock,
  • Cultural Differences
  • This view has permeated global management
    thinking in the last couple of decades.
  • Is it time for a change?

17
A Different Perspective (Holden, 2002)
  • C1 C2 C3, where C3 is a new cultural hybrid
  • Culture and knowledge of culture as an
    organizational resource, i.e., a knowledge asset
  • Cross-cultural management as the application of
    this resource,
  • (Cross-cultural management as a form of Knowledge
    management)

18
Culture as a Problem/Opportunity
  • As a problem
  • The influence of culture must be anticipated,
    controlled and limited
  • As an opportunity
  • A source of competitive advantage, releasing
    synergies from international and intranational
    diversity (Tung, 1997)

19
New View of Culture
  • Culture based on shared or partly shared patterns
    of meaning and interpretation
  • These patterns are produced and reproduced and
    continually changed by the people identifying
    with them and negotiating with them in the course
    of social interaction thus
  • Peoples identification and affiliation with a
    multiplicity of cultures are subject to change.
    (Hannerz, 1996)

20
(No Transcript)
21
Extending Adlers Model (2002) to the Level of
Organizations, Groups and Teams
National Behaviors
National Attitudes
22
A Case of Culture
  • Treaty of Waitangi Negotiation between Crown
    (Office of Treaty Settlements OTS) and the
    Claimant Group
  • The Influence of Culture
  • The need to build relationships before attending
    to negotiations
  • The selection and use of communication channels

23
Team Membership (Extended)
24
Conditions Present at Start up of Team
 
25
Building Relationships
  • There are two sorts of cultures that we need to
    bring together, between the claimant negotiators
    and the key Government negotiators, who are going
    to meet and be making hard judgments based on
    what we are telling them. And that requires a
    huge level of trust, which we are able to build
    up through a whole lot of face-to-face meetings
    over long periods of interaction, two years.
  • We have got to the position where they can trust
    us as Government negotiators to be acting in
    their best interests. We are not going to be
    running them short, to try and get something from
    them. That requires a close cultural melding in a
    sense.

26
The Selection and Use of Communication Channels
  • Through a whole lot of face-to-face meetings over
    two years of interaction we built up a huge level
    of trust. This resulted in a close cultural
    melding.
  • The last four weeks before the signing of the
    Heads of Agreement was frantic and involved a
    different way of working together virtually.
    After a series of critical face-to-face meetings
    to work out some difficult points and with just a
    couple of days to go, communication took place
    primarily by phone and e-mail. Important issues,
    normally dealt with face-to-face, were resolved
    virtually and they performed admirably on their
    side under that regime. This kind of tells me
    that although the preference might be there for
    face-to-face, when the costs are too high they
    work very fine with other scenarios.

27
Driving Factors in the Selection and the Use of
Communication Channels
28
Driving Factors in the Selection and the Use of
Communication Channels (cont)
29
Summary of CaseCulture as
  • Relationship
  • Context
  • Therefore, outcomes of cross-cultural
    collaboration and integration processes cannot be
    predicted with certainty.
  • COMPLEX SYSTEMS that evolve

30
Coping with Complex Systems require special
talents and abilities
  • Interactive translation cross-cultural
    communicative competence Participative
    Competence
  • Cross-cultural management should foster
    participative competence

31
What it Takes to Communicate across Cultures
  • Perspective taking understanding other world
    views that underpin insight and knowledge
    generated by a particular community
  • Participative Competence
  • An open mind
  • flexible attitude
  • nonjudgmental
  • tolerance for ambiguity
  • The ability to
  • communicate respect
  • display empathy
  • personalize knowledge and perceptions

32
And....
  • Language competency
  • Interpersonal skills
  • Area knowledge

33
Conclusions
  • Management Options
  • Subscribe to culture shock, etc., and create high
    hurdles, or
  • embrace culture in all its diversity as a
    resource to respond to the demands of the global
    market, reap the benefits of cross-border
    alliances, and enhance organizational learning
    (Schneider Barsoux, 1997)

34
  • Organizational renewal for the global,
    knowledge-based economy is directly linked to the
    companys willingness and capacity to integrate
    best practices and experience from as many as the
    in-company loci of common knowledge as possible
    (Holden, 2002p. 222)
  • Virtual Teams and networks provide the potential
    for rapidly bringing together diverse,
    organizational (and extra-organizational)
    knowledge, but they require pro-active and
    advanced management to be successful.

35
Further Discussion
36
Culture and Globalisation
  • Globalization of the economy challenges us to
    become more internationally aware and
    cross-culturally savvy. Globalization is not just
    an economic matter, more and more it is concerned
    with issues of cultural meaning
  • Questions
  • Will globalisation see the emergence of cultural
    homogeneity or cultural Balkanization?
  • Should global leaders develop a macro
    perspective, not bound to any one national or
    cultural identity?

37
Organizational National Culture
  • Prior to 1980, many considered organisational
    culture to be independent of national culture.
    This has changed, much recent research focuses on
    the link between organisational and national
    culture and their corresponding influences.
  • Questions
  • Is organizational culture, in effect, a
    by-product of national or societal culture?
  • Can organizational culture persist outside of
    originating national culture?
  • How does the introduction of Western management
    techniques and technologies to non-western
    countries reflect western biases?
  • Will there be a backlash of indigenous
    techniques and technologies?
  • What is the role of organizational leadership in
    mediating between national and organizational
    culture?

38
And MoreNational Culture and KM
  • In published reports of knowledge management
    systems, national culture and ethnic background
    of users are rarely mentioned.
  • Issues
  • Are KMS designers implicitly adopting the
    culture-free hypothesis as a basis for design?
    What is the impact of this hypothesis?
  • What is the impact of implicitly embedded
    cultural values in models such as the SECI
    model?
  • Does knowledge loses its contextual embeddedness
    when it travels?
  • Do cultural differences impact information
    flows, knowledge management processes, and
    knowledge sharing?

39
And moreNational Culture and ICTs
  • Cultural emphasis most widely addressed from the
    position of how ICTs affect organizational and
    national culture.
  • Issues
  • What is the effect of organizational and
    national culture on ICT and vice-versa?
  • Are IS tacitly embedded with the cultural values
    of the originating nation? How does this affect
    trans-national transfer?
  • Should cultural levels of analysis be extended to
    recognise an ICT driven culture?
  • Will proliferance of ICTs result in
    homogenisation of culture, or will it assist
    cultures to avoid cultural convergence?

40
Culture and Social Capital
  • features of social life networks, norms, and
    trust that enable participants to act together
    more effectively to pursue shared
    objectivesSocial capital, in short refers to
    social connections and the attendant norms and
    trust. (Putnam, 1995)
  • Social capital has been found to be important at
    both a national and sub-national level. social
    capital frameworks are generally developed around
    the micro, mezzo and macro levels
  • Issues
  • Are the differences in levels of social capital
    in different regions of a nation due to culture?
  • Why is social and ethnic heterogeneity
    associated with lower levels of social capital?
  • How does culture affect the individual
    measurement criteria for social capital?
  • Is an international measure of social capital
    valid in a culturally diverse world?

41
Culture and Trust
  • The importance and benefits of trust, and the
    emerging global and multicultural workplace,
    highlight the need for use to understand how
    trust develops and the ways national culture
    impacts the trust building process.
  • Issues
  • Increasing globalisation necessitates closer
    examination of the link between culture and
    trust.
  • What is the impact of culture when building
    trust between individuals organisations when
    they are operating on a virtual platform?
  • How do different societies decide whether and
    whom to trust?
  • How does trust impact on knowledge sharing?

42
Culture, Innovation Creativity
  • Despite many economically-driven studies on
    innovation at a national level, little has been
    written on the impact of national culture on
    innovation.
  • Most common measurement is taken at the
    individual, organisational and national levels.
  • McElroy (2002) claims that social capital must be
    taken into account when examining innovation.

43
Final Questions
  • What is the relationship between culture, social
    capital, human capital, intellectual capital,
    innovation, creativity, virtuality, and knowledge
    management?
  • Is there a unifying theory?
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