Title: Cross-Cultural Management
1Cross-Cultural Management
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2Chapter 1 Meanings and Dimensions of Culture
- Outline
- Chap1-1 Cross-cultural management
- Chap1-2 Globalization
- Chap1-3 Definitions of culture
- Chap1-4 Nature of culture
- Chap1-5 Cultural values
- Chap1-6 Dimensions of culture
- Chap1-7 Attitudinal Dimensions of Culture
- Chap1-8 Trompenaars s Cultural Dimensions
3Chap1-1
Cross-cultural management
4What is Cross-Cultural Management?
- CCM is a fairly new field that is based on
theories and research from - Cross Cultural Psychology
- International Business
- Organizational Behaviour
- Human Resources
- Anthropology
5Goals for Cross-Cultural Management
- Cross Cultural Management seeks to
- understand how national cultures affect
management practices - identify the similarities and differences across
cultures in various management practices and
organizational contexts - increase effectiveness in global management
6Chap1-2
7Globalization
- Like it or not, globalization is hereto stay.
- Most large companies have some kind of business
relations with customers, companies, employees or
various stake-holders in other countriesand
cultures. (Global corporations) - Many employees and managers deal with people from
other cultures on a constant basis - Most of us have a close experience with only one
or two culturesgt
8Globalization
- We do not understand people from other cultures
as readily and intuitively as people from our own
culture gt - Cross cultural management helps organization
members to gain better understanding of other
cultures, of their culture and of the
consequences of people from different cultures
working together
9Chap1-3
10Culture
- Definition acquired knowledge that people use to
interpret experience and generate social
behavior. - Culture forms values, creates attitude,
influences behavior.
11Chap1-4
12Culture
- Characteristics of culture include
- Learned
- Shared
- Transgenerational
- Symbolic
- Patterned
- Adaptive
13Cultural diversity
- (P4 Culture and types of handshake)
- Cultural values
- (P5 Priorities of cultural values US, Japan)
- (P5 examples where culture can affect management
approaches) - Depict cultural diversity through concentric
circles.
14Chap1-5
15Priorities of Cultural Values
Arab Countries 1. Family security 2. Family
harmony 3. Parental guidance 4. Age 5.
Authority 6. Compromise 7. Devotion 8.
Patience 9. Indirectness 10. Hospitality
Japan 1. Belonging 2. Group harmony 3.
Collectiveness 4. Age/seniority 5. Group
consensus 6. Cooperation 7. Quality 8.
Patience 9. Indirectness 10. Go-between
United States 1. Freedom 2. Independence 3.
Self-reliance 4. Equality 5. Individualism
6. Competition 7. Efficiency 8. Time 9.
Directness 10. Openness
16Management Approaches Affected by Cultural
Diversity
Cultural Diversity
17Summary of what we learned last week
- Introduction to the course of cross-cultural
management and our international teaching team - Goals for Cross-cultural management
- Nature of culture
18We will learn today
- A model of culture concentric circles
- Comparing culture as a normal distribution
- Values in culture
- Hofstedes cultural dimensions
19A model of culture concentric circles
Outer layer observable, e.g. language, food,
buildings, art. Middle layer helps people
understand how they should behave. Inner layer
intangible, helpful for problem-solving and well
interactions with other people.
20Comparing Cultures as Overlapping Normal
Distribution
Chinese Culture
U.S. Culture
?
?
21Stereotyping from the Cultural Extremes Brugha
and Dus research
- How Americans see the Chinese
- in community
- avoid confrontation
- (keep in harmony)
- respect for authorities
- and seniors
- How Chinese see Americans
- individualism
- face confrontation
- (arguments and debates)
- respect for achievements
Chinese Culture
U.S. Culture
22Values in Culture
- Values basic convictions that people have
regarding what is right and wrong, good and bad,
important and unimportant. - Value differences and similarities across
cultures P 10 common personal values - U.S. Values and possible alternatives
- Values in transition work values change over
time.
23Dominant Western Values in Workforce
Career Stage
Entered the Workforce
Approximate Current Age
Dominant Work Values
Hard working loyal to firm conservative
Nonconforming seeks autonomy loyal to
self Ambitious, hard worker loyal to
career Flexible, values leisure loyal to
relationships
50 to 65 35 to 50 35 to 35 Under 25
1. Protestant Work Ethic 2.
Existential 3. Pragmatic 4. Generation X
Mid-1940s to Late 1950s 1960s to
Mid-1970s Mid-1970s to Mid-1980s Mid-1980s thro
ugh 1990s
24Chap1-6
25Hofstedes Cultural Dimensions
- Dutch researcher Geert Hofstede found there are
four dimensions of culture. - Hofstedes initial data questionnaire surveys
with over 116000 respondents from over 70
different countries who worked in the local
subsidiaries of IBM. - The fifth dimension was added later.
- Criticized because of its focus on just one
company. - Popular in the research field of cross-cultural
management.
26- Power Distance
- Uncertainty Avoidance
- Individualism
- Masculinity
- Long-Term Orientation
Hofstedes Five Cultural Dimensions
27- Power Distance the extent to which less powerful
members of organizations accept that power is
distributed unequally. - Low people treated as equals despite social
status - High people accept authority relations
- Uncertainty avoidance the extent to which people
feel threatened by ambiguous situations and have
created beliefs and institutions that try to
avoid these. - Low prefer few formal rules
- High want clear behavioral guides
28- Individualism/collectivism the tendency of
people to look after themselves and their
immediate family only (belong to groups or
collectives and to look after each other in
exchange for loyalty). - Low group behavior important
- High individual behavior important
-
- A bipolar continuum
Individualism
Collectivism
Individualism
Collectivism
Individualism
29- Masculinity/femininity a situation in which the
dominant values in society are success, money,
and things (caring for others and the quality of
life). - Low cooperation friendly atmosphere employment
security low stress warm interpersonal
relationships. - High competition challenge recognition
wealth advancement high stress tight control. - A continuum
Femininity
Masculinity
30- Longterm orientation value placed on
persistence, status, thrift - Low respect for tradition, personal stability,
focused on the past - High perseverance, thrift, focused on the future
- This dimension was added to depict the influence
of Confucianism in Asia. - This dimension is similar to Adjusting proposed
by Brugha and Du.
31Examples of Cultural Dimensions
Country Power Distance Individualism Masculinity Uncertainty Avoidance Long-term Orientation
China High Low Moderate Moderate High
France High High Moderate High Low
Germany Low High High Moderate Moderate
Hong Kong High Low High Low High
Indonesia High Low Moderate Low Low
Japan Moderate Moderate High Moderate Moderate
Netherlands Low High Low Moderate Moderate
Russia High Moderate Low High Low
United States Low High High Low Low
West Africa High Low Moderate Moderate Low
A low score is synonymous with collectivism
A low score is synonymous with masculinity A
low score is synonymous with a short-term
orientation
32Additional Frameworks
Two additional perspectives, of
social/cross-cultural psychologists merit
attention Markus Kitayama Independent
Interdependent Construals Triandis
Individualism-Collectivism
33Vertical Horizontal Individualism Collectivism
- Harry Triandis Combination of Individualism vs.
collectivism and power achievement vs.
benevolence universalism - VI achievement individualism (USA)
- HI universalism individualism (Sweden)
- VC power collectivism (India)
- HC benevolence collectivism (Israel rare)
34Schwartzs Values
- Universalism
- Benevolence
- Conformity tradition
- Security
- Power
- Achievement
- Hedonism
- Stimulation
- Self Direction
35Schwartzs Value Map
36Empirical test of the Theory
- 75,000 respondents, varied samples in 68
countries - Instrument lists 57 abstract value items
- How important is each item as a guiding
principle in your life?
37- Tasks in the next session
- Students talks and presentations
- Discussion in groups how to learn Cross-cultural
management? - Assignment after class
- Read a paper on Hofstedes cultural dimensions.
38Preview
- Integrating Hofstedes cultural dimensions
- Attitudinal dimensions of culture
- Trompenaarss cultural dimensions
- Integrating culture and management
39Chap1-7 Attitudinal Dimensions of Culture
- Work Value and Attitude Similarities
- Research has revealed many similarities in both
work values and attitudes - Ronen and Kraut
- Smallest space analysis (SSA) - maps the
relationship among countries by showing the
distance between each on various cultural
dimensions - Can identify country clusters
- Ronen and Shenkar
- Examined variables in four categories
- Importance of work goals
- Need deficiency, fulfillment, and job
satisfaction - Managerial and organizational variables
- Work role and interpersonal orientation
40A Synthesis of Country Cultures
41GLOBE Project
- Multi-country study and evaluation of cultural
attributes and leadership behavior - Are transformational characteristics of
leadership universally endorsed? - 170 country co-investigators
- 65 different cultures
- 17,500 middle managers
- 800 organisations
42GLOBE Project
- What traits are universally viewed as impediments
to leadership effectiveness? - Based on beliefs that
- Certain attributes that distinguish one culture
from others can be used to predict the most
suitable, effective and acceptable organizational
and leader practices within that culture - Societal culture has direct impact on
organizational culture - Leader acceptance stems from tying leader
attributes and behaviors to subordinate norms
43GLOBE Cultural Variable Results
Variable Highest Medium Lowest Ranking Ranking Ra
nking
Assertiveness Spain, U.S. Egypt, Ireland Sweden,
New Zealand
Future orientation Denmark, Canada Slovenia,
Egypt Russia, Argentina
Gender differentiation South Korea, Italy,
Brazil Sweden Denmark Egypt
Uncertainty avoidance Austria, Denmark Israel,
U.S. Russia, Hungary
Power distance Russia, Spain England,
France Demark, Netherlands
Collectivism/Societal Denmark, Hong Kong,
U.S. Greece, Hungary Singapore
In-group collectivism Egypt, China England,
France Denmark, Netherlands
Performance orientation U.S., Taiwan Sweden,
Israel Russia, Argentina
Humane orientation Indonesia, Egypt Hong Kong,
Germany, Spain Sweden
44Chap1-8 Trompenaars Cultural Dimensions
- Research produced five cultural dimensions that
are based on relationship orientations and
attitudes toward both time and the environment - Universalism vs. Particularism
- Universalism - belief that ideas and practices
can be applied everywhere in the world without
modification - Focus on formal rules and rely on business
contacts - Particularism - belief that circumstances dictate
how ideas and practices should be applied and
something cannot be done the same everywhere - Focus on relationships, working things out to
suit the parties
45Trompenaars Cultural Dimensions (cont.)
- Individualism vs. Communitarianism
- Individualism - people regard themselves as
individuals - Rely on individuals to make decisions
- Communitarianism - people regard themselves as
part of a group - Seek consultation and mutual consent before
making decisions - Neutral vs. Emotional
- Neutral - culture in which emotions are held in
check - People try not to show their feelings
- Emotional - culture in which emotions are
expressed openly and naturally - People smile, talk loudly, greet each other with
enthusiasm
46Trompenaars Cultural Dimensions (cont.)
- Specific vs. Diffuse
- Specific - culture in which individuals have a
large public space they readily share with others
and a small private space they guard closely and
share with only close friends and associates - People often are open and extroverted
- Work and private life are separate
- Diffuse - culture in which both public and
private space are similar in size and individuals
guard their public space carefully, because entry
into public space affords entry into private
space as well - People often appear indirect and introverted, and
work and private life often are closely linked
47Trompenaars Cultural Dimensions (cont.)
- Achievement vs. Ascription
- Achievement - culture in which people are
accorded status based on how well they perform
their functions - Ascription - culture in which status is
attributed based on who or what a person is - For example, status may be accorded on the basis
of age, gender, or social connections - Time
- Sequential approach to time - people do one thing
at a time, keep appointments strictly, follow
plans to the letter - Synchronous approach - people do more than one
thing at a time, appointments are approximate
48Trompenaars Cultural Dimensions (cont.)
- Environment
- Inner-directed
- People believe in controlling environmental
outcomes - Outer-directed
- People believe in allowing things to take their
natural course - Cultural Patterns or Clusters
- Defined groups of countries that are similar to
each other in terms of the five dimensions and
the orientations toward time and the environment
49Trompenaars Cultural Groups
Individualism
x
x Communitarianism Specific
relationship x
x Diffuse relationship
Universalism
x
x Particularism
Neutral relationship
x Emotional relationship
x Achievement
x
x Ascription
50Trompenaars Cultural Groups
Individualism Communitarianism x
x x x
x Specific relationship Diffuse
relationship x x
x x
x Universalism Particularism
x x x
x x Neutral
relationship x
x x
x Emotional relationship
x Achievement Ascription
x x x
x x
51Trompenaars Cultural Groups
Individualism x
x
x Communitarianism Specific
relationship Diffuse relationship
x x x
x Universalism Particular
ism x
x x
x Neutral relationship x
x
x Emotional relationship
x Achievement
x x Ascription
x x
52Trompenaars Cultural Groups
Individualism
x Communitarianism x
x
x Specific relationship x
x Diffuse relationship
x
x Universalism x
x
x Particularism
x Neutral relationship
x Emotional relationship x
x
x Achievement
x Ascription
x x
x
53Trompenaars Cultural Groups
Individualism
x Communitarianism x
x
x Specific relationship x
x
x Diffuse relationship
x Universalism
x x x
x Particularism
Neutral relationship
x
x Emotional relationship
x x
Achievement x
x
x Ascription
x
54Culture Maps - Frameworks
Edward T. Hall
Geert Hofstede
Kluckhohn Strodbeck
Trompenaars
Variations in Value Orientations
Value Patterns
Value Patterns
Culture Elements
- universalism particularism
- collectivism individualism
- affectiveneutral relationships
- specificitydiffuseness
- achievement ascription
- time orientation
- Internalexternal control
-
- Intl. business practice
- relation to nature
- orientation to time
- belief about human nature
- mode of human activity
- relationships
- space
-
- Intl. business practice
- power
- risk
- individualism
- masculinity
- long term orientation
-
- management
- theories - practice
- time
- space
- things
- friendships
- agreements
-
- interpersonal
- behavior