Title: Organizational Culture
1Organizational Culture
- A pattern of basic assumptions that the group
learned as it solved its problems of external
adaptation and internal integration, that has
worked well enough to be considered valid and,
therefore, to be taught to new members as the
correct way to perceive, think and feel in
relation to those problems. - Edgar Schein, 1992
2Levels of Organizational Culture
Artifacts symbols of culture in the
physical and social work environment
Values Espoused what members of an organization
say they value Enacted reflected in the way
individuals actually behave
Assumptions deeply held beliefs that guide
behavior and tell members of an organization how
to perceive and think about things
3Organizational Culture
Artifacts symbols of culture in the
physical and social work environment
Visible, often not decipherable
Values Espoused what members of an organization
say they value Enacted reflected in the way
individuals actually behave
Greater level of awareness
Assumptions deeply held beliefs that guide
behavior and tell members of an organization how
to perceive and think about things
Taken for granted, Invisible, Preconscious
4Types of Artifacts
- Personal Enactment
- Ceremonies and Rites
- Stories
- About the boss
- About getting fired
- About relocating
- About promotions
- About crisis situations
- About status considerations
- Rituals
- Symbols
5Functions of Organizational Culture
- Culture provides a sense of identity to members
and increases their commitment to the
organization - Culture is a sense-making device
for organization members - Culture reinforces the values
of the organization - Culture serves as a control
mechanism for shaping
behavior
6Understanding Organizational Culture
7Types of Cultures
- Constructive
- Valuing members, self-actualizing, affiliative,
and humanistic/encouraging normative beliefs
(expected behavior or conduct) - Passive-defensive
- Approval-oriented, traditional and bureaucratic,
dependent and nonparticipative, punish mistakes
but ignore success - Aggressive-defensive
- Confrontation and negativism are rewarded,
nonparticipative, positional power, winning
valued, competitiveness rewarded, perfectionistic
8Constructive Culture
9Passive Defensive Culture
10Aggressive-Defensive Culture
11Organizational Culture Research Suggests
- Organizational culture correlated with employee
attitudes and behavior - Congruence between an individuals values and the
organizations values associated with
organizational commitment, job satisfaction,
intentions to quit, and turnover - Organizational culture did not predict a
companys financial performance - Mergers frequently failed due to incompatible
cultures
12Theories on the relationship between
organizational culture and performance
Strong Culture Perspective Fit Perspective Adaptiv
e Perspective
13 Strong Culture
- an organizational culture with a consensus on the
values that drive the company and with an
intensity that is recognizable even to outsiders
14Strong Cultures Facilitate Performance
- BECAUSE
-
- They are characterized by goal
- alignment
- They create a high level of motivation
- because of shared values by the members
- They provide control without the
- oppressive effects of bureaucracy
15 Fit Perspective
- a culture is good only if it fits the industry or
the firms strategy
16Fit Perspective
-
- Three particular industry characteristics affect
culture - Competitive environment
- Customer requirements
- Societal expectations
17Organizational Socialization
- Phase 1 Anticipatory
-
- Phase 2 Encounter
- Phase 3 Change and acquisition
18 Adaptive Culture
- an organizational culture that encourages
confidence and risk taking among employees, has
leadership that produces change, and focuses on
the changing needs of customers
19- Adaptive vs. Nonadaptive Cultures
20Most Important Elements in Managing Culture
- What leaders pay attention to
- How leaders react to crises
- How leaders behave
- How leaders allocate rewards
- How leaders hire and fire individuals
21Organizational Socialization Process
22Organizational Socialization
Phases
Perceptual and Social Processes
23Organizational Socialization
Phases
Perceptual and Social Processes
- Encounter values, skills, and attitudes start to
shift as new recruit discovers what the
organization is truly like
- Managing lifestyle-versus-work conflicts
- Managing intergroup role conflicts
- Seeking role definition and clarity
- Becoming familiar with task and group dynamics
24Organizational Socialization
Phases
Perceptual and Social Processes
- Change and acquisition recruit masters skills and
roles and adjusts to work groups values and norms
- Competing role demands are resolved
- Critical tasks are mastered
- Group norms and values are internalized
25Outcomes of Socialization
- Newcomers who are successfully socialized should
exhibit - Good performance
- High job satisfaction
- Intention to stay with organization
- Low levels of distress symptoms
- High level of organizational commitment
26How cultures are embedded in organizations
- Formal/public statements
- Physical Layout
- Slogans, co. lingo
- Mentoring, modeling
- Explicit rewards, promotion criteria
- Stories, legends, myths
- Processes and outcomes, measurement
- Workflow and systems
27Mentoring
- Outcomes for Mentees
- Outcomes for Mentors
- Outcomes for Organizations
- Maintaining the Culture
28Functions of Mentoring
- Career Functions
- Sponsorship
- Exposure-and-Visibility
- Coaching
- Protection
- Challenging Assignments
- Psychological Functions
- Role Modeling
- Acceptance-and-Confirmation
- Counseling
- Friendship
29Interventions for Changing Organizational Culture
30Questions on Culture
- Can the organizational culture change?
- How?
- Where does the culture come from?
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- Does the culture look the same from the top and
from the bottom?