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Organizational Culture

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A system of meaning shared by the organization s members Cultural values are ... Socialization Core Values Subcultures Dominant Culture How Employees ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Organizational Culture


1
Organizational Culture
In any organization, there are the ropes to skip
and the ropes to know. -- R. Ritti and G.
Funkhouser
2
Environment and Corporate Culture
GENERAL ENVIRONMENT
ECONOMIC
OPERATING ENVIRONMENT
SOCIAL
NEW ENTRANTS
SUPPLIER
INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
PRODUCTION TECHNOLOGY STRUCTURE INPUTS
SUBSTITUTES
POLITICAL
CULTURE
COMPETITION
TECHNOLOGY
CUSTOMER
LEGAL
3
What is Organizational Culture?
  • A system of meaning shared by the organizations
    members
  • Cultural values are collective beliefs,
    assumptions, and feelings about what things are
    good, normal, rational, valuable, etc.

4
Examples of Organizational Culture
  • Innovation and risk taking (3M)
  • Outcome orientation (Bausch Lomb)
  • Aggressiveness (Microsoft)
  • Continuous learning and innovation (Nokia)

5
Characteristics of Organizational Culture
Observed behavioral regularities
Philosophy on treatment of employees/ customers
Norms
Rules of employee behavior
Organizational Culture
Dominant values
Organizational climate
6
Elements of Organizational Culture
  • Physical Structures
  • Rituals/ Ceremonies
  • Stories
  • Language
  • Beliefs
  • Values
  • Assumptions

Artifacts of Organizational Culture
Organizational Culture
7
Artifacts Organizational Stories
  • Social prescriptions of desired behavior
  • Demonstrate that organizational objectives are
    attainable
  • Most effective stories
  • Describe real people
  • Assumed to be true
  • Known throughout the organization
  • Are prescriptive

8
Artifacts Rituals and Ceremonies
  • Rituals
  • programmed routines
  • e.g., conducting meetings, employee forums, x-mas
    parties
  • Ceremonies
  • planned activities for an audience
  • e.g., award ceremonies
  • Heroes
  • Figure who exemplifies character and deed
  • E.g. founders as Tom Watson of IBM, Bill Gates of
    Microsoft

9
Artifacts Organizational Language
  • Words used to address people, describe clients,
    etc.
  • e.g. sir/maam, first name calling
  • Leaders use phrases and metaphors as cultural
    symbols
  • e.g.. General Electrics grocery store
  • Language also found in subcultures
  • e.g.. Whirlpools PowerPoint culture
  • Slogans
  • E.g. Nokia Connecting People

10
Organizational Subcultures
  • Located throughout the organization
  • Can support or oppose (countercultures) firms
    dominant culture
  • Two functions of countercultures
  • provide surveillance and evaluation
  • source of emerging values

E. M. Samelson/Orlando Sentinel
11
Artifacts Physical Structures/Space
  • Oakley, Inc.s protective and competitive
    corporate culture is apparent in its building
    design and workspace. The building looks like a
    vault to protect its cherished product designs
    (eyewear, footwear, apparel and watches).

Courtesy of Oakley, Inc.
Courtesy of Oakley, Inc.
12
Artifacts - Industry
Information technology
Advertising and Media
Call Centers
13
How Organizational Cultures Form
Top Management
Philosophy of the Organizations Founders Bill
Hewlett Dave Packard John Gokongwei Bill
Gates
Organizational Culture
Selection
Socialization
14
Do Organizations Have Uniform Cultures?
Subcultures
Dominant Culture
Core Values
15
Stories
Rituals
How Employees Learn Culture/ How it is
reinforced
Material Symbols
Language
16
Benefits of Strong Corporate Cultures
SocialControl
Strong Organizational Culture
SocialGlue
AidsSense-Making
17
Organizational Culture
Functions
Liabilities
  • Controlling behavior
  • Defining boundaries
  • Conveying identity
  • Promoting commitment
  • Blocking mergers
  • Inhibiting diversity
  • Inhibiting change
  • Blocking acquisitions

18
Managing, Changing, and Merging Cultures
  • Managing through stories, heroes, symbols and
    ceremonies
  • Culture often need to be changed to ensure
    organizational success
  • Merging cultures through symbolic leaders

19
Adaptive Organizational Cultures
  • External focus -- firms success depends on
    continuous change
  • Focus on processes more than goals
  • Strong sense of ownership
  • Proactive --seek out opportunities

AP/Wide World
20
Bicultural Audit
  • Part of due diligence in merger
  • Minimizes risk of cultural collision by
    diagnosing companies before merger
  • Three steps in bicultural audit
  • 1. Collect artifacts
  • 2. Analyze data for cultural conflict/compatibilit
    y
  • 3. Recommend solutions

21
Merging Organizational Cultures
Assimilation
Acquired company embraces acquiring firms culture
Deculturation
Acquiring firm imposes its culture on unwilling
acquired firm
Integration
Both cultures combined into a new composite
culture
Separation
Merging companies remain separate with their own
culture
22
Strengthening Organizational Culture
Foundersand leaders
Strengthening Organizational Culture
Culturally consistent rewards
Selection and socialization
Stable workforce
Managing the cultural network
23
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24
Studies show that culture is closely related to
the effectiveness of organizations.
25
Effectiveness depends on . . .
  • the core values and beliefs of the members of the
    organization.
  • the policies and practices used by the
    organization.
  • the success in translating the core values and
    beliefs into policies and practices.
  • the match between values, beliefs, policies,
    practices, and the organizations environment.

26
Effectiveness is related to . . .
  • involvement participation.
  • consistency shared beliefs and values.
  • adaptability ability to recognize the need for
    change and the willingness to change
  • mission shared purpose.

27
Model of Organizational Culture Types
28
Four Culture Types
29
Studies on Culture Types
  • Deshpande, Farley, and Webster (1993) found that
    competing values of the market culture outperform
    those of the clan culture.
  • Those of the adhocracy culture outperformed those
    of the diagonally opposing hierarchy culture.
  • The speed of response to environmental changes
    which determine a higher performance is thus
    culturally dependent.

30
EXERCISE-Organizational Culture Assessment
Instrument (OCAI)
31
B
A
D
C
32
Case Study Organizational Culture and Performance
33
Cultural Change
  • Conduct a cultural analysis to identify cultural
    elements needing change
  • Make it clear to employees that the
    organizations survival is legitimately
    threatened if change is not forthcoming
  • Appoint new leadership with new vision
  • Introduce new stories and rituals to convey new
    vision
  • Change the selection and socialization process
    and reward systems to support new values

From Management by Robbins and Coulter
34
Motivation andOrganizational Culture Types
35
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36
The Learning OrganizationManagement Approach in
New Millenium
37
Learning Organization Culture
  • Has a culture that values sharing knowledge to
    adapt to the changing environment and
    continuously improve
  • From Management Fundamentals by Lussier

38
When Companies Seek to Foster Certain Culture
Types
  • Clan culture needs the five leadership practices
  • Adhocrarcy culture needs enabling others to act
    and encouraging the heart
  • Hierarchy culture should not use enabling others
    to act and encouraging the heart
  • Market culture should consider alternatives to
    leadership practices.

39
Culture and Organization Growth Stages
40
Case Study Culture and Organization Growth
Stages
PLDT Acquires Smart
NTT Docom of Japan Invests in Smart
Continuous innovation
Expand geographic coverage
41
Culture and Motivation
10
42
What is the Organizational Culture in the
Philippines?
43
Philippine Organizational Culture
  • Espouses a reorientation in the organization to
    three values, namely
  • kaugnayan (identity),
  • karangalan (pride)
  • katapatan (commitment).
  • To accentuate these core values,
    corporate leaders emphasize
  • paternalism (pagbabahala and pananagutan),
  • personalism or pakikipagkapwa (treating a person
    as a fellow human being),
  • familism (giving importance to the family as a
    social unit).

44
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