Title: Intercultural Management
1Intercultural Management
- Effective Communication in a Global Environment
2Global Business
3Intercultural Myths
- The Global Village Myth the world is
homogeneous - Universality Myth underneath our differences, we
are all really the same.
4Can Most People be trusted?
- United States 55
- United Kingdom 49
- Mexico 30
- West Germany 19
- Italy 1
5Culture Influences Values and Attitudes
- Values and Attitudes influence Business Behavior
6What is culture
Observable behaviour
Values and assumptions
7Layers of culture
Right or wrong
Language, food, dress religion, buildings,
fashion, art
Good or Bad
Assumptions about existence
8Cultural differences
- Type of culture
- How we relate to people
- How we relate to time
9Low context
High Context
10High-Context Cultures
- Indirect and circuitous forms of relating
- Tactful, evasive and ambiguous
- Operates through personal relationships and trust
- Negotiations slow and ritualistic
11Low Context cultures
- Direct and to the point
- Precise, blunt and transparent
- Operates through legalistic framework
- Negotiation as structured as possible
12Relationship with people
-
- Individualism Communitarian
- Neutral Emotional
- Universalism Particularism
- Achievement Ascription
13Individuals
- Use of the I form in communication
- Instant decision making by representatives
- Achievement is personal
- Individual assumes responsibility for actions
14Communitarians
- Use of the we form
- Decisions referred back by delegates to
organisations - Achievement is group based and joint
responsibility is assumed for actions
15Individualism
Encourages individual freedom and responsibility
However..
We need to avoid Conformism and slow Decision
making, so we must.
We dont want to degenerate Into
self-centredness, so we Must
Encourage individuals to Work for consensus in
the interest Of the group although
Communitarianism
16Verbal Communication
- Low-Context A
- B
- High-Context A
- B
- Oriental A
- B
17Tone Of Voice
- Low-Context
- High-Context
- Oriental
18Neutral Cultures
- Hide emotions
- Cool and controlled behaviour is admired
- Physical contact and strong expression of body
language is taboo - Emotions that are controlled may sometimes explode
19Affective Cultures
- Thoughts and feelings are expressed verbally and
non-verbally - Expression of disagreement is uninhibited
- Lively discussion with lots of emotion admired
- Frequent physical contact and open expression
of body language permissible
20Universalist
- Rules, regulations and procedures very important
- Agreement is usually supported by legal contract
- There is the law, and that is that
- A persons trustworthiness is based on honouring
their word or contract
21Particularist
- Relationships more important than rules
- Legal contracts and be easily modified
- The law is relative
- A persons trustworthiness is based on whether
they respond to changing circumstances
22Achievement
- Titles are only used when relevant
- Respect for hierarchy is based on effectiveness
and ability of jobholder - Senior managers may be of varying age and gender
- Senior managers hold their position based on
competence and qualifications
23Ascription
- Titles used extensively to indicate status in
organisation - Respect for hierarchy is required to demonstrate
commitment to the organisation - Senior managers are usually male, middle-aged and
qualified by background, formal qualifications
and connections
24Time
Sequentially
Synchronically
Past Present Future
25Nonverbal Sensitivity
- Greetings
- Eye Contact
- Space
- Touch
- Posture
- Facial expressions
- Timing
- Silence
- Gestures
26Resolution
- Respect Knowledge Tolerance
- Understanding
- Cooperation