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Week 6 DEScRIBING CULTURAL DIFFERENCES

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WEEK 6 DESCRIBING CULTURAL DIFFERENCES MNGT 583 zge Can Further Examination of Individualism -Collectivism Tightness and Complexity (Triandis, 1995) Tightness ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Week 6 DEScRIBING CULTURAL DIFFERENCES


1
Week 6DEScRIBING CULTURAL DIFFERENCES
  • MNGT 583 Özge Can

2
How to Unpack Culture?
  • Essence of culture gt the content and structure
    of the basic mental representations members of
    particular social groups share.
  • Complex interactions of values, attitudes, and
    behavioral assumptions of a society.
  • How can we unpact this complex concept?
  • Limited number of ways in which a society can
    manage certain problems gt developing a system
    that categorizes and compares societies on this
    basis.

3
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4
Subsidiaries of an American firm
5
How Culture Affects Business?
  • Strategy formation and implimantation
  • Organization structure
  • HRM practices
  • Conflict management approaches
  • Negotiation tactics
  • Leadership styles

6
Different Models to Compare Cultures
  • Kluckhohn Strodtbecks (1961) comparative
    anthropology framework
  • Hofstedes study of value dimensions (1980)
  • Extansions on Hofstedes study
  • Shwartz value survey (1990, 1992)
  • Trompenaars dimensions (1993)
  • The GLOBE study (House et al., 2004)
  • Social axioms (Leung et al. 2002)

7
Kluckhohn Strodtbecks Framework
  • Six value orientations to categorize cultures
  • Relationships to nature
  • Beliefs about human nature
  • Relationships between people
  • Nature of human acitivity
  • Conception of space
  • Orientation of time

8
Kluckhohn Strodtbecks Framework
9
Defining harmony differently
10
Hofstedes Study
  • Based on attitude surveys of 117,000 employees of
    Iin 40 different countries, Hofstede extracted
    four dimensions
  • individualismcollectivism
  • power distance
  • uncertainty avoidance
  • masculinityfemininity
  • Giving every country a score ranging from 0 to
    100 on each of the four dimensions.

11
Measuring Values Desirable vs. Desired
  • Desirable How people think the world ought to be
    (Qs referring people in general). Norms involved.
  • Desired what poeple want for themselves (Qs
    worded as you or me)
  • Norms standards for behavior that exist within a
    group or category of people
  • Desirable relates more to ideology, the desired
    to practical matters

12
The Trap of Ecological Fallacy
  • Ecological Fallacy gt making the mistake of
    applying the scores at the country level to
    individuals
  • Within each nation there might be variation on a
    particular dimension, such that a particular
    individual will not be at all representative of
    the mean score.

13
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14
Individualism-Collectivism
  • The extent to which ones self-identity is
    defined according to individual characteristics
    or by the characteristics of the groups to which
    the individual belongs on a permanent basis
  • The extent to which individual or group interests
    dominate.

15
Power Distance
  • The extent to which power differences are
    accepted and sanctioned in a society.

16
Uncertainty Avoidance
  • The extent to which societies focus on ways to
    reduce uncertainty and create stability.

17
Masculinity-Femininity
  • The extent to which traditional male orientations
    of ambition and achievement are emphasized over
    traditional female orientations of nurturance and
    interpersonal harmony.

18
Extention of Hofstedes Work -1
  • A subsequent study based on Chinese values
    (Chinese Value Survey by Bond et al., 1987)
    conducted in 23 countries.
  • Four underlying dimensions of cultural value
    orientations found
  • Integration
  • Human-heartedness
  • Moral discipline
  • Confucian work dynamism (Later labeled as long
    vs. short term orientation)

19
Extention of Hofstedes Work -2
  • World Value Survey (WVS) coordinated by Ronald
    Inglehart (and later by Minkov), covering more
    than 100 countries
  • Data-collection took place in 10-year intervals
  • Freely acessible from the internet

20
Cultural Distance
  • How different national cultures are from each
    other?
  • Index of cultural distance gt relative
    similarities and differences between nations

21
Criticisms to Hofstedes Study
  • The operationalization of the constructs
  • The limits to generalize the study findings (data
    comes only from IBM employees)
  • No theoretical base in developing the survey
  • Other methodological criticisms
  • Problems with factor analysis
  • Many items within a dimension seems unrelated
  • Many of the items related to several of the
    dimensions

22
Schwartz Value Survey (SVS)
  • Content and structure of human values
  • Content gt the criteria people use to evaluate
    events and select courses of action.
  • Structure gt the organization of these values
    based on their similarities and differences.
  • They derived 56 values that reflected various
    ways of satisfying the needs of a society.
  • The values clustered into 10 groups called value
    types. (can be seen as refinement of Hofstedes
    earlier work)
  • 7 value types at national culture level

23
Schwartz Value Survey (SVS)
  • Egalitarianism recognition of people as moral
    equals
  • Harmony fitting in with the environment
  • Embeddedness people as embedded in the
    collective
  • Hierarchy legitimation of unequal distribution
    of power
  • Mastery exploitation of the natural or social
    environment
  • Affective autonomy pursuit of positive
    experiences
  • Intellectual autonomy independent pursuit of own
    ideas

24
SVS Individual Level Value Structure
25
SVS National Level Value Structure
26
Trompenaars Dimensions
  • His seven value dimensions (1993) were derived
    primarily from the prior work of North American
    sociologists and anthropologists
  • 1) Universalismparticularism Universalism is a
    belief that what is true and good can be
    discovered and applied universally, whereas
    particularism is a belief that unique
    circumstances determine what is right or good.

27
Trompenaars Dimensions
  • 2) Individualismcollectivism Similar to
    Hofstedes definition, this dimension concerns
    the extent to which people plan their actions
    with reference to individual benefits versus
    those of the group.
  • 3) Neutralaffective In neutral cultures,
    emotion should be held in check, and maintaining
    an appearance of self-control is important,
    whereas in affective cultures, it is natural to
    express emotions.

28
Trompenaars Dimensions
  • 4) Specificdiffuse The extent to which
    individuals allow access to their inner selves to
    others. In specific cultures, people separate the
    private part of their lives from the public,
    whereas in diffuse cultures, these aspects of the
    individual overlap.
  • 5) Achievementascription This dimension is
    about how status and power are determined in a
    society. In an ascription society, status is
    based on who a person is, whereas in an
    achievement society, status is based on what a
    person does.

29
Trompenaars Dimensions
  • 6) Time This dimension is about past versus
    future orientations and about the extent to which
    time is viewed as linear versus holistic and
    integrative with past and present together with
    future possibilities.
  • 7) Environment This dimension is the extent to
    which people feel that they themselves are the
    primary influence on their lives. Alternatively,
    the environment is seen as more powerful than
    they are, and people should strive to achieve
    harmony with it.

30
Trompenaars Dimensions
  • Two dimensions at national level
  • Loyal involvementutilitarian involvement,
    representing varying orientations toward group
    members
  • Conservatismegalitarian commitment, representing
    orientations toward obligations of social
    relationships
  • These two can be seen as extensions and
    refinements of Hofstedes individualism-collectivi
    sm and power distance dimensions, respectively.

31
The GLOBE Study
  • The most recent study of cultural differences as
    a part of of the Global Leadership and
    Organizational Behavior Effectiveness (GLOBE)
    program (House et al., 2004).
  • It involved 170 researchers working in 62
    different societies and collected data from
    approximately 17,000 middle managers in 951
    organizations.

32
The GLOBE Study
  • Institutional collectivism (from Hofstede)
  • In-group collectivism (from Hofstede)
  • Power distance (from Hofstede)
  • Uncertainty avoidance (from Hofstede)
  • Gender egalitarianism (Hofstedes femininity
    dimension)
  • Assertiveness (Hofstedes masculinity dimension)
  • Humane orientation (from Kluckhohn Strodtbeck)
  • Future orientation (from Kluckhohn Strodtbeck)
  • Performance orientation (from McClelland
    masculinity)

33
The GLOBE Study
  • Institutional collectivism The degree to which
    organizational and societal institutional
    practices encourage and reward collective
    distribution of resources and collective action
  • In-group collectivism The degree to which
    individuals express pride, loyalty, and
    cohesiveness in their organizations or families
  • Important All dimensions were measured both as
    practices (the way things are as is) and
    values (the way things should be as it should
    be)

34
Further Examination of Individualism
-Collectivism
  • Tightness and Complexity (Triandis, 1995)
  • Tightness gt The extent to which members of a
    culture agree about what is correct behavior,
    believe they must behave exactly according to
    cultural norms, and believe they will receive or
    should give severe criticism for even small
    deviations from cultural norms
  • Complexity gt The amount of differentiation in
    the various domains of individuals lives. The
    numbers of different roles available to
    individuals, the size of communities, and the per
    capita gross national product of a country are
    suggested as measures of cultural complexity.

35
Tightness, Coplexity, Individualism-Collectivism
36
Further Examination of Individualism
-Collectivism
  • Vertical and Horizontal (Triandis, 1995)
  • Vertical collectivism gt See themselves as an
    aspect of an in-group, but members of the
    in-group are different in terms of status. These
    cultures are characterized by patterns of social
    relationships that emphasize communal sharing
    according to need and authority ranking or the
    distribution of resources according to rank
  • Horizontal individualismgt The self is autonomous
    and people are generally equal. These cultures
    are characterized by patterns of social behavior
    that emphasize equity in resource sharing
    according to contribution and distribution of
    resources equally among members

37
Vertical-Horizontal Dimension
38
Social Axioms
  • As an alternative way to value studies to
    understand and compare cultures
  • Social Axioms (Leung, 2002)
  • Social axioms are generalized beliefs about
    oneself, the social and physical environment, or
    the spiritual world, and are in the form of an
    assertion about the relationship between two
    entities or concepts.
  • Unlike values, they do not have an evaluative
    component they only show a relationship from A
    to B.

39
Social Axioms Individual Level
  • Cynicism a negative view of human nature, a
    biased view against some groups of people, a
    mistrust of social institutions, and a disregard
    of ethical means of achieving an end
  • Social complexity beliefs that there are no
    rigid rules but rather multiple ways of achieving
    a given outcome and that inconsistency in human
    behavior is common
  • Reward for application a general belief that
    effort, knowledge, and careful planning will lead
    to positive results
  • Spirituality belief in the existence of
    supernatural forces and the functions of
    religious belief
  • Fate control a belief that life events are
    predetermined and that there are some ways to
    influence these outcomes

40
Social Axioms Society Level
  • Four of the five dimensions merged into one
    strong factor which was labeled as dynamic
    externality
  • The other strong factor social cynicism
  • Social cynicism seem to be a new cultural
    dimension since it only moderately correlates
    with dimensions from other studies

41
Other Levels for Cultural Differences
  • Within country/ nation differences
  • Regional
  • Ethnic
  • Language
  • Religious
  • Gender
  • Generation
  • Social class

42
Two Implications of Culture for International
Management
  • What people want from work
  • Views about leadership

43
Using Frameworks Models of Cultural Variation
  • Hidden enthocentricm by the people conducting
    those research possible misinterpretations
  • Instead of explaining culture, they should not
    constrain the way you assess people from another
    culture gt oversimplifying, sophisticated
    stereotyping
  • Do not rely on overly simplistic models of the
    effect of culture
  • Pay attention to the level of analysis gt whether
    it is the individual or the nation/ society

44
Using Frameworks Models of Cultural Variation
  • Importance of cultural paradoxes
  • Situational context, cultural history, geography
    etc. are important
  • Pay attention to internal, within-country
    differences
  • They are best used for descriptive purposes
    rather than in-depth cultural evaluation
  • The best knowledge of culture comes from direct
    interactions/ information fro natives

45
Making Better Sense of Culture
  • 1) Approach other cultures with the idea of
    testing your sophisticated stereotypes
  • 2) Find culltural informants and mentors to help
  • 3) Carefully assess information that seems
    inconsistent with cultural stereotypes
  • 4) Learn mental maps that will increase
    effectiveness in different cultures
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