1 / 18

International cultures and project work

International cultures and project work. Difficulties and possibilities. The Stages of Internationalization.

olina
Download Presentation

International cultures and project work

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. International cultures and project work Difficulties and possibilities

  2. The Stages of Internationalization Stage 4: Multinational OperationsThe firm becomes a full-fledged multinational corp. (MNC) with assembly and production facilities in several countries and regions of the world. Some decentralization of decision making is common, but many personnel decisions are still made at corp. headquarters. Stage 2: Export OperationsThe firm expands its market to include other countries, but retains production facilities within domestic borders. Stage 1: Domestic OperationsThe firm’s market is exclusively domestic. Stage 5: Transnational OperationsFirms that reach this stage are often called transna-tional because they owe little allegiance to their country of origin. Operations are highly decentralized, with each busi-ness unit free to make personnel decisions with very loose control from corp. headquarters. Stage 3: Subsidiaries or Joint Ventures The firm physically moves some of its operations out of the home country.

  3. What is a Project? Attributes • Temporary • Unique product, service, or result • Progressive Elaboration Project Management Book of Knowledge (PMBOK, 2000) …a project is about implementing change!

  4. Why is change so difficult? • Comfort Zones • Complacency • Fear i.e. culturally dependent aspects!

  5. What is Culture? • Definition – “A pattern of shared 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” (Rogers, 1995)

  6. Levels of Culture • Cultural differences can exist in any setting involving varying groups: • Inter-organization • Intra-organization • Organizations include any grouping of people (corporations, societies, etc.)

  7. 7 Dimensions of Difference • Universalism vs. Particularism – (Rules vs. Relationships) • Individualism vs. Communitarianism (Self interest vs. Group interest) • Neutral vs. Effective (Reason vs. Emotion) • Specific vs. Diffuse (Compartmentalization versus Depth in relationships) • Achievement vs. Ascription (Doing vs. Being) • Synchronous vs. Sequential (Time is circular vs. Time is a race) • Inner Directed vs. Outer Directed (Control Nature vs. Align with Nature) Trompenaars, F., & Hampden-Turner, C. (1998). Riding the Waves of Culture: Understanding Diversity in Global Business. New York: McGraw-Hill.

  8. Recognizing Differences • May be: • Explicit (easily observed) • Implicit (hidden, requiring more effort) • Both are potential barriers • The key is to quickly and efficiently identify both types

  9. How can we identify Cultural Differences? • Interviews • Questionnaires • Direct Observation These require time and should, therefore, be implemented early in the project life cycle

  10. Communication leads to Conflict Resolution • Engage all parties • Look for hidden dilemmas • Communication is the first step toward reconciliation

  11. You cannot “over-communicate”! • Be consistent and accurate • Rumors and/or lack of information can erode support • Don’t miss opportunities to praise positive results and/or milestones achieved • Bad news • Gets worse with age • Reveal it as early as possible to allow for recovery • Dilute it by providing information on recovery plans

  12. How do we change the organizational culture to conform with our project? • “WE” don’t! • Only time and the shared experience of the members will change the culture • We must first seek to understand the cultural differences …then, establish an environment for change

  13. So what do we do as Project Managers? • Realize that we are cultural “change agents” • Learn how to identify cultural differences that may impact our projects • Learn how to resolve these cultural differences

  14. How are cultural differences resolved? • “Reconciliation” • Maximize the strengths of each position • Minimize the weaknesses of each position • The resulting position is synergistic • Cultural reconciliation greatly simplifies project implementation (fewer people fighting the effort!) • This is NOT a compromise, which can erode BOTH positions

  15. Urbanization Nationalism Colonisation Education Personal Culture Migration Industrialization Minority Experience Social background Values World-views Beliefs Behaviours Cross-cultural Adjustments Ethnic background Profession Religion Gender Language Forces Shaping Individual Culture

  16. Dangers! • Stereotypes • Prejudice • Ethno-centric perspectives

  17. Managing an offshore project • Ethnocentric Approach • Top management and other key positions are filled by people from the home country • Polycentric Approach • International subsidiaries are managed and staffed by personnel from the host country • Geocentric Approach • Nationality is deliberately downplayed and the firm actively searches on a worldwide or regional basis for the best people to fill key positions

  18. Discussion questions for April 22nd • Each group shall make short summaries of the literature and be prepared to present this summary in class (about 4 pages) • List the main messages, the main advantages and the main problems of the three IJPM articles in the readings. • The project work form, to which national cultures is it best suited, and to which is it problematic? • There will also be a short groupwork during the seminar that does not require preparation, but (of course) familiarity with the readings. • All summaries and answers/reflections to questions shall be handed over to Johann in paper format at the beginning of the seminar. Use the standardised cover form!!!

More Related