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Organisational Culture

Chapter 14. Organisational Culture. Learning Objectives. 14.1 Describe the elements of organisational culture and discuss the importance of organisational subcultures 14.2 List four categories of artefacts through which corporate culture is deciphered

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Organisational Culture

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  1. Chapter 14 Organisational Culture

  2. Learning Objectives 14.1 Describe the elements of organisational culture and discuss the importance of organisational subcultures 14.2 List four categories of artefacts through which corporate culture is deciphered 14.3 Discuss the importance of organisational culture and the conditions under which organisational culture strength improves organisational performance 14.4 Compare and contrast four strategies for merging organisational cultures 14.5 Identify four strategies for changing or strengthening an organisation’s culture, including the application of attraction-selection-attrition theory. 14.6 Describe the organisational socialisation process and identify strategies to improve that process

  3. Wesfarmers’ Organisational Culture Wesfarmers’ award-winning corporate culture has helped Coles to become a serious competitor in the retail food business

  4. Organisational Culture Defined • The basic pattern of shared values and assumptions shared within the organisation • Defines what is important and unimportant • Company’s DNA—invisible, yet powerful template that shapes employee behaviour

  5. Elements of Organisational Culture Artifacts of organisational culture Organisational culture

  6. Content of Organisational Culture • The relative ordering of values • A few dominant values • Example: Wesfarmers—integrity, openness, boldness and accountability. • Problems measuring organisational culture • Oversimplifies diversity of possible values • Ignores shared assumptions • Adopts an ‘integration’ perspective • An organisation’s culture is fuzzy: • Diverse subcultures (‘fragmentation’) • Values exist within individuals, not work units

  7. Organisational Culture Profile Source: O’Reilly et al (1991)

  8. Organisational Subcultures • Dominant culture—most widely shared values and assumptions • Subcultures • Located throughout the organisation • Can enhance or oppose (countercultures) firm’s dominant culture • Two functions of countercultures: • Provide surveillance and critique, ethics • Source of emerging values

  9. Artefacts of Organisational Culture • Observable symbols and signs of culture • Physical structures, ceremonies, language, stories • Maintain and transmit organisation’s culture • Need many artefacts to accurately decipher a company’s culture

  10. Artefacts: Stories and Legends • Social prescriptions of desired (or dysfunctional) behaviour • Provides a realistic human side to expectations • Most effective stories and legends: • Describe real people • Assumed to be true • Known throughout the organisation • Are prescriptive

  11. Artefacts: Rituals and Ceremonies • Rituals • Programmed routines (e.g. how visitors are greeted) • Ceremonies • Planned activities for an audience (e.g. award ceremonies)

  12. Artefacts: Organisational Language • Words used to address people, describe customers, etc. • Leaders use phrases and special vocabulary as cultural symbols • Language also found in subcultures

  13. Artefacts: Physical Structures and Symbols • Building structure—may shape and reflect culture • Office design conveys cultural meaning • Furniture, office size, wall hangings

  14. Organisational Culture Strength • How widely and deeply employees hold the company’s dominant values and assumptions • Strong cultures exist when: • Most employees understand/embrace the dominant values • Values and assumptions are institutionalised through well-established artefacts • Culture is long lasting—often traced back to founder

  15. Functions of Strong Corporate Cultures

  16. Contingencies of Organisational Culture and Performance • Organisational culture strength moderately predicts organisational performance • Need to consider contingencies: • Ensure culture-environment fit • Avoid corporate ‘cult’ strength • Create an adaptive culture

  17. News Corporation’s ‘Whatever it Takes’ Culture According to various observers and government officials, Rupert Murdoch’s powerful media empire has a ‘whatever it takes’ corporate culture that has tacitly encouraged staff to cross ethical and legal boundaries

  18. Organisational Culture and Ethics • Ethical values become embedded in an organisation’s dominant culture • To create a more ethical organisation, leaders need to work on the embedded culture that steers employee behaviour

  19. Merging Cultures: Bicultural Audit • Part of due diligence in merger • Minimises cultural collision by diagnosing companies • Three steps in bicultural audit: • Identify cultural artefacts • Analyse data for cultural conflict or compatibility • Identify strategies and action plans to bridge cultures

  20. Merging Organisational Cultures Assimilation Acquired company embraces acquiring firm’s cultural values Deculturation Acquiring firm imposes its culture on unwilling acquired firm Integration Cultures combined into a new composite culture Separation Merging companies remain separate with their own culture

  21. Changing/Strengthening Organisational Culture

  22. Changing/Strengthening Organisational Culture continued • Actions of founders/leaders • Organisational culture sometimes reflects the founder’s personality • Transformational leaders can reshape culture— organisational change practices • Aligning artefacts • Artefacts keep culture in place • e.g. create memorable events, communicating stories, transferringculture carriers

  23. Changing/Strengthening Organisational Culture continued • Introducing culturally consistent rewards • Rewards are powerful artefacts—reinforce culturally-consistent behaviour • Attracting, selecting, socialising employees • Attraction-selection-attrition theory • Socialisation practices

  24. Attraction-Selection-Attrition Theory • Organisations become more homogeneous (stronger culture) through: • Attraction: applicants self-select and weed out companies based on compatible values • Selection: applicants selected based on values congruent with organisation’s culture • Attrition: employees quit or are forced out when their values oppose company values

  25. Organisational Socialisation Defined The process by which individuals learn the values, expected behaviours and social knowledge necessary to assume their roles in the organisation

  26. Socialisation: Learning and Adjustment • Learning process • Newcomers make sense of the organisation’s physical, social and strategic/cultural dynamics • Adjustment process • Newcomers need to adapt to their new work environment • New work roles • New team norms • Newcomers with diverse experience adjust better

  27. Stages of Socialisation

  28. Facebook’s Landing Teams Facebook instils its unique corporate culture at new sites by parachuting in a ‘Landing Team’ of current employees. The Landing Team carefully selects applicants for their compatibility with Facebook’s culture and coaches newcomers on the Facebook way of life

  29. Improving Organisational Socialisation • Realistic job preview (RJP) • A balance of positive and negative information about the job and work context • Socialisation agents • Supervisors: technical information, performance feedback, job duties • Co-workers: ideal when accessible, role models, tolerant and supportive

  30. Chapter 14 Organisational Culture

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