Kellogg (Aust) Pty Ltd Australia - case study

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Cereal Culture Transformed

Introduction                                                                                1

Kellogg (Aust) Pty Ltd has operated in Australia since 1924; the first Kellogg plant was built in 1928, and to this day is still producing goods to be transported around Australia. Kellogg Australia has a large market share in the grain-based food industry, but it’s growth locally had matured, and management saw the need for change; as it was the only option the company could take if growth was to continue. The way this change was to be implemented was to create a new culture within the organisation.

“The aim of a successful culture or social group is to send its members

               out into the world as self-regulating mechanisms.” (Goffman 1969).

The way Kellogg went about achieving a renewed culture was to work with the employees and find out their needs then apply them to achieve the needs of the core business. Through the introduction of a leadership culture Kellogg was able to grow and overcome the problems associated with the previous culture. This essay will cover how Kellogg saw a problem and overcame it by introducing a changed culture.

Before the change                                                                                      2

As said previously Kellogg has operated in Australia since 1924, so the company is very mature, and there has been plenty of time for customs and common practices to be embedded within the organisation. By the 1980’s, things started to become taxing, as machinery had become older, management-employee relations had become poorer, and the demand for the product had become matched by the demand for overtime by employees. The management style was very traditional with managers managing and employees working, all in their own domains, and mediated by 13 union groups. The future was looking bleak if things went on as they were; however, the future could be rich and exciting if dramatic cultural changes were made.

“Change has overtaken every company. Creating change,

managing it, mastering it, and surviving it is the agenda

for anyone in business who aims to make a difference.”

(Fishman 1997)

What was necessary was a renewal – a total new beginning in every section of the company from plant and machinery through to human resource management and employee relations. Management needed to change and it had to come to terms with what the company’s culture actually is. The development of people (employees) at all levels would feature in the new culture. Anything relating to the old culture needed to be expelled. 

Why the change was necessary?

Previously Kellogg was an industrial relations environment. Management managed and employees worked and did what management told them to. Management said, “jump!” Employees would say, “how high?” Theorically this may sound desireable, but more often than not, the way in which tasks were to be completed by employees caused inevitable conflict. Examples show this, when in 1986 alone 100 stoppages were caused from bad management, which caused the unions to apply force. Most of these stoppages occurred as employees had little trust in management due to the central control form of leadership, where there is one leader who controls the entire operations.  Many problems arose from this management style.

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First steps to cultural change                                                                       3

 At Kellogg’s the undertaking of change meant no less than a change in the whole company culture. A team effort with union, management and employees all participating and being involved was required so as to create change within the culture. Cultural change was necessary and on the 13 October 1989, the company, with union approval, was allowed to communicate ...

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