Tutorial Assignment - Organizational Culture

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  1. Tutorial Assignment – Organizational Culture

  1. Organizational Culture and its Characteristics

  1. Organizational culture :

Organisational culture has profound consequences for worker behaviour, company performance and organisational change and is often necessary. It can simply be defined as a system of shared values and beliefs that influence worker behaviour. Martin (1992, 3) gives the following (lengthy) definition of culture:

As individuals come into contact with organizations, they come into contact with dress norms, stories people tell about what goes on, the organization's formal rules and procedures, its informal codes of behaviour, rituals, tasks, pay systems, jargon and jokes only understood by insiders and so on. These elements are some of the manifestations of organizational culture. When cultural members interpret the meanings of these manifestations, their perceptions, memories, beliefs, experiences, and values will vary, so interpretations will differ - even of the same phenomenon. The patterns or configurations of these interpretations, and the ways they are enacted, constitute culture.

A key role for culture is to differentiate the organisation from others and provide a sense of identity for its members. Cultures do not have to be logical or consistent, in fact they seldom are and can appear quite haphazard and chaotic to the outsider. A strong culture is one that is internally consistent, is widely shared, and makes it clear what it expects and how it wishes people to behave. According to Charles Handy an organization’s culture can be in the following forms:

  1. Power culture –In a power culture ray of power and influence spread out from a central figure or group. There may be a specialist or functional structure but central control is exercised largely through appointing loyal key individuals and interventionist behaviour from center and personal influence rather than on procedures or purely logical factors.

  1. Role culture - This culture is often referred to as a bureaucracy. It works by logic and rationality. Departmental functions are demarcated and empowered with their role. Co-ordination is with the senior management group. People are appointed to role based on their ability to carry out the functions. Only role and function related performance is required.

  1. Task (project team) culture - This culture is like a net with small teams of cells at the interstices. It is a small team approach to organisations. As a culture, power and influence are distributed to the interstices of the net. The emphasis is on results and getting things done. Resources and decision making power is given to the right people.

  1. Person culture - The individual is the central point. The culture only exists for the people concerned; it has no super-ordinate objective. If a group of individuals decide to band together to do their own thing and with a secretary helping - it is a person culture.

  1. Factors that determine an organisation’s culture:

Culture is a dynamic and evolving process. Key individuals have a crucial role to play in shaping and refining an organisation’s culture. It is determined by many factors and many authors have different views on what makes an organisation’s culture.

Key determinants of organisational culture are:

  1. Values, administrative practices and personality of founder(s) – In most organisations the culture is greatly influenced by its founders. When Ray Kroc bought McDonald’s franchise he built it around four basic concepts – quality, cleanliness, service and price. All franchisees are required to attend the McDonald University where they learn the cultural values and the proper way to run the franchise. Although Kroc is no more the culture he left behind is very much alive.

  1. Choices (conscious and unconscious), behaviour patterns and prejudices of top management – If top management is caring towards employees (eg: in a situation of a sickness of a family member) it would be identified as an acceptable behavoir of the organisation. Similarly if the top management want results irrespective of how they are achieved it may lead to the others using short cuts and even resorting to unethical practices to achieve results.  
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  1. The culture (norms, beliefs and values) of the society in which the organisation operates – An organisation is greatly influenced by the culture of the society in which it operates as the employees bring with them the beliefs and norms of that society. The same multinational company with branches in Japan and the United States would show different preferences to team working.

  1. The nature of industry the organisation is in – An organisation operating as a stable utility provider (eg; water board) would operate in a totally different way from one that operates in a competitive ...

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