ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE AND ENVIRONMENT: A LOOK AT THE CONSTRATINTS How much impact does a Manager have in an organization? MANAGEMENT THEORY Has two views on Managers: 1. Omnipotent View: in our first lessons we spoke about how important managers are to management. This reflects the dominant assumption in management theory. This view the quality of an organization’s managers determines the quality of the organization itself. The differences in the organization’s performance are due to the manager’s decisions and actions. Good managers Anticipate change Exploit opportunities Correct poor performance Lead their organizations toward goals – which may be changed if needed. When profits are up – managers take the credit and reward themselves When profits are down – managers are fired and replaced with new blood Applicable in business and others like sports teams Someone is able regardless of reasons. To blame To praise – even if they had little to do with achieving positive outcomes. 2. Symbolic View: In this view The manager’s ability to affect outcomes is influenced and constrained by external factors Should not expect manager to significantly affect an organization’s performance An organization’s results are influenced by factors managers do not control: Economy, Customers, Governmental policies, Competitors’ actions, Industry conditions, Control over technology, Decisions made by previous managers Symbolic View is based on the belief that Managers symbolize control and influence by creating meaning out of randomness, confusion and uncertainty; or trying to innovate and adapt by developing plans, making decisions and involving themselves in managerial activities. In Reality: Managers are not helpless – nor powerless They experience
Internal constraints from organization’s culture External constraints from the organization’s environment They influence the organization’s performance culture and environment ORGANIZATION’S CULTURE - Every person has a unique personality Warm, shy, relaxes, aggressive - So do organization’s Definition Organizational Culture Shared - Values - Principles - Traditions - Way of doing things That influence the way organization act Evolved over time Determines - what the think of the organization - and how they behave Implications of Culture 1. Culture is a perception - from what they hear - from what they see - from what they experience from within the organization 2.Whether they - come from different backgrounds - hold different positions they tend to describe the organization in similar ways (shared) 3. Organizational culture is descriptive Concerned with how perceive the organization – not how they like it. They do not evaluate it.
7 DIMENSIONS THAT CAPTURE ESSENCE OF ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE
Exhibit 3–2
Dimensions of Organizational Culture
Each dimension ranges - from High (Very Typical) - to Low (Not Typical) 1. Attention to Detail - Degree to which employees are expected to exhibit precision, analysis and attention to detail 2. Innovation and Risk Taking - Degree to which employees are encouraged to be innovative and to take risks 3. Stability - Degree to which organizational decisions and actions emphasize maintaining the status quo. 4. Aggressiveness - Degree to which the employees are aggressive and competitive rather than cooperative. 5. Team Orientation - Degree to which work is organized around teams rather than individuals. 6. People Orientation - Degree to which management decisions take into the effects on people in the organization 7. Outcome Orientation - Degree to which managers focus on results or outcome rather than how these outcomes are achieved. NOT ALL Cultures Have EQUAL IMPACT On Employees’ Behaviors and Actions Strong Cultures Are cultures in which key values are deeply held and widely held. Have a strong influence on organizational .
Factors Influencing the Strength of Culture
Size of the organization Age of the organization Rate of employee turnover Strength of the original culture Clarity of cultural values and beliefs
BENEFITS OF A STRONG CULTURE Creates a stronger employee commitment to the organization. Aids in the recruitment and socialization of new employees. Fosters higher organizational performance by instilling and promoting employee initiative. - Values are clear and widely accepted - Employees know - what they should do - what is expect of them so they can act / react right away. DISADVANTAGE OF A STRONG CULTURE Prevent employees from trying new approaches - Especially in periods of rapid change An organization’s current customs, traditions and general way of doing things are largely due to what it has done before and
how successful it has been with these endeavors.
SOURCES OF ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE The organization’s founder o Vision and Mission
Past practices of the organization o The way things have been done
The behavior of top management
Organizational practices help maintain culture CONTINUATION OF THE ORG CULTURE Recruitment of like-minded employees Socialization of new employees to help them adapt to the culture.
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HOW EMPLOYEES LEARN CULTURE
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Stories - Narratives of significant events or actions of people that convey the spirit of the organization
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Rituals Repetitive sequences of activities that express and reinforce the values of the organization
Material Symbols - Physical assets distinguishing the organization Language - Acronyms and jargon of , phrases, and word meanings specific to an organization
HOW CULTURE AFFECTS MANAGERS SAMPLES OF CULTURE - Look busy even if you are not - If you take risks and fail around here, you will pay dearly for it - Before you make a decision, run it by your boss so that he or she is never surprised - We make our product only as good as the competition for us to - What made us successful in the past will make as successful in the future - If you want to get to the top here, you have to be a team player. Simple rule for getting ahead in an organization: Find out what the organization rewards and do those things. Manager’s decisions are influenced by the culture in which he/she operates Planning
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The degree of risk that plans should contain Whether plans should be developed by individuals or teams The degree of environmental scanning in which management will engage
Organizing
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How much autonomy should be designed into employees’
jobs
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Whether tasks should be done by individuals or in teams
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The degree to which department managers interact with each other
Leading
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The degree to which managers are concerned with increasing employee job satisfaction
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What leadership styles are appropriate Whether all disagreements—even constructive ones—should be eliminated
Controlling
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Whether to impose external controls or to allow employees to control their own actions
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What criteria should be emphasized in employee performance evaluations
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What repercussions will occur from exceeding one’s budget
ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE ISSUES Four current organizational issues worthy of developing: 1. Creating an Ethical Culture An organizational culture most likely to shape high ethical standards are High in risk tolerance Low to moderate aggressiveness Focus on means as well as outcomes Managers are ed for taking risks and innovation, are discouraged from engaging in uncontrolled competition and will pay attention to how goals are achieved as well as t0 what goals are achieved. Creating an Ethical Culture
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Be a visible role model. Communicate ethical expectations. Provide ethics training. Visibly reward ethical acts and punish unethical ones.
Provide protective mechanisms so employees can discuss ethical dilemmas and report unethical
behavior without fea 2.
Creating an Innovative Culture Challenge and involvement o How much employees are involved in, motivated by and committed to long-term goals and success of the organization Freedom o Degree to which employees can independently define their work, exercise discretion and take initiative to day to day activities Trust and openness o Degree to which employees are ive and respectively of each other Idea time o Amount of time to elaborate on new ideas before action Playfulness/humor o How much spontaneity, fun and ease there is in the workplace Conflict resolution Degree to which individuals make decisions and resolve issues based on the good of the organizations versus personal interest Debates o How much employees are allowed to express their opinions and put forth their ideas for consideration and review Risk-taking o How much managers tolerate uncertainty and whether employees are rewarded for taking risks
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Creating a Customer-Responsive Culture Hiring the right type of employees (ones with a strong interest in serving customers) - Hire service- people with the personality and attitudes consistent with customer service— friendliness, enthusiasm, attentiveness, patience, concern about others, and listening skills.
Having few rigid rules, procedures, and regulations - Employees need to have freedom to meeting changing customer requirements. - Design customer-service jobs so that employees have as much control as necessary to satisfy customers. Using widespread empowerment of employees Having good listening skills in relating to customers’ messages - Train customer service people continuously by focusing on improving product knowledge, active listening, showing patience, and displaying emotions.
Providing role clarity to employees to reduce ambiguity and conflict and increase job satisfaction - As the leader, convey a customer-focused vision and demonstrate through decisions and actions the commitment to customers. - Socialize new service- people to the organization’s goals and values. Having conscientious, caring employees willing to take initiative - Empower service- employees with the discretion to make day-to-day decisions on jobrelated activities.
4. Workplace Spirituality Culture that recognizes that - people have an inner life that nourishes and is nourished - (PEOPLE HAVE A MIND AND SPIRIT) - by meaningful work that takes place in the context of community. - (WHICH SEEKS MEANING AND PRPOSE IN THEIR WORK AND DESIRE TO CONNECT WITH OTHER HUMAN BEINGS IN THEIR COMMUNITY._ Seems Important in today’s world. Why? - A way to counterbalance turbulence of life. - People looking for connection - Formal religion has not worked and looking for anchor to replace lack of faith – filling emptiness Characteristics of a Spiritual Organization Strong sense of purpose o Building an organization for a meaningful purpose instead of just making money. Focus on individual development o Not just providing jobs. Realize importance of people and need to grown and learn. Trust and openness o Characterized by mutual trust and honesty. o Leaders it mistakes o Upfront with customers and stakeholders Employee empowerment o Managers trust employees to make conscientious and thoughtful decision Toleration of employees’ expression o Do not stifle employees expression of feelings BENEFITS OF A SPIRITUAL ORGANIZATION
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Improved employee productivity
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Reduction of employee turnover Stronger organizational performance Increased creativity Increased employee satisfaction Increased team performance Increased organizational performance
Concerns: - Secular organizations like business should not impose spiritual values on employees - Are spirituality and business compatible? THE ENVIRONMENT Earlier we discussed the Systems Approach. Modern organizations all work in an open system o Recognizing that it interacts with its environment Organizations takes its inputs from the environment & Distributes its output to the environment External Environment Those factors and forces outside the organization that affect the organization’s performance. Components of the External Environment Specific environment: external forces that have a direct and immediate impact on the organization. - Suppliers o Products o Resources: Human, Funds etc - Customers o Tastes can change - Competitors o Pricing o Product/Services Development o Products/Services Offered. - Pressure Groups o Social and political groups outside that influence our organization
General environment: broad economic, socio-cultural, political/legal, demographic, technological, and global conditions that may affect the organization.
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS - Interest rates - Inflation - Changes in disposable income Affect how managers manage their employees POLITICAL/ LEGAL CONDITIONS Laws and regulation can limit manager’s options - Ex. Dismissing an employee / Labor Laws Political conditions influence decisions and actions - in country and outside. $ Allocation SOCIOCULTURAL CONDITIONS Managers adjust to changing expectations - Junk food to healthy snacks - Smoking - Other countries’ values and cultures DEMOGRAPHIC CONDITIONS - Gender, - age, - level of education, - geographic location, - income, - family composition Changes may constrain how manager’s plan, organize, lead and control. TECHNOLOGICAL - Continuous technological changes - DNA – human genetic code - Telephones are getting smaller and smaller - Automated Offices / Virtual Offices - Electronic Meetings - Robotic manufacturing - Synthetic fuels GLOBAL CONDITIONS - World is getting smaller - Managers are challenged by big and small competitors in the environment HOW ENVIRONMENT AFFECTS THE MANAGER
Not all environments are the same. - It differs in the degree of change and complexity in the organization’s environment 1. Environmental Uncertainty The extent to which managers have knowledge of and are able to predict change their organization’s external environment is affected by:
Complexity of the environment: the number of components in an organization’s external environment. o and the extent of knowledge the organization has about these components. o The less components, the more stable the environment
Degree of change in environmental components: how dynamic or stable the external environment is. o o
Stable – minimal change Changes that can be predicted and anticipated Dynamic Example: Record company – Digital Rapid technology changes make it Difficult to anticipate Environmental Uncertainty Matrix
Uncertain environments are threats to organizations - Managers prefer Simple and Stable Environments - But environment cannot be controlled.
The second
2. Stakeholders Any constituencies in the organization’s environment o that are affected by the organization’s decisions and actions o and who can affect the organization
Why Manage Stakeholder Relationships? It can lead to improved organizational performance. o Knowing who they are can help you serve them better It’s the “right” thing to do given the interdependence of the organization and its external stakeholders. o Organizations depend on stakeholders How do we manage our Stakeholders? 1. Identify the organization’s external stakeholders. 2, Determine the particular interests and concerns of the external stakeholders. 3. Decide how critical each external stakeholder is to the organization. 4.Determine how to manage each individual external stakeholder relationship. - The more critical the stakeholder, the more uncertain the environment