Categorieën: Alle - flexibility - culture - hierarchy - values

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Theme 8: Organisational Culture

Organisational culture is defined by a set of shared assumptions that influence how members of an organisation perceive, think about, and react to their environment. It encompasses various elements such as hierarchy, pay levels, job descriptions, norms, values, rituals, jokes, jargon, and the physical environment.

Theme 8: Organisational Culture

Theme 8: Organisational Culture

Organisational Change:

Change is not always accepted by the organisation and those who work within it and can be rested for different reasons: Uncertainty and insecurity Elective perception and retention Misunderstanding of the purpose of change Habit Feelings of threat towards job position
Models of Organisational Change:
Designing and implementing change:

The challenge for the leadership pf organisations and other change leaders is to understand and manage change so that it is shaped to support the fundamental purpose of the organisation and to enable the effectiveness and flourishing of those who work within and are served by the organisation.

The Learning Perspective:

This perspective advocates for a pro-active approach to change and the creating of a culture within which learning happens continually at all levels Two notions from this perspective: Active Learning- proposes that organisations should continuously review their functioning, diagnose gaps, between current and desired performance, identify objectives for change, implement change, evaluate outcomes and the institutionalise the whole approach. The Learning Organisation- works to create, acquire and transfer knowledge in order that the organisation adapts itself continually on the bias of now knowledge and insight, as well as to the external forces that influence survival.

Systems Perspective to Change:

Anchored in the systems thinking. This perspective fundamentally makes an assumption that organisations are composed of a multitude of subsystems that vary in shape in size and scope and that change in one subsystem will lead to change in other subsystems.

The Episodic vs Continuous Change:

Episodic (planned) Planned and potentially revolutionary change Aims to make lasting and fundamental changes Change is usually big, noisy, and involves lots of time and money Examples: restructurings, mergers, and acquisition 2. Continuous (emergent) change Involves continuous (usually non-disruptive) improvements, encouraged by reflection and learning Can be achieved by encouraging all to be agents of change Works better with flexible rather than bureaucratic organisational systems

Factors that necessitate organisational change: Actions of competition Government legislation Environmental factors Demographic factors Ethics Leadership

Organisational, Culture, climate, behaviour and organisational performance:

The organisations cultural orientation will an indirect or direct affect on performance related factors such as: customer service, teamwork, employee satisfaction, corporate social responsibility. The organisational climate can ultimately become part of “how we do things around here” (culture), which can have a recursive effect on the climate. This can effect success domains such as: Customer service Quality Involvement Training Information knowledge (acquisition and transfer) teamwork/organisation Overall satisfaction

Organisational culture:

Employees perceptions of the work environment “what it feels like to work here”

How do cultures develop:

Factors that facilitate development of an organisations culture: Leadership: what leaders say, do and the decisions they make Recruitment and Selection Process: what type of people are recruited, with what competencies and characteristics Socialisation processes: what employees are told about the organisation and its expectations Globalisations: culture is also shaped by international cultures

Models of culture:

Competing Values Model:
2 Fundamental dimensions of effectiveness: Flexible versus control Internal versus external orientation 4 quadrant model: Internal orientation and low flexibility (internal process emphasis) Internal orientation and high flexibility (Human relations emphasis) External orientation and low flexibility (rational goal emphasis) External orientation and high flexibility (Innovation)
Goffee and Jones: Sociability vs Solidarity Model:
Can be represented by 2 fundamental dimensions: Sociability: sincere friendliness or the emotional non-instrumental relations among friends in the work place. (social relations) Solidarity: emphasis on shared common tasks and goals (task performance) 4 configurations: Networked organisations: high sociability, low solidarity. Emphasis on positive feelings, good social relations Mercenary Organisations: low sociability, high solidarity. Emphasis on productivity and performance Fragmented organisations: low sociability, low solidarity. Emphasis on neither Communal organisations: high sociability, high solidarity. Emphasis on both
Scheins Model
Views cultures in terms of three levels: Espoused level: elements that are captured in the mission statements, visions and company brochures Artefacts: elements such as hierarchy, pay levels, documents, meeting practices, ritual celebrations etc. Basic Hidden Assumptions: lamest that tell us a great deal about the organisations true values.

Def: set of shared, taken-for-granted implicit assumptions that members of an organisation hold and that determine how they perceive, think about and react to their environment.

This is visible in the: Hierarchy Pay level Job descriptions Norms Values and rituals Jokes and jargon Physical environment