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7.1.1 Culture defined through its response to change

Consider this

Everybody pitches in.

Does your company value fluid, cross-functional teamwork? Do those values emanate from the top - from the CEO and other executives? Does everyone in your company understand and strive to further its vision of what it' s doing in the world? Are there company anecdotes you could tell a stranger to illustrate your commitment to unconstrained cooperation? To unconstrained thinking? In your own work group? In other work groups?

Adapted from: Wetherbe, J C (1996). 'The world on time', Vision Book Summaries , number 156.

Think about this basic principle: In an organisation with a shared culture among employees, everyone has specific responsibilities, but there are low fences between jobs. People will hop over fences to help others out, but nobody can blame another for his or her failures.

The 'commonly held' beliefs and 'shared meanings' represented in the above analogy and discussed in most definitions of organisational culture imply that one organisation can be distinguished from another.

The concept of ' relatively stable beliefs' in Williams et al.'s definition of organisational culture implies that organisational culture can be changed. At the same time, organisation culture can assist by providing some stability and guidance in times of change.

The final two decades of last century were a period of remarkable transformation for Western organisations; and during this time much of conventional management wisdom was altered. In general, as we have pointed out, organisations became smaller, and entire levels of management were removed from some organisations. Organisations began to focus more on giving autonomy and responsibility to employees. Employees could take the initiative of working together in the organisation, providing new ideas without waiting for the commands to come from above.

In all these types of changes, culture provided direction to a host of managerial actions and employee responses. It acted as an 'invisible force' that could be a powerful and valuable tool for change, or which inhibited change unless managers understood how to use and alter it or 'fine tune' it as required.

The growing trend towards the implementation of programs designed to improve productivity, efficiency and equity in workplaces has emphasised the need to understand and develop employee values and attitudes; because employee understanding and participation in the development and maintenance of a positive organisational culture will be a significant part of determining business success.

In organisations, people behave in accordance with their understanding of the organisation's cultural norms and values. These standards of expected behaviour determine how decisions are made and how problems are solved.

The following textbook reading defines the nature of organisational culture and introduces you to the 'common jargon' associated with a discussion on culture. Note 'The manifestation of organisational culture'. Go back and think about the case at the end of your study on culture.

In your text

Bartol, K M; Martin, D C; Tein, M H and Matthews, G W (2001), pages 81-86.

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