330 likes | 829 Views
Chapter 3. The Environment and Corporate Culture. The External Environment. The elements of the world constantly change All outside elements that affect the organization General environment: Affects organizations indirectly
E N D
Chapter 3 The Environment and Corporate Culture
The External Environment • The elements of the world constantly change • All outside elements that affect the organization • General environment: Affects organizations indirectly • Task environment: Sectors that conduct transactions with the organization • Organizational ecosystem: Formed by the interaction among a community of organizations in the environment • Internal environment: Elements within the organization boundaries
General Environment: International • Globalization influences all other aspects of the external environment • New competitors, customers, suppliers • Changes in social, technological, and economic trends • All organizations must compete and think globally • Economic power has shifted to China and India • The global environment is complex and ever-changing
General Environment: Technological • Massive scientific & technological advancements in a specific industry and society Massive changes for org. & industries Drive competition and help innovative companies gain market share • Examples: Internet access, smart phone, laptop, videoconference, etc.
General Environment: Sociocultural Demographic characteristics, norms, customs, and values • Connected Generation or Generation C has woven technology into every aspect of life • U.S. population is aging • Growing diversity has implications for business
General Environment :Economic • Economic health of the country/region • Extended globally with uncertainty • Consumer purchasing power • Unemployment rate inflation • Interest rates – Discount rate, federal funds rate, prime rate
General Environment:Legal Political • Government regulations; state, local, and federal government agencies • Political activities • Managers must recognize the power of pressure groups (interest groups) • Work to influence companies to behave in a socially responsible way
General Environment: Natural • Organizations must be sensitive to the environment • Growing importance and pressure • Natural dimension does not have own voice • Environmental groups advocate action/policy • Reduce pollution • Develop renewable energy • Global warming • Sustainable use of scarce resources
Task Environment • Customers • Competitors • Suppliers • Labor Market
Organization-Environment Relationship • The environment creates uncertainty for managers • Managers must respond and design adaptive organizations • Uncertainty – managers do not have sufficient information about environmental factors to understand and predict environmental needs and changes
Adapting to the Environment • Boundary-spanning roles – link and coordinate the organization with external environment, seek: • Business intelligence • Competitive intelligence • Interorganizational partnerships – reduce boundaries and begin collaborating with other organizations • M& A (Mergers & Acquisitions) –occurs when two or more organizations combine to become one • Joint ventures – strategic alliance or program by two or more organizations
The Internal Environment: Corporate Culture Corporate culture is the set of key values, beliefs, understandings, and norms that members of an organization share • Symbols • Stories • Heroes • Slogans • Ceremonies
Group Project 1 • Comparative Study b/w Korean Corporate Culture & American Corporate Culture in the Automobile Industry • Impacts of cultural differences on supply chain management (SCM). • SCM is considered a key to success of Hyundai. Is it really true? We want to investigate the real stories.
Types of Culture (continued) • Adaptability C. autonomy • Adaptability vs. Achievement= flexibility vs. stability • Involvement • Consistency
Shaping Corporate Culture for Innovative Response • Corporate culture attracting, motivating, and keeping good employees • People (employees) & how they are treated Increasing the firm value the most • Corporate culture plays a key role in learning and innovate responsesto threats from the external environment, challenging new opportunities, or organizational crises
Managing the High-Performance Culture • Bottom-line strategies are successful in the short term • Successful companies balanceculture and performance • Culture is the “glue” that holds the organization together • Based on solid organizational mission/purpose • Shared adaptive values that guide decisions and practices • Encourages individual employee ownership of: • Bottom-line results • Organization’s culture
Cultural Leadership • Defines and uses signals and symbols to influence corporate culture • Articulate a vision for the organizational culture that employees can believe in • Heeds the day-to-day activities that reinforce the cultural vision • Leaders communicate through words and actions