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This session covers organizational culture's impact on behavior, methods for diagnosing and implementing culture change, and the role of organizational learning in transformation. Topics include dimensions of culture, diagnosing culture through philosophical and behavioral approaches, and the assessment instrument by Cameron & Quinn. It explores the four cultures (Clan, Adhocracy, Hierarchy, Market) and strategies for changing culture through vision, commitment, symbolic leadership, and organizational change. The importance of becoming a Learning Organization is emphasized, focusing on knowledge acquisition, distribution, interpretation, and memorization. Human resource practices that support organizational learning are emphasized, along with identifying and overcoming common cultural learning disabilities. The session also covers Peter Senge's Five Disciplines, leadership in the Learning Organization, and Arie De Geus's insights on getting to organizational learning.
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Organizational Design, Diagnosis, and Development Session 25 Strategic Interventions, I I Organization Transformations
Objectives • To consider organizational culture and it impact of behavior in the organization • To examine ways of diagnosing culture and change interventions • To present a model of the organizational learning process and its impact of change.
Organizational Culture • The cognitive framework of attitudes, values, norms, and expectations shared by members of the organization
Dimensions of Culture • Innovativeness • Stability • People orientation • Results orientation • Informality • Conscientiousness • Collaborativeness
Culture and Performance • Organizational effectiveness • Strong culture exerts pressures to adhere to norms • Moderated by appropriateness of culture to strategy and mission
Diagnosing Culture • Philosophical approach • Behavioral approach
Organizational Culture Assessment Instrument by Cameron & Quinn • 1. Dominant characteristics: family style place, entrepreneurial, results oriented & structured- formal • 2. Leadership: nurturing, entrepreneurial-risk taking, results oriented, efficient • 3. Management of employees: consensus, innovative, achieving & competitive, & stability. • 4. Organization glue: loyalty - trust, innovation - development, goal accomplishment, formal rules • 5. Strategic emphasis - human development, opportunities oriented, winning, efficiency - control • 6. Criteria of success: human resources, product innovation, winning, dependability
Four Cultures • Clan - Internal focus & flexible • Adhocracy - External focus & flexible • Hierarchy - Internal focus & controlled • Market culture - External focus & controlled
Changing Culture • Vision • Commitment • Symbolic leadership • Organizational change • Membership • Human resources • Slow fix
The Learning Organization • Organizations that acquire and apply knowledge to help cope with and adapt to change • Knowledge acquisition • Information distribution • Information interpretation • Organizational memorization
The Learning Organization • Structure • Information systems • Human Resource Practices • "The ability to learn faster than your competitors may be the only sustainable competitive advantage.” Arie De Geus, head of planning for Royal Dutch/Shell
Human Resource Practices, cont.. • Reward and support individual learning • The appraisal and reward system needs to value the acquisition of new skills and knowledge, as well as the sharing of these. • Skill based pay, support of training and education • The institution of corporate universities • Work-based learning
Cultures with Learning Disabilities • “I am my position” • “The enemy is out there” • “Illusion of taking charge” • “Fixation on events” • “Delusion of learning from experience” • “Myth of the management team” • From the Fifth Discipline, Peter Senge
The 5 Disciplines • Systems thinking • Personal mastery, • Personal vision • Creative tension • Commitment to truth • Mental models • Shared Vision • Team learning • From the Fifth Discipline, Peter Senge
Leadership in the Learning Organization • Create learning space and freedom • Develop potential of individual members • Think about successors • Be a coach, a mentor, a steward • From Management General by Arie De Gues
Getting to Organizational Learning • Making the switch • Measuring the outcomes
Backwards & Forwards • Summing up: Today’s session delved into cultural change in the organization and then into a particular cultural change known as the learning organization. The signs of non-supportive and supportive cultures as delineated by Peter Senge were examined. • Looking ahead: We conclude our semester with consideration of organizational development in global settings and a synopsis of what we’ve covered this term