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The Environment and Corporate Culture. Chapter 3. Organizational Environment. All elements existing outside the boundary of the organization that have the potential to affect the organization. Manager’s Challenge: IBM, p. 77. External Environment. General environment – affects indirectly
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The Environment and Corporate Culture Chapter 3
Organizational Environment • All elements existing outside the boundary of the organization that have the potential to affect the organization Manager’s Challenge: IBM, p. 77
External Environment • General environment – affects indirectly • Task environment • Affects directly • Influences operations and performances • Internal environment – elements within the organization’s boundaries
Organizational Environments Technological General Environment Technological Customers Socio-Cultural International Task Environment Employees Labor Market Competitors Culture Management Suppliers Internal Environment Economic Legal/Political Suppliers
International Dimension • Provides New • Customers • Competitors • Suppliers • Shapes: • Social trends • Technological trends • Economic trends
Technological Dimension • Scientific and technological advances • Specific industries • Society at large • Impact • Competition • Relationship with Customers • Medical advances • Nanotechnology advances
Socio-Cultural Dimension • Dimension of the general environment • Demographic characteristics • Norms • Customs • Values
Key Demographic Trends in U.S. • By 2050 non-Hispanic whites will make up only about half of the population, down from 74% in 1995; and 69% in 2004 • Baby boomer generation is aging and losing interest in high-cost goods. Generation Y, rival them in size, will soon rival them in buying power. • The single father household is the fastest growing living arrangement, which rose 62% in 10 years. Two-parent and single-mother households are still much more numerous • Unprecedented demographic shift = married couple households slipped from 80% in 1950s to just over 50% in 2003. Couples with kids= 25%, with projection 20% by 2010 and 30% of homes inhabited by someone who lives alone.
Economic Dimension • General economic health • Consumer purchasing power • Unemployment rate • Interest rates • Recent Trends • Frequency of mergers and acquisitions • Small business sector vitality
Task Environment Sectors that have a direct working relationship with the organization • Customers • Competitors • Suppliers • Labor Market
Labor Market Forces Labor Market Forces Affecting Organizations today • Growing need for computer literate information technology workers • Necessity for ongoing investment in human resources – recruitment, education, training • Effects of international trading blocks, automation, outsourcing, shifting facility locations upon labor dislocations
Adopting to the Environment • Boundary-spanning • Inter-organizational partnerships • Mergers or joint ventures
External Environment and Uncertainty High Adapt to Environment High Uncertainty Rate of Change in Factors in Environment Low Uncertainty Low High Low Number of Factors in Organization Environment
Competitive Intelligence - CI • What - Activities to get as much information as possible about one’s rivals • Where - Web sites, commercial databases, financial reports, market activities, news clippings, trade publications, personal contacts • Why – Spot potential threats or opportunities Ethical Dilemma: Competitive Intelligence Predicament, P. 105
Interorganizational Partnerships Shift in paradigm • Trust, value added to both sides • Equity, fair dealing, everyone profits • E-business links to share information and conduct digital transactions • Close coordination; virtual teams and people on site • Involvement in partner’s product design and production • Long-term contracts • Business assistance goes beyond the contract
Levels of Corporate Culture Culture that can be seen at the surface level Visible 1. Artifacts, such as dress, office layout, symbols, slogans, ceremonies Invisible Deeper values and shared understandings held by organization members 2. Expressed values, such as “The Penney Idea,” “The HP Way” 3. Underlying assumptions and deep beliefs, such as “people are lazy and can’t be trusted”
Visible Manifestations • Symbols • Stories • Heroes • Slogans • Ceremonies
Environment and Culture • A big influence on internal corporate culture is the external environment • Cultures can vary widely across organizations • Organizations within same industry reveal similar cultural characteristics Experiential Exercise: Working in an Adaptive Culture, p. 104
Corporate Culture Adaptability Adaptive Culture Unadaptive Culture Managers tend to behave somewhat insularly, politically, and bureaucratically. As a result, they do not change their strategies quickly to adjust to or take advantage of changes in their business environments. Visible Behavior Managers pay close attention to all their constituencies, especially customers, and initiate change when needed to serve their legitimate interests, even if it entails taking some risks. Managers care mainly about themselves, their immediate work group, or some product (or technology) associated with that work group. They value the orderly and risk-reducing management process much more highly than leadership initiatives. Managers care deeply about customers, stockholders, and employees. They strongly value people and processes that can create useful change (e.g., leadership initiatives up and down the management hierarchy). Expressed Values Source: John P. Kotter and Jmaes L. Heskett, Corporate Culture and Performance (New York, The Free Press, 1992), 51.
Four Types of Corporate Cultures Needs of the Environment Flexibility Stability External Achievement Culture Adaptability Culture Strategic Focus Involvement Culture Consistency Culture Internal
Cultural Leadership • Articulates a visionthat employees can believe in • Defines and communicates central values that employees believe in • Values are tied to a clear and compelling mission, or core purpose • Heeds the day-to-day activities that reinforce the cultural vision – work procedures and reward systems match and reinforce the values
High-Performance Culture Creating and maintaining a high-performance culture in today’s turbulent environment and changing workplace is not easy. • Managers widely communicate their cultural values through their words and particularly their actions • Value statements that are not reinforced by management behavior are meaningless or even harmful for employees and the organization • Cultural leaders uphold their commitment to values during difficult times or crises.