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National Culture and IT Management. ECIS591. Culture…isn’t everyone basically the same?. Japanese prefer fax to email… Israelis are not big users of word-processing packages Indian programmers are too polite… In Spain, the “OK” symbol is considered vulgar
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Culture…isn’t everyone basically the same? • Japanese prefer fax to email… • Israelis are not big users of word-processing packages • Indian programmers are too polite… • In Spain, the “OK” symbol is considered vulgar • Malaysian programmers may be fluent in English but have no idea of slang terms….
What is Culture? • “…culture is defined as an integrated system of learned behavior patterns that are characteristic of the members of any society. It includes everything a group thinks, says, does, and makes – its customs, language, materialartifacts, and shared systems of attitudes and feelings “- Czinkota, et al (1996), p.298
Researchers agree that… • Culture is learned and shared from generation to generation • Cultural norms may be acquired through parents, schools, religious organizations, and social organizations • Elements of culture include both verbal and non-verbal language, religion, values and attitudes, perceptions, and protocols
Dimensions of Culture • Hofstede • Power Distance • Individualism/Collectivism • Masculinity/Femininity • Uncertainty Avoidance • Confucianism/Dynamism • Hall • Space • Material Goods • Friendship • Time • Agreement
Hofstede’s Dimensions of Culture • Conducted between 1967-1978 • Collected over 100,000 surveys from IBM employees around the world • Single, consistent control group • National differences emerge despite strong corporate culture
Power distance • Also referred to as Revering Hierarchy • Extent to which subordinates expect and accept the fact that power is distributed unequally in a firm • Some cultures see large gaps between hierarchical levels • Panama scores highest, Israel lowest
Individualism/Collectivism • Extent to which individual sees themselves as part of a group • Individualistic Cultures • Expected to have opinions • Stress personal achievements • Independence • Individual rights • Collectivist Cultures • Harmony • Welfare group
Implications for IS Management? • Systems Design • Inherently group effort • Process designed for conflict • Incentive Schemes • Reward individual or group?
Masculinity/Femininity • Taking care of business • “toughness” in meeting goals • “softness” in taking care of people and quality of life • Japan ranks as highly masculine • Scandinavian countries rank low • Implications? • Work hours
Uncertainty Avoidance • Attitudes towards risk, ambiguity, predictability, and control • “High avoidance” cultures place emphasis on stability • “Low avoidance” countries embrace change and innovation • Japanese high on Uncertainty Avoidance • Hong Kong low on Uncertainty Avoidance
Confucianism/Dynamism • Recent addition to cultural dimensions • Here-and-now vs. future • Confucian traits • Thrift • Persistence • Diligence • Patience • Patriarchal authority
Hall’s Dimensions of Culture • Space • Close-talker? • Queues • Materialism • Danish CEO admired for driving old car • Americans fight for corner office with biggest desk • Japanese manager may sit with other employees to downplay role of status and material goods
Hall’s Dimensions • Friendships • Some western cultures make and lose friends quickly (due to high mobility) • Other cultures may take longer to develop relationship but long-lasting • Holds for businesses as well … relationship first, then business
Hall’s Dimensions • Time • Monochronic cultures • See time as linear • Events taken one at a time • Stress on punctuality and deadlines • Polychronic cultures • See time as non-linear, simultaneous, unlimited • Plans constantly change • Delays less important • Germans considered monochronic, French are polychronic
High Vs. Low Context Cultures Japanese, Chinese, Mediterranean, Latin, Indian High context (Implicit details) American, German, English, Scandinavian Low context (Explicit details)
Opinion 1: Culture Does Not Matter • Cougar et.al (1990) • Compared motivation and personal growth needs of systems analysts • Compared US, Austria, Singapore, Israel • Found great similarities between all countries • Suggests overpowering effects of professional culture
Culture not important…. • 1996 study of software development tool preferences between Europe, Japan, US… no significant differences • 1989: Danish and Canadian analysts had similar design values • First technical values • Second, economic values • Sociopolitical values (concern for users)
Opinion 2: Culture matters • Mostly anecdotal evidence… • French better at object-oriented design • Japanese better at metrics • British know about Jackson Methodology… unknown in US • Belgians more “process-oriented” • Americans code first and design later
Consider Japan • Quality assurance • Japanese fixed all bugs… regardless of severity • Meaning of requirements • Americans see the requirements as a contract negotiation… Japanese do not charge for minor changes • Designers • Americans tend to take a top down approach… Japan takes bottom up approach
Global Information Systems • Information Technology (IT) facilitates the global transformation of business • Crossing border poses challenges to technology managers • geographic • legal • cultural • temporal • need radical changes to existing technology infrastructures and management
Types of global enterprises • Devised by Bartlett and Ghoshal (1989) • International • Global • Multinational • Transnational
The International Strategy • Subsidiaries leverage parent competencies • Coordinated federation
Global • R&D, manufacturing done at HQ • Strategic decisions are centralized • Central hub
Multinational • Multidomestic • Aims at local responsiveness • Knowledge developed/retained at subsidiary level • Decentralized federation
Transnational • Shared decision-making • Complex coordination • Centers of excellence • Dispersed resources • Integrated network
Jarvenpaa and Ives (1993) • Built on work by Karimi and Konsysnki • Based their work on Information Processing Theory (Galbraith 1973) • Good fit when information processing capacities of firm match requirements of environment and technology • Jarvenpaa and Ives develop typology of 4 global IT management configurations
The Global IT Strategies • Intellectual Synergy • Headquarters Driven • Independent IT Operations • Global Integrated IT • IS managers strive for best fit between above strategy and perceived global strategy
Intellectual Synergy • Includes several global systems • Each likely to be tailored for individual use • Each run independently by the subsidiary • Subsidiary-HQ IS relationship characterized by • Personal contacts • Cooperation • Shared learning
Headquarters Driven • All IT-related decisions made by headquarters • Goal is • To achieve efficiency • To avoid duplication of development effort
Independent IT Operations • Independent systems initiatives in each subsidiary • Focus on local responsibility • Few, if any, common systems through the firm • Fosters sense of systems ownership
Global Integrated IT • Strives for worldwide integration of IT that supports core competencies of firm • Dispersed resources • Numerous common systems • Applications for non-core areas run locally