1 / 14

Organizational Culture Analysis: Health Systems Lab

Organizational Culture Analysis: Health Systems Lab. Jenna Marquard September 1, 2005. Why a Culture Analysis?. Aid in understanding an organization’s culture Pinpoint areas for improvement Create tension for change This was a self-assessment. What Did we Look at?. Visible Elements

Download Presentation

Organizational Culture Analysis: Health Systems Lab

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Organizational Culture Analysis:Health Systems Lab Jenna Marquard September 1, 2005

  2. Why a Culture Analysis? • Aid in understanding an organization’s culture • Pinpoint areas for improvement • Create tension for change • This was a self-assessment

  3. What Did we Look at? • Visible Elements • Shared symbols • Rituals and ceremonies • Heroes • Stories

  4. What Did we Look at? • Hidden Elements • Values • Norms • Beliefs

  5. What Did we Look at? • Functions of Organizational Culture • Providing a sense of identity for members • Guiding and controlling behavior • Enhancing cooperation • Guiding decision making • Enhancing commitment • Providing justification for behavior

  6. Methods • Survey • Internet survey tool called “SurveyMonkey” • Link to the survey sent via an e-mail • Anonymous responses • Documentation Review • Use of data within the lab • Guidelines for lab-related travel • Resource guide for Health Systems Lab members

  7. Visible Elements • Academic Landmarks • Work Products • Logos • “Write a Paragraph” • Post-docs and Past graduates • Fellow members who have accomplished something significant • Leaders: authors, researchers, departmental figures • Stories of trouble: to learn from, to reassure • Personal life stories and small talk • ‘How-to’ and ‘How-not-to’ stories • Landmarks: graduations, semester completion, accomplishments, a student leaving • Work-related: retreats, lab meetings • Values: what members feel is important to acknowledge

  8. Visible Elements • Rituals and ceremonies identified as used most often • Although rituals and ceremonies are not daily occurrences, they may have a larger impact on organizational culture • With a good deal of work done independently, elements of organizational culture that bring members together may be seen as more beneficial • Symbols identified as used least often

  9. Hidden Elements • Work Products: grants, publications, research, etc. • Training: activities during training program • Feedback: learning to give feedback to, and receive feedback from, colleagues • More senior students passing on knowledge to newer students • Attendance at lab and project meetings • Providing feedback and contributing • Acting in a scholarly and ethical way • Specific behaviors are not heavily regulated

  10. Hidden Elements • Values were the most clear hidden elements • Values mentioned by lab responses can be translated across research institutes • Academic works, such as publications or presentations, for instance, are universally valued in the research world • The lab sees those who have been successful in terms of our values as heroes • Norms were the least clear hidden elements • Where independent thought is valued, individual behavior may be less regulated

  11. Functions • Set examples for each other • We do not ‘control’ each other • Feedback is given on research decisions • Guide what is worth spending time on • Commitment to research • Commitment to each other • The lab is ‘give and take’ • We are a tight community • Provides belonging • Provides lab roles • Being a part of this specific group: Patti’s lab has clout on and off campus • Provides a source of feedback • There is little of this • Feedback from the group may be used to justify some behaviors • We work in project teams • We provide feedback to each other • Patti advocates collaboration • There is a lot of informal talking, sharing ideas, sharing stories

  12. Functions • Survey respondents rated organizational culture as having the largest influence on providing a sense of identity for members, enhancing cooperation and enhancing commitment • Aligns with clarity in organizational values • Guiding and controlling behavior, guiding decision making and providing justification for behavior were rated as least influenced by organizational culture • Aligns with lack of clarity in organizational norms

  13. Conclusions • The culture of the lab is a translation of research organizations in general • The lab values and sees success in a similar framework as other researcher organizations, through specific outputs such as publications and presentations • They find heroes in those who have been successful in these areas • Like other research organizations, the lab does not tend to regulate behaviors as long as the values of the lab are attended to

  14. Recommendations • Using additional symbols by more formally recognizing the importance of non-career-related acts (mentoring, logistics, website) • Broadening the scope of success to value other heroes (ethical behavior, contributions to the community, etc.) • Using stories in a more structured way as a learning tool

More Related