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The Corporate Cult

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Title: The Corporate Cult


1
The Corporate Cult
  • March 29, 2005

2
From Theory to Practice How Do Organizations Use
Social Influence Tactics?
  • Employee Socialization How do organizations
    create the perfect worker?
  • 6 Tactics to Remember
  • Collective vs. Individual
  • Formal vs. Informal
  • Sequential vs. Random
  • Fixed vs. Variable
  • Serial vs. Disjunctive
  • Investiture vs. Divestiture

3
Socializing Obedience
  • Different tactics result in different behaviors.
  • Innovative Response Employees actively
    change/shape their role.
  • Custodial Response Employees do what they are
    told.
  • Custodial Response (1) Sequential, (2) Variable,
    (3) Serial, (4) Divestiture.
  • Video Clip Full Metal Jacket

4
Analyzing the Video
  • Theory of socialization would predict a custodial
    response under the following conditions
  • Recruit follows a definite set of stages
    (sequential)
  • With no timetable for moving from one stage to
    the next (variable).
  • Recruit has a role model to demonstrate correct
    behavior (serial)
  • Old self is stripped away and new self is
    re-defined according to the organizations values
    (divestiture).
  • Does the movie get it right?

5
Recruits are Trained So, Now What?
  • Social influence used to maintain correct
    behavior.
  • Strong Organizational Culture Norms and values
    are strongly held and widely shared.
  • (OReilly Chatman, 1996)
  • Example Nordstrom is cult like in their
    devotion to customer service. (1) Everyone knows
    it is important (2) and the value is enforced.
  • Example Video clip about Southwest Airlines.

6
Southwestern Airlines
  • What is valued at Southwest Airlines?
  • How are these values conveyed to employees?
  • Does Southwest sound like a great place to work?

7
Management by Conformity
  • Management scholars have emphasized the
    importance of conformity and have advocated the
    use of techniques that elicit maximal conformity
    in organizations (OReilly Chatman, 1996).
  • How have theories we have learned been applied to
    management?
  • Example Chapter from Built to Last.
  • Book spent 5 years on the Business Week
    bestseller list.
  • Had 70 printings translated into 16 languages.
  • Spawned many imitations that analyze
    organizations from the perspective of cult
    tactics.

8
How is a Cult like Culture Achieved?
  • Participation Commitment escalated by making
    people go through a series of steps in order to
    become a full-fledged member.
  • Sequential socialization.
  • Public commitment to a particular belief makes
    views more extreme (Group Polarization).
  • Example Repeating the Wal-Mart Creed out loud
    at a rally, doing the Wal-Mart Wiggle.

9
Flow of Information
  • Information Control what people see and hear.
  • Uncertainty leads to conformity (Sherif, Asch).
    Rigorous socialization upon entry when conformity
    is most likely.
  • Make injunctive norms salient (Cialdini).
    Complete consistency in communicating what people
    ought to believe makes norms more powerful.

10
Flow of Information (continued)
  • Information should come only from inside the
    group
  • Limit interactions with outsiders by immersing
    the employee in company activities (e.g. After
    hours socializing, weekend retreats). Link to
    group polarization.
  • Reject dissent like a virus. Disagreement creates
    mixed messages, therefore, those who do not fit
    should be weeded out immediately (Moscovici,
    Nemeth).

11
Rewards
  • Reward people for behaving correctly.
  • Make people feel that they are part of an elite
    group. People at Nordstrom feel special because
    not everyone can survive at that store.
  • Use public recognition Nordstrom names a
    customer service All Star that goes above and
    beyond the call of duty.

12
Strong Cultures (and/of) Innovation
  • Collins Porras (1994) argue that the most
    innovative firms are also the most cult like.
  • OReilly Chatman (1996) argue that adaptation
    and flexibility can be built into the norms and
    values of an organization.
  • Example Cult-like culture of creativity.
  • If creativity is valued than the best way to
    elicit creativity is by using the same social
    control mechanisms used to elicit any desired
    behavior.
  • Example Norms at innovative firms like Intel
    encourage employees to challenge the status quo.

13
Compliance or Conversion?
  • Would Moscovici argue that people in strong
    culture firms are complying or are they truly
    converted?
  • How do you separate the cynics from the true
    believers?
  • OReilly Chatman (1996) argue that control
    comes from a feeling of being watched. Then what
    happens when people feel that no one is looking?

14
Is Wal-Mart Really a Cult?
  • People have argued that strong culture firms
    share a lot in common with cults.
  • Did they carry the comparison too far, or there
    real similarities?
  • Are there certain factors that distinguish a
    strong corporate culture from a cult?
  • If companies can really exert so much
    psychological control, are there ethical issues
    that should be considered?

15
Thursday The Counter-argument
  • Most management scholars have emphasized the
    importance of conformity, and the rejection of
    dissent.
  • Other scholars have highlighted the importance of
    dissent and conflict.
  • On Thursday, we will compare the two perspectives
    and attempt to reach a middle ground.
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