Title: CULTURE VS' NATIONAL CULTURE
1CULTURE VS. NATIONAL CULTURE
2CULTURE IN CONTEXT
Transformation Process
Culture
Input
Output
Environment National Culture Political
Legal Economic Resources History
Organizational Group Individual
Task
Formal Organizational Arrangements
Individual
Feedback
From Nadler Tushman, A General Diagnostic
Model for Organizational Behavior
3WHAT IS CULTURE?
Culture is learned H.E.L.P.
H abits E xpectations L anguage P erception
4Culture is a system of H.E.L.P.
- Habits
- Patterns of behavior and thought
- Expectations
- For ourselves and others, accepted norms
- Language
- Language and symbols with shared meaning
- Perspective
- About how the world works, assumptions
Day 1
5- When Im angry I.......
- If I dont agree with an idea I.......
- When someone in my team has done a good job
I....... - If someone hasnt been pulling his/her load
I....... - A meeting is to...........
- If Im shown a picture of someones family and
one of the members is fat
grin and bear it say that its interesting and
Ill think about it reward the group leave it
up to group pressure formalize a
decision laugh and comment on persons health
6UNDERSTANDING CULTURE
- Artifacts On the surface, that can be sensed
easily - Values That can be or inferred, or
articulated - Assumptions Hidden -- about man and the
environment, about human nature, human roles
relationships, reality, time, risk-taking..
7Core Cultural Axioms
- Combines dimensions and values
- Focuses on major beliefs/values and links them to
behavior
8Cultures Influence on Work
Dr. Julia Gluesing, Cross-Cultural Connections,
Inc.
9Cultures Influence on Work
With Dr. Julia Gluesing, Cultural Connections,
Inc.
10Cultures Influence on Work
With Dr. Julia Gluesing, Cross-Cultural
Connections, Inc.
11Culture in Business
- Social Stratification System
- Vertical vs. flat organizational structure
- Age-seniority vs. expertise
- Gender-based distinctions
- Family-based groups
- Industrial groups
- Occupational distinctions
12- Relationship Preferences
- Power distance
- Individualism vs. collectivism
- Communication
- Obtaining information
- High and low context cultures
- Explicit versus implicit communication
- Task and Information processing
- Precision of language
- Categorization of information
- Monochronic vs. polychronic
13- Risk-taking Behavior
- Uncertainty avoidance
- Trust
- Fatalism
- Negotiation Decision-making
- Length of different stages of process
- Team sizes
- Power and authority issues
- Data versus stories as evidence
- Comfort with ambiguity
- Influence tactics--consensus-building,
- persuasion, fiat, reciprocity . . .
14DECISION-MAKING
15CULTURAL LEVELS
National
Organizational
Occupational
16CULTURE AT THREE LEVELS
- National Culture
- Hofstedes dimensions of national culture
- Power distance, Uncertainty Avoidance,
Individualism-collectivism, Masculinity-Femininity
- Sub-national cultures
- Organizational Culture
- The culture of Matsushita and Sony versus
Japanese culture - Individual culture
- Function of different affiliations, extent of
socialization, learned through experience . . .
, Stereotypes
17Discussion Simulations
- Different Contexts of Culture
18Feeling Upset at Work
19- Choose between the following two extremes to
conceive of a company what do you think is
usually true? What do you think most people would
prefer? - A. One way is to see a company as a system
designed to perform functions and tasks in an
efficient way. People are hired to perform these
functions with the help of machines and other
equipment. They are paid for the tasks they
perform. - B. A second way is to see a company as a group of
people working together. They have social
relations with other people and with the
organization. The functioning is dependent on
these relations.
20Two Ways to Work
G R O U P
System
21Question
- A defect is discovered in one of the
installations. It was caused by negligence of one
of the members of a team. Responsibility for this
mistake can be carried in various ways. - A. The person causing the defect by
negligence in the one responsible. - B. Because he or she happens to work in a team,
the responsibility should be carried by the group.
22Four Building Blocks
- Concept of Self (How we interpret the human
condition) - Individualist-Collectivist
- Concept of Responsibility (Our relationship with
others) - Personal versus Societal Responsibility
- Concept of Time
- Monochronic-Polychronic
- One thing at a time-Multi-tasking
- Locus of Control (Fate)
- Internal-External
Based on Hall, 1959, 1977 Klukhohn Strodtbeck,
1961
23RESPONSIBILITY
24CONCEPT OF TIME
25RELATIONAL TIME
26LOCUS OF CONTROL
27National Cultures
28Hofstedes Dimensions of Workplace Culture
- Power Distance -- extent to which the less
powerful members of institutions and
organizations within a country expect and accept
that power is distributed unequally, society is
hierarchical - Uncertainty Avoidance -- extent to which members
of a culture feel threatened by uncertain or
unknown situations. This feeling is, among other
things, expressed through nervous stress and in a
need for predictability a need for written and
unwritten rules. - Masculinity/Femininity -- Masculinity pertains to
societies in which social gender roles are
clearly distinct (i.e., men are supposed to be
assertive, tough, and focused on material
success, whereas women are supposed to be more
modest, tender, and concerned with the quality of
life) Femininity pertains to societies in which
social gender roles overlap (i.e., both men and
women are supposed to be modest, tender, and
concerned with the quality of life). - Individualism/Collectivism -- the degree to which
the ties between individuals are loose (everyone
is expected to look after himself or herself) or
strong (people are integrated into strong,
cohesive ingroups from birth onwards which
protect them in exchange for unquestioning
loyalty).
29National Cultures
30National Cultures
31National Cultures
32National Cultures
33Midterm 2 November 30th
- 30 Multiple choice questions (3 points each)
- You choose 1 of 2 essays (10 points)
- Bring
- Scantron (Form 882-E the small style)
- ONE piece of three ring, lined binder paper
-
34Multiple choice questions will cover
- Assigned reading in Chapters 2, 8, 11, and 13
- The Porter article The Competitive Advantage of
Nations - Global Operations Management and
Recontextualization in Technology Transfer
35Use these slides and the class review discussion
as guides
- Study
- the text
- your notes
- the original slides available on the class web
page
36Key issues in Chaps. 8 and 11 Foreign Direct
Investment (FDI)
- Definition of foreign direct investment
- Why firms do foreign direct investment
- Be able to think about under what circumstances a
firm would produce abroad - Most FDI is to and from developed countries, but
investment in developing countries is growing
37Hopes and fears of developing (poor) countries
- What developing countries want
- Need for capital when a country is running a
trade deficit - What they fear from investing companies
38Key issues in Porters Competitive Advantage of
Nations
- Understand what Porter means by the competitive
advantage of an industry - Understand the four determinants
- Factor conditions
- Demand conditions
- Related and supporting industries
- Firm strategy, structure, and rivalry
- Understand what Porter means by each
- Importance of pressure on firms
39Key issues in Global Sourcing (Country
Evaluation and Selection)
- How location decisions should be influenced by
Porters theories - Scanning and initial decision techniques
- Know some key criteria
- Size
- Growth rate
- Stability
- Spillovers
- Limitations of scanning
- Dangers in using standard data sources
40 - What causes firms to eliminate proposals from
countries - Diversification vs. Concentration strategies
- Differences between new and reinvestment
decisions