Title: Management 11e John Schermerhorn
1Management 11e John Schermerhorn
- Chapter 11Organizational Cultureand Change
2Planning Ahead Chapter 11 Study Questions
- What is organizational culture?
- What is a multicultural organization?
- What is the nature of organizational change?
3Study Question 1 What organizational culture?
- Organizational culture
- The system of shared beliefs and values that
develops within an organization and guides the
behavior of its members - Socialization
- How new members learn the culture of the
organization
4Figure 11.1 Levels of organizational
cultureobservable culture and core culture in
the organizational iceberg
5Study Question 1 What organizational culture?
- Strong cultures
- Commit members to do things that are in the best
interests of the organization - Discourage dysfunctional work behavior
- Encourage functional work behavior
- The best organizations have strong cultures that
- Are performance-oriented
- Emphasize teamwork
- Allow for risk taking
- Encourage innovation
- Value the well being of people
6Study Question 1 What organizational culture?
- What is observable culture?
- What one sees and hears when walking around an
organization - Elements of observable culture
- Heroes
- Ceremonies, rites and rituals
- Legends and stories
- Metaphors and symbols
- What is the core culture?
- Underlying assumptions and beliefs that influence
behavior and contribute to the observable culture
7Study Question 1 What organizational culture?
- Core culture and values
- Core values are beliefs and values shared by
organization members - Strong cultures have a small but enduring set of
core values - Commitment to core values is a key to long-term
success - Important cultural values include
- Performance excellence
- Innovation
- Social responsibility
- Integrity. Worker involvement. Customer service.
Teamwork
8Study Question 1 What organizational culture?
9Study Question 1 What organizational culture?
- Value-based management
- Describes managers who actively help to develop,
communicate, and enact shared values - Criteria for evaluating core values
- Workplace spirituality
- Creates meaning and shared community among
organizational members
10Study Question 1 What organizational culture?
11Study Question 1 What organizational culture?
- Symbolic leadership
- Symbolic leaders use symbols well to establish
and maintain a desired organizational culture - Symbolic leaders behave in ways that espouse the
organizations values - Symbolic leaders
- Use language metaphors
- Highlight and dramatize core values and
observable culture - Use rites and rituals to glorify performance
12Study Question 2 What is a multicultural
organization?
- Multicultural organizations
- Based on pluralism, operating with inclusion and
respect for diversity - Multiculturalism
- involves pluralism and respect for diversity
- Characteristics of multicultural organizations
- Pluralism
- Structural integration
- Informal network integration
- Absence of prejudice and discrimination
- Minimum intergroup conflict
13Study Question 2 What is a multicultural
organization?
- Diversity
- Describes differences among people at work, such
as age, gender, race - Diversity alone does not guarantee positive
performance impact - Diversity must be included in training and human
resource practices - Positive impact results when diversity is
embedded in the organizational culture - Organizational subcultures
- Cultures based on shared work responsibilities
and/or personal characteristics - Ethnocentrism is the belief that ones subculture
is superior to all others
14Study Question 2 What is a multicultural
organization?
- Common subcultures include
- Occupations and functions
- Ethnicity or national cultures
- Gender and generations
- Challenges faced by minorities and women
- Glass ceiling
- Harassment and discrimination
- Minorities may adapt by exhibiting biculturalism
- adopting characteristics of the majority
culture
15Figure 11.2 Glass ceilings as barriers to women
and minority cultures in traditional
organizations
16Study Question 2 What is a multicultural
organization?
- Diversity leadership approaches
- Managing diversity commits to building an
organizational culture that allows all members to
reach their full potential - Affirmative action commits the organization to
hiring and advancing minorities and women - Valuing diversity commits the organization to
education and training programs
17Figure 11.3 Leadership approaches to
diversityfrom affirmative action to managing
diversity
Source Developed from R. Roosevelt Thomas, Jr.,
Beyond Race and Gender (New York AMACOM, 1991),
p. 28.
18Study Question 3 What is the nature of
organizational change?
- Change leader
- A change agent who takes leadership
responsibility for changing the existing pattern
of behavior of another person or social system - Change leadership
- Forward-looking
- Proactive
- Embraces new ideas
19Figure 11.4 Change leaders versus status quo
managers
20Study Question 3 What is the nature of
organizational change?
- Top-down change
- Change initiatives come from senior management
- Success depends on support of middle-level and
lower-level workers - Bottom-up change
- The initiatives for change come from any and all
parts of the organization, not just top
management - Crucial for organizational innovation
- Made possible by
- Employee empowerment
- Employee involvement
- Employee participation
21Study Question 3 What is the nature of
organizational change?
- Integrated change leadership
- Successful and enduring change combines
advantages of top-down and bottom-up approaches - Incremental and transformational change
- Incremental change
- Bends and adjusts existing ways to improve
performance - Transformational change
- Results in a major and comprehensive redirection
of the organization -
22Study Question 3 What is the nature of
organizational change?
23Study Question 3 What is the nature of
organizational change?
- Organizational targets for change
- Tasks. People. Culture. Technology. Structure
- Phases of planned change
- Unfreezing
- The phase in which a situation is prepared for
change and felt needs for change are developed - Changing
- The phase in which something new takes place in
the system, and change is actually implemented - Refreezing
- The phase of stabilizing the change and creating
the conditions for its long-term continuity
24Figure 10.3 Lewins three phases of planned
organizational change
25Study Question 3 What is the nature of
organizational change?
- Improvisational Change
- Making continual adjustments as changes are being
planned - Force-coercion strategy of change
- Uses power bases of legitimacy, rewards and
punishments to induce change - Relies on belief that people are motivated by
self-interest - Direct forcing and political maneuvering
- Produces limited and temporary results
- Most useful in the unfreezing phase
26Study Question 3 What is the nature of
organizational change?
- Rational persuasion strategy of change
- Bringing about change through persuasion backed
by special knowledge, empirical data, and
rational argument - Relies on expert power
- Relies on belief that reason guides peoples
decisions and actions - Useful in the unfreezing and refreezing phases
- Produces longer-lasting and internalized change
- Shared power strategy of change
- Engages people in a collaborative process of
identifying values, assumptions, and goals from
which support for change will naturally emerge - Time consuming but likely to yield high
commitment - Involves others in examining sociocultural
factors related to the issue at hand - Relies on referent power and strong interpersonal
skills in team situations - Relies on belief that people respond to
sociocultural norms and expectations of others
27Figure 11.6 Alternative change strategies and
their leadership implications
28Study Question 3 What is the nature of
organizational change?
- Why people resist change
- Fear of the unknown. Disrupted habits. Loss of
confidence. Loss of control. Poor timing. Work
overload. Loss of face. Lack of purpose - Checklist for dealing with resistance to change
- Check the benefits those involved see a clear
advantage - Check the compatibility keep change similar to
existing values/processes - Check the simplicity make it as easy as
possible to understand - Check the triability allow people to slowly try
the change adjusting as progression is made
29Study Question 3 What is the nature of
organizational change?
- Methods for dealing with resistance to change
- Education and communication
- Participation and involvement
- Facilitation and support
- Facilitation and agreement
- Manipulation and co-optation
- Explicit and implicit coercion
30Chapter 11 Case
- Apple Inc. People and design create the future