Organizational Culture
Organizational Culture
Organizational culture is
a widely used term but one that seems to give rise to a degree of ambiguity.
Watson (2006) emphasizes that the concept of culture originally derived from a
metaphor of the organization as ‘something cultivated’. For the past number of
decades, most academics and practitioners studying organizations suggest the
concept of culture is the climate and practices that organizations develop
around their handling of people, or to the promoted values and statement of
beliefs of an organization (Schein, 2004). Schein (2004) highlights that ‘the
only thing of real importance that leaders do is to create and manage culture;
that the unique talent of leaders is their ability to understand and work with
culture; and that it is an ultimate act of leadership to destroy culture when
it is viewed as dysfunctional’ (p.11).
Culture therefore gives
organizations a sense of identity and determines, through the organization’s
legends, rituals, beliefs, meanings, values, norms and language, the way in
which ‘things are done around here’. An organizations’ culture encapsulates
what it has been good at and what has worked in the past.
Arnold (2005, p 625)
indicates that “organizational culture is the distinctive norms, beliefs,
principles and ways of behaving that combine to give each organization its
distinct character”. These two definitions suggest that organizational culture
distinguishes one organization from another organization. Therefore, organizational
culture is to an organization what personality is to an individual (Johnson,
1990).
The Organizational
culture help to reduce conflicts, to control and coordinate, reduce
uncertainty, and to maintain competitive advantage.
The main source of organizational
culture is the organization’s leadership. Leadership in this context refers to
the influential individuals, often the founders who have a major impact on the
creation of the organization’s early culture (Schein, 1985). According to Brown
(1998, p 48) “in building their organizations founders tend to impose their
beliefs and values about the nature of the world, organizations and human
nature on other organizational participants”.
References
Adler, N.
(2002). International dimensions of organizational behavior (4'"
ed.). Cincinnati: South-Western Publishing.
Jason A.Colquitt, Jeffery
A. Lepine & Michael J. Wesson, (2011), “Organizational Behaviour –Improving
performance and commitment in the Workplace”, Tata McGraw Hill Education
Private Limited,NewDelhi, pp.548-557.

When starting a new venture it is easy to get consumed with the tasks in making this a reality. But without giving careful thought to how one interacts with others, particularly on the team, a founder may be setting a culture without knowing it. What can a founder do to positively impact the culture for the long term in these very early days, and what should he or she be careful not to do to negatively impact the culture?
ReplyDeleteA better culture is needed to establish a better organization. Values shared by individuals, acceptance of the values and symbolic meanings for the value for employees are the main features of an organizational culture (Simsek and Fidan, 2005).
ReplyDeleteOrganizational culture creat a better environment for the performance of employee. Good article.
ReplyDelete