MN7181 - People and Organisations: Principles and Practice in Global Contexts - 9
What is Organizational Culture?
Organizational Culture included
an organization’s expectations, experiences, philosophy, and values that hold
it together, and is expressed in its self-image, inner workings, interactions
with the outside world, and future expectations. It is based on shared
attitudes, beliefs, customs, and written and unwritten rules that have be
developed overtime and are considered valid. (The Business Dictionary).
As defined by Schwartz and Davis (1981), culture is a pattern of beliefs and expectations shared by the organization's members. These beliefs and expectations produce norms and powerfully shape the behavior of individuals and groups in the organization.
As defined by Schwartz and Davis (1981), culture is a pattern of beliefs and expectations shared by the organization's members. These beliefs and expectations produce norms and powerfully shape the behavior of individuals and groups in the organization.
How are Cultures created?
An organization's culture is shaped as the organization faces external and internal challenges and learns how to deal with them. When the organization's way of doing business provides a successful adaptation to environmental challenges and ensure success, those values are retained.
Is Organizational Culture Important?
Yes. Organizational culture is a vital driver for the success or failure of any organization. An aligned culture can drive it to success, and similarly, the wrong culture can suppress its ability to adapt to a dynamic world.
Taking these into consideration, Terrence Deal and Allan Kennedy proposed one of the first models of organizational culture, in their "Corporate Cultures: The Rites and Rituals of Corporate Life" book in 1982.
In their model of culture, Deal and Kennedy suggested that the basic of organizational culture was interlocking set of six cultural elements:
- History – Traditions of the past keep people anchored to the core values that the organization was built on.
- Values and Beliefs – Cultural identity is formed around the shared beliefs of what is really important, and the values that determine what the organization stands for.
- Rituals and Ceremonies – Ceremonies are what employees’ do every day which brings them together.
- Stories – Stories allow employees’ to learn about what is expected of them and better understand what the business stands for.
- Heroic Figures – Related to stories are the employees and managers whose status is elevated because they embody organizational values. These heroes serve as role models and their words and actions signal the ideal to aspire to.
- The Cultural Network – The informal network within an organization is often where the most important information is learned. Informal players include:
2. Gossipers - who put their own spin on current events and feed people a steady diet of interesting information.
3. Whisperers - who have the ear of the powerful people in the organization. They can be used by anyone with a message they want taken to the top but who doesn't want to use formal communication channel.
4. Spies - who provide valuable information to top management, and let them know what really happens on a daily basis.
5. Priests and Priestesses - who are the guardians of cultural values. they know the history of the company inside out, and can be relied on to interpret a current situation using the beliefs, values and past practices of the company.
Deal and Kennedy's Culture Types
Examining these cultural elements across a variety of
organizations, Deal and Kennedy identified four distinct types of cultures
along with two market place factors that they felt influenced cultural patterns
and practices. They were:
- The degree of risk associated with a company’s key activities
- The speed at which companies learn whether their actions and strategies are successful.
Deal and Kennedy present these factors into a 2X2 matrix that identified the four culture types as below:


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