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Terms in this set (121)
Organizational culture consists of the values and assumptions shared within an organization that also dictate the correct way of thinking about and acting on problems and opportunities facing the organization
true
Values are conscious perceptions, while assumptions are nonconscious
true
Organizational culture is not defined by espoused values. Instead, it consists of shared enacted values.
true
Artifacts of organizational culture may include the building's design, the way people are greeted, and the food served in the company's cafeteria
true
Artifacts provide valuable evidence about a company's culture
true
Rituals support organizational culture by providing social prescriptions of the ways things should or should not be done around the organization; they are the programmed routines of daily organizational life that dramatize an organization's culture
false
Organizational stories and legends serve as powerful social prescriptions of the way things should (or should not) be done. They add human realism to corporate expectations, individual performance standards, and the criteria for getting fired.
The strength of an organization's culture refers to how widely and deeply employees hold the company's dominant values and assumptions.
true
Efficiency-focused cultures are likely to be more important for companies in environments with strong competition and standardized products
true
Organizations with adaptive cultures are unable to maintain a stable value system and, consequently, tend to perform poorly in the long run
false
An adaptive culture exists when employees are receptive to change—they assume that the organization needs to continuously adapt to its external environment and that they need to be flexible in their roles within the organization. This does not imply that they will perform poorly in the long run.
The assimilation strategy is the most likely to result in a culture clash.
false
The cultural assimilation strategy seldom produces cultural clashes, because the acquiring firm's culture is highly respected and the acquired firm's culture is either weak or relatively similar to the other culture
The deculturation strategy is most appropriate when the merging companies are in unrelated industries.
false
The separation strategy is most appropriate when the two merging companies are in unrelated industries or operate in different countries, because the most appropriate cultural values tend to differ by industry and national culture
Organizational culture can sometimes be reshaped by applying transformational leadership and organizational change practices
true
One way to change an organization's culture is to change its artifacts
true
Organizational socialization is a process of both learning and adjustment
true
Impression management can distort preemployment for employers
true
_____ are unconscious, taken-for-granted perceptions or ideal prototypes of behavior that are considered the correct way to think and act toward problems and opportunities.
A. Values
B. Organizational artifacts
C.
Languages
D. Beliefs
E. Shared assumptions
E. Shared assumptions
Which of these statements about shared assumptions is true?
A. They are not taken-for-granted perceptions, but rather conscious decisions.
B. They are so deeply embedded they probably cannot be discovered by surveying employees.
C. They are the same as espoused values.
D. They are revealed through corporate value statements.
E.
They rise to the surface only when employees let them
B. They are so deeply embedded they probably cannot be discovered by surveying employees.
The organizational culture dimension of attention to detail is characterized by _____.
A. tolerance
B. fairness
C. precision
D. collaboration
E. security
C. precision
Which
of the following organizational culture dimension is characterized by competitiveness and a low emphasis on social responsibility?
A. stability
B. innovation
C. outcome orientation
D. aggressiveness
E. respect for people
D. aggressiveness
The themes shared most widely by employees represent
A. the organization's dominant culture.
B. the organization's deculturation process.
C. the
organization's counterculture.
D. artifacts held mainly by senior executives in the organization.
E. rituals prevalent in the organization
A. the organization's dominant culture.
One advantage of countercultures is that they
A. rarely exist in real organizations.
B. maintain surveillance over and critically review the company's dominant culture.
C. prevent organizations from developing a corporate
culture.
D. ensure that corporate mergers occur without any culture clashes.
E. discourage conflict and dissension among employees.
B. maintain surveillance over and critically review the company's dominant culture.
One of the functions of _____ is that it is a spawning ground for emerging values that keep the firm aligned with the needs of customers, suppliers, society, and other stakeholders.
A. a
multicultural organization
B. a shared value
C. a subculture
D. an espoused value
E. urban culture
C. a subculture
_____ are conscious perceptions about what is good or bad, right or wrong.
A. Assumptions
B. Values
C. Morals
D. Artifacts
E. Decisions
B. Values
If artifacts of organizational culture are
the physical structure, language, rituals, and stories, then what are shared values and assumptions?
A. change agents
B. management styles
C. components of hierarchy
D. organizational structure
E. organizational culture
E. organizational culture
Corporate leaders hope _____ will eventually become the organization's culture and guide the organization's decisions and actions.
A. enacted
values
B. shared values
C. espoused values
D. shared assumptions
E. organizational culture
C. espoused values
What are spawning grounds for emerging values that keep the firm aligned with the evolving needs and expectations of customers, suppliers, communities, and other stakeholders?
A. dominant cultures
B. subcultures
C. innovations
D. details
E. enacted values
B. subcultures
Organizations differ in their cultural content, that is, the relative ordering of
A. shared values.
B. shared assumptions.
C. enacted values.
D. espoused values.
E. countercultures.
A. shared values.
Which of the following are the observable indicators of organizational culture?
A. assumptions
B. artifacts
C.
values
D. beliefs
E. mental models
B. artifacts
What is the significance of artifacts in organizational culture?
A. Artifacts are the same as organizational culture.
B. Artifacts are the residual parts of the organization that cannot fit into its culture.
C. Artifacts represent the directly observable symbols and signs of an organization's culture.
D. Artifacts are the main observable
indicators that the organization does not have a culture.
E. Artifacts mainly reflect the subcultures that conflict with an organization's dominant culture
C. Artifacts represent the directly observable symbols and signs of an organization's culture.
Organizational stories are most effective at communicating organizational culture only when they
A. make employees emotional.
B. are told by senior
executives to the public.
C. describe real people and are assumed to be true.
D. are descriptive rather than prescriptive.
E. tend to pressurize individual performance
C. describe real people and are assumed to be true
Rituals are
A. programmed routines of daily organizational life that dramatize the organization's culture.
B. more formal artifacts than ceremonies.
C. verbal symbols of cultural
values that reveal how employees talk to one another, describe customers, express anger, and greet stakeholders.
D. physical structures that convey the dominant values of an organization's culture.
E. games that people play to defy the dominant culture and, instead, support countercultural beliefs and values.
A. programmed routines of daily organizational life that dramatize the organization's culture.
At
meetings of a major consumer products firm, employees habitually stand up when the most senior executive at the meeting enters the room. This practice represents
A. evidence that the meeting has employees who hold countercultural values.
B. an adaptive culture in the company.
C. a ritual that probably symbolizes the organization's dominant culture.
D. a form of deculturation that eventually undermines the organization's dominant culture.
E. that the company's espoused values
differ from its enacted values.
C. a ritual that probably symbolizes the organization's dominant culture.
Ceremonies are
A. programmed routines of daily organizational life that dramatize the organization's culture.
B. more formal artifacts than rituals.
C. verbal symbols of cultural values that reveal how employees talk to one another, describe customers, express anger, and greet stakeholders.
D.
physical structures that convey the dominant values of an organization's culture.
E. games that people play to defy the dominant culture and, instead, support countercultural beliefs and values.
B. more formal artifacts than rituals.
Which of the following is an artifact?
A. values
B. language
C. assumptions
D. beliefs
E. corporate cult
B. language
Language is
A. programmed routines of daily organizational life that dramatize the organization's culture.
B. not good at highlighting the values of organizational subcultures.
C. verbal symbols of cultural values that reveal how employees describe customers, express anger, and greet stakeholders.
D. physical structures that convey the dominant values of an organization's culture.
E. games that people play to defy the
dominant culture and, instead, support countercultural beliefs and values.
C. verbal symbols of cultural values that reveal how employees describe customers, express anger, and greet stakeholders.
Which of the following is a verbal symbol of cultural values?
A. speeches at ceremonies
B. expressions of anger
C. shared assumptions
D. beliefs
E. rituals
B. expressions of anger
Which of these statements about organizational stories is false?
A. Stories are most effective at communicating corporate culture when they describe real events with real people.
B. Stories serve as powerful social prescriptions of the way things should or should not be done.
C. Stories produce emotions in listeners, and these emotions tend to improve listeners' memory of the lesson within the story.
D. Stories
advise people what not to do, but leave out the solutions and suggestions.
E. Stories add human realism to corporate expectations, individual performance standards, and the criteria for getting fired.
D. Stories advise people what not to do, but leave out the solutions and suggestions.
The Target motto, "Expect more, pay less," is an example of
A. an organizational artifact.
B. organizational
language.
C. organizational culture.
D. an organizational ritual.
E. an espoused value.
B. organizational language.
_____ are planned activities conducted specifically for the benefit of an audience.
A. Artifacts
B. Rituals
C. Assumptions
D. Ceremonies
E. Values
D. Ceremonies
Collaborative and creative
cultures value more teamwork and flexibility, so space design is
A. structured.
B. informal.
C. for individuals.
D. more fixed.
E. symmetrical.
B. informal.
Which of the following is true about the work space in a controlling and competitive culture?
A. more team space
B. low to medium enclosures
C. flexible environment
D. symmetrical layout
E. organic design
D. symmetrical layout
Which of the following is true about organizational culture?
A. It is suggested that companies with strong cultures tend to be more successful, irrespective of any conditions.
B. Companies have strong cultures when the dominant values are held mainly by a few people at the top of the organization.
C. Most employees across all subunits understand the dominant values but choose to ignore them.
D. The
life span of strong organizational cultures is almost always short.
E. The strength of an organization's culture refers to how widely and deeply employees hold the company's dominant values and assumptions
E. The strength of an organization's culture refers to how widely and deeply employees hold the company's dominant values and assumptions
Which of the following statements about the strength of
organizational culture and organizational performance is true?
A. Organizations with stronger cultures tend to perform better than those with weak cultures when the culture content fits the external environment.
B. There is no relationship between an organization's cultural strength and its performance.
C. Organizations with stronger cultures tend to perform better only when they acquire other organizations with distinct cultures.
D. Organizations with stronger cultures almost always
perform poorly compared to those with weak cultures.
E. Organizations with stronger cultures perform poorly if they have subcultures.
A. Organizations with stronger cultures tend to perform better than those with weak cultures when the culture content fits the external environment.
Which of the following tends to happen when an organization's culture is misaligned with its external environment?
A. The
corporate culture gets stronger.
B. The organization's subcultures weaken.
C. The organization has more difficulty anticipating and responding to stakeholder needs.
D. The organization is unable to develop subcultures.
E. The various subcultures within the organization keep changing
C. The organization has more difficulty anticipating and responding to stakeholder needs.
Organizations with an
adaptive corporate culture
A. are unlikely to survive in the long run.
B. have employees who see things from an open systems perspective.
C. tend to be less ethical than organizations with non-adaptive cultures.
D. have no artifacts to keep their culture in place.
E. are focused inward to employee needs.
B. have employees who see things from an open systems perspective.
Which of the following is a
characteristic of an adaptive corporate culture?
A. Employees hold a common mental model that the organization's success depends on their personal well-being.
B. Employees continuously question past practices.
C. Employees tend to be more reactive.
D. Employees tend to take the view that any activity beyond their job description is not their job.
E. Employees are more individualistic and do not experiment with new ideas outside their work profiles.
B. Employees continuously question past practices.
Employees at SuperTech Services seek out opportunities rather than wait for them to arrive. They also have a strong learning orientation. This implies that SuperTech has
A. a weak organizational culture.
B. a strong counterculture.
C. relatively few artifacts representing the organization's culture.
D. a culture that is misaligned with its external environment.
E. an adaptive
culture.
E. an adaptive culture.
Which one of the following statements about a strong culture is false?
A. Organizations with stronger cultures tend to perform better than those with weak cultures when the culture content fits the external environment.
B. There is a relationship between an organization's cultural strength and its performance.
C. A strong culture encourages decisions and behaviors that
can undermine the organization's connection with its stakeholders.
D. If the dominant values are congruent with the environment, then employees are more likely to engage in decisions and behaviors that improve the organization's interaction with that environment.
E. The benefits of a strong culture depend on whether its content—the culture's dominant values and assumptions—is aligned with the external environment.
C. A strong culture encourages decisions and behaviors that can undermine the organization's connection with its stakeholders.
Corporate cults may undermine organizational effectiveness because they lock people into _____, which can blind them to new opportunities and unique problems.
A. mental models
B. dissension
C. alignment
D. rituals
E. adaptation
A. mental models
Organizational
culture is a(n)
A. conscious driver.
B. social control mechanism.
C. separator of people.
D. short-lived phenomenon.
E. unstable environment.
B. social control mechanism.
Wells Fargo is now under investigation for its cultural practices. Rewards were given based on meeting account quotas. This practice caused employees to behave
A. unethically.
B. consciously.
C. creatively.
D.
ethically.
E. vigilant.
A. unethically.
The main purpose of a bicultural audit is to
A. determine whether a company's organizational culture is sufficiently strong.
B. estimate the number of dominant and subcultural values that exist in an organization.
C. find out whether people from different countries have the same corporate cultures.
D. identify and diagnose differences in the corporate
cultures of merging organizations.
E. teach new employees the organization's dominant cultural values.
D. identify and diagnose differences in the corporate cultures of merging organizations.
One of the first steps to minimize a cultural clash in a merger is to
A. significantly reduce the strength of the culture in both the organizations.
B. conduct a bicultural audit.
C. significantly increase the
strength of the culture in both organizations.
D. replace the chief executives in both organizations before merger negotiations begin.
E. replace the employees with new ones.
B. conduct a bicultural audit.
_____ occurs when employees at the acquired company willingly embrace the cultural values of the acquiring organization.
A. Deculturation
B. Assimilation
C. Separation
D. Integration
E.
Negotiation
B. Assimilation
In which strategy does the acquiring company impose its culture and business practices on the acquired organization?
A. deculturation
B. assimilation
C. separation
D. integration
E. bicultural audit
A. deculturation
A deculturation strategy of merging two corporate cultures should be
applied when
A. employees at the acquired company willingly embrace the cultural values of the acquiring organization.
B. both firms operate successfully in different industries.
C. employees in the acquired firm want to hold on to their firm's culture even though it does not fit the external environment.
D. both of the firms have weak cultures.
E. the merging companies agree to remain distinct entities with minimal exchange of culture or organizational practices.
C. employees in the acquired firm want to hold on to their firm's culture even though it does not fit the external environment.
Which strategy for merging two distinct cultures is most effective when the two companies have relatively weak cultures with overlapping values?
A. deculturation
B. assimilation
C. separation
D. integration
E. negotiation
D. integration
Which of the following is true about using the strategy of integration for merging different corporate cultures?
A. It works best when people realize that their existing cultures are good enough, which motivates them to stick to their dominant values.
B. It is the fastest strategy for merging different corporate cultures.
C. It is potentially safe because neither party is preserving the existing culture.
D. It should be considered when the
merging companies have strong cultures and distinct cultures.
E. It creates a new composite culture that preserves the best features of the previous cultures.
E. It creates a new composite culture that preserves the best features of the previous cultures.
Which strategy for merging two distinct cultures is most appropriate when the two merging companies are in unrelated industries or operate in different
countries, because the most appropriate cultural values tend to differ by industry and national culture?
A. deculturation
B. assimilation
C. separation
D. integration
E. negotiation
C. separation
When merging two organizations, a separation strategy is most commonly applied when
A. both companies have relatively weak cultures that are generally ineffective.
B. one company has an effective
culture and employees at the other company would embrace that culture if applied to them.
C. the two organizations operate in distinct industries.
D. the acquired firm's culture doesn't work, whereas the culture of the acquiring firm does work.
E. a bicultural audit reveals that both companies have very similar cultures.
C. the two organizations operate in distinct industries.
When merging cultures, it
is best to
A. go quickly so it is less painful.
B. take time to be sure it is a cultural fit.
C. lay off all previous employees to minimize dissension.
D. undermine employee performance and customer service.
E. have one culture dominate the other.
B. take time to be sure it is a cultural fit.
Which merger strategy is most difficult to maintain?
A. deculturation
B. assimilation
C.
separation
D. integration
E. negotiation
C. separation
An organization's culture begins with its
A. clients.
B. country-level managers.
C. employees.
D. founders and leaders.
E. auditors.
D. founders and leaders.
Which of the following statements is consistent with the attraction-selection-attrition (ASA)
theory?
A. Job applicants who later become organizational members tend to be attracted to coworkers who share their values and assumptions.
B. Organizations have a natural tendency to attract, select, and retain people with values that are consistent with the organization's own culture.
C. Attraction, selection, and attrition are part of the natural life-cycle of organizational members.
D. Employees get attached to organizations that meet their reward expectations.
E. Attraction
followed by selection inevitably leads to attrition in the future
B. Organizations have a natural tendency to attract, select, and retain people with values that are consistent with the organization's own culture
The workplace layout, reporting structure, office rituals, type of information distributed, and language are all examples of
A. values.
B. assumptions.
C. socialization.
D. artifacts.
E.
attrition.
D. artifacts.
What has the most powerful effect on strengthening or reshaping an organization's culture?
A. ceremonies
B. rewards
C. employees
D. values
E. communication
B. rewards
Which one of the following is true about strong cultures?
A. They have a stable workforce.
B. They have employees who
work alone.
C. They seek job applicants whose values are different to expand the cultural beliefs.
D. They do not hold leaders accountable for employees' values.
E. The firm establishes the founder's habits.
A. They have a stable workforce.
The web-based application, LinkedIn, uses _____ to find job applicants by posting that new people or firms have viewed your profile.
A. attraction
B.
selection
C. attrition
D. rewards
E. recognition
A. attraction
On the television show, Undercover Boss, the boss becomes an employee to learn the job. The current employees then judge how well the undercover boss will fit in. The employees are practicing
A. attraction.
B. attrition.
C. selection.
D. recruitment.
E. retention.
C. selection.
Organizational socialization is best described as a process of _____, where newcomers try to make sense of and adapt to the company's environment.
A. cooperation and stability
B. power and restructuring
C. negotiation and concession-making
D. learning and adjustment
E. managing and delegating
D. learning and adjustment
In the context of organizational
socialization, the adjustment process is better for
A. those who rebel against and reject the company's dominant values.
B. employees who experience significant levels of reality shock.
C. newcomers with diverse work experience.
D. people who are able to avoid the encounter stage of socialization.
E. individuals who retain their personal identity.
C. newcomers with diverse work experience.
The
process of organizational socialization begins
A. as soon as the person is hired by the organization.
B. within the employee's first week on the job.
C. long before the first day of work for the organization.
D. when the employee finally reconciles preemployment expectations with organizational reality.
E. when the employee receives his or her first performance appraisal.
C. long before the first day of work for the organization.
During which of the following stages of socialization do people first learn about the organization and job?
A. role management
B. encounter
C. preemployment
D. probation
E. orientation
C. preemployment
The preemployment stage of organizational socialization would be more effective if
A. employers avoided forming a psychological contract.
B. employers and job
applicants gave and received accurate information about each other.
C. employers and applicants experienced reality shock when meeting each other for the first time.
D. job applicants distorted their resume in order to get the job offered.
E. the applicants kept a clean slate and avoided searching for information on the company and forming expectations.
B. employers and job applicants gave and received accurate information about each other.
Which of the following happens during the preemployment stage of organizational socialization?
A. Conflicts are resolved between work and nonwork activities.
B. Employees form expectations (a psychological contract) about working at that organization.
C. Reality shock is experienced.
D. Newcomers test how well their preemployment expectations fit reality.
E. Applicants strengthen relationships with coworkers and
supervisors
B. Employees form expectations (a psychological contract) about working at that organization.
Many employees experience a reality shock on their first day at work because
A. applicants want employees to develop better expectations of future work experiences.
B. applicants want to ensure that employees develop a stronger loyalty to the organization.
C. newcomers test how well their
preemployment expectations fit reality, and many companies fail this test.
D. employers ignore the duty to orient new applicants on the first day of work.
E. colleagues provide a lot of information regarding various work assignments on the very first day.
C. newcomers test how well their preemployment expectations fit reality, and many companies fail this test.
Reality shock is
A. provided by
organizations to ensure that new employees accept the challenges at work.
B. an element in the model of individual behavior.
C. common in lateral career development.
D. a unique feature of an adaptive culture.
E. a perceived discrepancy between employee expectations and reality.
E. a perceived discrepancy between employee expectations and reality.
_____ is the third stage of organizational
socialization that is most active as employees make the transition from newcomers to insiders.
A. Role management
B. Preemployment socialization
C. Encounter
D. Gathering information
E. Job interview
A. Role management
Resolving conflicts between work and nonwork activities mainly occurs during the _____ stage of socialization.
A. role management
B. encounter
C. preemployment
D.
reality shock
E. disillusionment
A. role management
Which of the following is true about socialization agents?
A. Socialization agents help integrate new employees into the team.
B. Socialization agents provide support on the basis of the compensation offered to do so.
C. Family support is an important socialization agent for new employees.
D. A strong corporate culture discourages socialization
agents from doing their job.
E. Employers group socialization agents on the basis of their qualifications.
A. Socialization agents help integrate new employees into the team.
_______ is a system whereby newcomers are assigned to coworkers for sources of information and social support.
A. Realistic job preview
B. Work ownership
C. Relational partnership
D. Psychological contract
E. The buddy
system
E. The buddy system
James has just joined CoraTech Systems, where he has been assigned to Paul and Natalie for sources of information about the company. Paul and Natalie introduce James to others at Coratech, give him an office tour, and assure him that they will meet him regularly for the first few weeks, to help him in the transition to the new company. In this scenario, Paul and Natalie are part of the
CoraTech's
A. two-man rule.
B. work ownership.
C. buddy system.
D. inspection partnership.
E. duty segregation.
C. buddy system.
The _____ refers to the individual's beliefs about the terms and conditions of a reciprocal exchange agreement between him- or herself and an employer.
A. psychological contract
B. relational contract
C. transactional contract
D. mental model
E. realistic
job preview
A. psychological contract
Effective socialization supports newcomers'
A. individual beliefs.
B. organizational comprehension.
C. perceptions.
D. resolution of nonwork conflicts.
E. relationship expectations
B. organizational comprehension.
Companies are initiating a(n) _________ to help reduce turnover
and increase job performance.
A. work ownership
B. psychological contract
C. realistic job preview
D. relational partnership
E. buddy system
C. realistic job preview
Most employees at United FiberTech support the idea that the company's success depends on their willingness to continually change and improve customer service.
United FiberTech probably has
A. an adaptive culture.
B. many
countercultures.
C. more subcultures than employees.
D. an unethical culture.
E. no corporate culture.
A. an adaptive culture.
Most employees at United FiberTech support the idea that the company's success depends on their willingness to continually change and improve customer service.
United FiberTech most likely has a strong
A. management team.
B. learning orientation.
C. drive for
profits.
D. corporate cult.
E. training program.
B. learning orientation.
BarkBark Inc. and Happy Toys Ltd. are considering a merger and are unsure whether their two organizations will have a difficult time with clashing cultures. They perform a detailed diagnosis, collecting and analyzing the gathered data about the two merging companies. They identify several overlapping values, which they feel that they can effectively meld into a cohesive new culture.
In Scenario B, BarkBark and Happy Toys used _______ when considering the merger.
A. assimilation
B. deculturation
C. a bicultural audit
D. a merger strategy
E. a cultural review
C. a bicultural audit
BarkBark Inc. and Happy Toys Ltd. are considering a merger and are unsure whether their two organizations will have a difficult time with clashing cultures. They perform a detailed diagnosis, collecting and analyzing the gathered data about the two merging companies. They identify several overlapping values, which they feel that they can effectively meld into a cohesive new culture.
What type of cultural merge would be best for BarkBark?
A. integration
B. deculturation
C. assimilation
D. separation
E. incorporation
A. integration
BarkBark Inc. and Happy Toys Ltd. are considering a merger and are unsure whether their two organizations will have a difficult time with clashing cultures. They perform a detailed diagnosis, collecting and analyzing the gathered data about the two merging companies. They identify several overlapping values, which they feel that they can effectively meld into a cohesive new culture.
What type of cultural merge would be worst in this situation?
A. integration
B. deculturation
C.
assimilation
D. separation
E. incorporation
B. deculturation
Reagan is a new HR manager for a large company. She is concerned about the number of employees leaving the company and the lack of job applicants. She begins with a review of the company's policies and then a look at the culture. She talks with long-time employees to learn the stories and the rituals.
After listening and researching, Reagan
creates a posting on a popular website and searches employment boards. She has begun which component of cultural fit?
A. retention
B. attraction
C. selection
D. attrition
E. hiring
B. attraction
Reagan is a new HR manager for a large company. She is concerned about the number of employees leaving the company and the lack of job applicants. She begins with a review of the company's policies and then a look at the culture. She talks with long-time employees to learn the stories and the rituals.
After listening and researching, Reagan now knows why people are leaving. She has found that _______ is the cause.
A. retention
B. attraction
C. selection
D. attrition
E. interviewing
D. attrition
organizational culture
the values and assumptions shared within an organization
shared values
values that people within the organization or work unit have in common and place near the top of their hierarchy of values
shared assumptions
non-conscious, taken-for-granted perceptions or ideal prototypes of behavior that are considered the correct way to think and act toward problems and opportunities
espoused values
the values that corporate leaders hope will eventually become the organization's culture, or at least the values they want others to believe guide the organization's decisions and actions
enacted values
Values that actually guide and influence decisions and behavior; values put into practice
organizational culture profile dimensions
- innovation
- stability
- respect for people
- outcome orientation
- attention to detail
- team orientation
- aggressiveness
dominant culture
the values and assumptions shared most consistently and widely by the organization's members
subcultures
subgroups within the large organizational culture with unique values, ideas, and attitudes; may be divisional, regional, occupational, etc.
countercultures
subgroups that embrace values or assumptions that directly oppose the organization's dominant culture
artifacts
the observable symbols and signs of an organization's culture
categories of artifacts
- organizational stories and legends
- language
- rituals and ceremonies
- physical structures and symbols
rituals
the programmed routines of daily organizational life that dramatize the organization's culture
ceremonies
planned displays of organizational culture, conducted specifically for the benefit of an audience
functions of strong cultures
- control system
- social glue
- sense making
contingencies of culture strength
- whether the
culture content is aligned with the environment
- whether the culture is moderately strong (vs cultlike)
- whether the culture incorporates an adaptive culture
adaptive culture
an organizational culture in which employees are receptive to change, including the ongoing alignment of the organization to its environment and continuous improvement of internal processes
bicultural audit
a process of diagnosing cultural relations between companies and determining the extent to which cultural clashes will likely occur
strategies for merging organizational cultures
- assimilation
- deculturation
- integration
- separation
strategies for changing and strengthening organizational culture
- actions of founders and leaders
- align artifacts with the desired culture
- introduce culturally consistent rewards/recognition
- support workforce stability and communication
- use attraction, selection, and socialization for cultural "fit"
attraction-selection-attrition (ASA) theory
a theory which states that organizations have a natural tendency to attract, select, and retain people with values and personality characteristics that are consistent with the organization's character, resulting in a more homogeneous organization and a stronger culture.
organizational socialization
the process by which individuals learn the values, expected behaviors, and social knowledge necessary to assume their roles in the organization
organizational comprehension
development of an accurate cognitive map of the physical, social, strategic, and cultural dynamics of the organization
psychological contract
the individual's beliefs about the terms and conditions of a reciprocal exchange agreement between that person and another party (typically an employer).
types of psychological contracts
- transactional
- relational
transactional contracts
Primarily short-term economic exchanges with well-defined and unchanging responsibilities and obligations
relational contracts
Long-term attachments that encompass a broad array of dynamic, subjective mutual obligations
stages of organizational socialization
- preemployment socialization (outsider)
- encounter (newcomer)
- role management (insider)
reality shock
the stress that results when employees perceive discrepancies between their pre-employment expectations and on-the-job reality
realistic job preview (RJP)
a method of improving organizational socialization in which job applicants are given a balance of positive and negative information about the job and work context
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