Topic
Organizational culture
About: Organizational culture is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 31507 publications have been published within this topic receiving 926787 citations. The topic is also known as: corporate culture & organisational culture.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used data from a major strategic reorientation of a national telecommunications firm in order to assess the outcomes of participation in strategic change and found a strong positive relationship between participation and goal achievement and organizational commitment, and a strong negative relationship with resistance.
Abstract: Participation in strategic change processes is frequently assumed to have a number of positive consequences for decision quality, affective responses to change and success of strategic change implementation. To date little research has successfully established the validity of these claims. The fact that results from research into the effects of participation in other contexts are inconclusive is adding to the ambiguity concerning participation's efficacy in a strategic change context. This article uses data from a major strategic reorientation of a national telecommunications firm in order to assess the outcomes of participation in strategic change. Findings indicate a strong positive relationship between participation and goal achievement and organizational commitment, and a strong negative relationship with resistance. The results also suggest that the effects of participation are moderated by the changes' compatibility with organizational culture and the personal goals of change recipients.
392 citations
•
01 Mar 1994
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a framework for thinking about cultural change, including the aggressive approach, conciliative approach, corrosive approach, and indoctrinative approach.
Abstract: Frameworks for thinking about cultural change - Turtles all the way down Thinking culturally Strategies for cultural development Strategies for cultural transformation Tales from the rails: the APT fiasco The Castalian culture Towards an integrated strategy for cultural change Implementing cultural change - The aggressive approach The conciliative approach The corrosive approach The indoctrinative approach Evaluating different approaches to cultural change Designing an effective approach to cultural change Leading cultural change References Index.
390 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the possible relationships between corporate culture and organizational performance among Singaporean companies and found that culture was found to impact a variety of organizational processes and performance.
Abstract: While many culture researchers have devoted numerous articles to the nature and definitions of culture, relatively fewer articles have contributed towards culture and performance research. The purpose of this study is to investigate the possible relationships between corporate culture and organizational performance among Singaporean companies. The objectives of this study are twofold: first, it aims to investigate the validity of the culture construct. Can culture construct be operationalized along distinct, repeatable dimensions? Second, it attempts to assess how culture affects organizational performance. The organizational culture profile was used as the primary research instrument. Culture was found to impact a variety of organizational processes and performance. While more research remains to be done in this area, this study has demonstrated the power of culture in influencing organizational performance.
389 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide further evidence on the link between so-called high performance work systems and firm performance and relate these to organisational culture, using regression analyses controlling for sector, firm size and age.
Abstract: The HRM literature emphasises the importance of people in enhancing firm performance or even creating competitive advantage. This study provides further evidence on the link between so-called high performance work systems and firm performance and relates these to organisational culture. In total 175 organisations from different sectors in the Netherlands participated. Senior HR managers were questioned on HRM practices and chief executives on organisational culture. Three different groups of personnel are distinguished in the measures: core employees, managers and specialist professional staff. One high performance work system could be distinguished, consisting of a combination of practices with an emphasis on employee development, strict selection and providing an overarching goal or direction. Results of regression analyses controlling for sector, firm size and age show a significant impact of this system on several performance outcomes (perceived economic outcomes, beyond contract and absenteeism), as well as positive relationships with three organisational culture orientations. Practices that are not part of this combination also show some positive (but limited) links with culture and outcomes.
388 citations
••
TL;DR: Conger as mentioned in this paper examines why these skills are so critical and what the new language skills of leadership will be, and how leaders through their choice of words, values, and beliefs can craft commitment and confid...
Abstract: Executive Overview While we have learned a great deal about the necessity of strategic vision and effective leadership, we have overlooked the critical link between vision and the leader's ability to powerfully communicate its essence. In the future, leaders will not only have to be effective strategists, but rhetoricians who can energize through the words they choose. The era of managing by dictate is ending and is being replaced by an era of managing by inspiration. Foremost among the new leadership skills demanded of this era will be the ability to craft and articulate a message that is highly motivational. Unfortunately, it seems that few business leaders and managers today possess such skills. To make matters worse, our business culture and educational system may even discourage these skills. Conger examines why these skills are so critical and what the new language skills of leadership will be. He looks at how leaders through their choice of words, values, and beliefs can craft commitment and confid...
388 citations