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15: Organizational Culture

  • Page ID
    34454
    • Anonymous
    • LibreTexts

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    • 15.1: Building a Customer Service Culture: The Case of Nordstrom
      This page discusses Nordstrom Inc., a Seattle-based department store known for its outstanding customer service and employee satisfaction, ranked 34th on Fortune's list of best companies. It highlights the company’s minimal rules and employee empowerment, which encourages staff to exercise good judgment in delivering exceptional service.
    • 15.2: Understanding Organizational Culture
      This page discusses organizational culture, defined as the shared assumptions, values, and beliefs that shape behavior in organizations. It affects employee behavior and performance, serving as both an advantage and a liability. The culture has three levels: basic assumptions, values, and visible artifacts. It influences actions and decisions, often more effectively than formal rules. Aligning an organization's culture with its environment is essential for success.
    • 15.3: Characteristics of Organizational Culture
      This page examines organizational culture, covering aspects like culture strength, subcultures, and typologies such as the Organizational Culture Profile (OCP) with seven values. It discusses service culture in businesses, emphasizing employee empowerment and customer experience, as well as safety culture's impact on morale and profitability. Complexities of maintaining culture during mergers are illustrated by the DaimlerChrysler case.
    • 15.4: Creating and Maintaining Organizational Culture
      This page explores the significance of onboarding in aligning new hires with organizational culture, emphasizing the roles of leadership, mentoring, and structured orientation. Effective onboarding enhances performance and retention, while the organizational culture influences hiring practices and employee behavior.
    • 15.5: Creating Culture Change
      This page examines the necessity and challenges of cultural change in organizations, often triggered by crises or shifts in demands. It outlines successful strategies, such as creating urgency, leadership changes, role modeling, targeted training, and reward adjustments.
    • 15.6: The Role of Ethics and National Culture
      This page emphasizes the importance of organizational culture in fostering ethical behavior, highlighting that a culture focused on integrity is key to effective ethics training. It notes that leader behavior greatly affects this culture, and inconsistencies can undermine ethical foundations. Furthermore, national culture shapes organizational values, influencing competition versus harmony in company cultures.
    • 15.7: Clash of the Cultures - The Case of Newell Rubbermaid
      This page details Newell Company's transformation from a curtain rod manufacturer to a diversified household goods producer through acquisitions, with a focus on financial and operational control. The 1999 acquisition of Rubbermaid aimed to enhance market power but faced cultural challenges. CEO Joseph Galli's 2001 restructuring brought job cuts and strategic realignment, resulting in improved revenues and profitability, ultimately leading to recognition for Newell Rubbermaid in 2010.
    • 15.8: Conclusion
      This page explores organizational culture, emphasizing its importance in influencing a company's success and the challenges of changing it. It notes that alignment with strategy and environmental needs is critical, and leaders can facilitate cultural change through their actions, role modeling, rules, and storytelling.
    • 15.9: Exercises
      This page discusses the ethical dilemma of hiring a benefits specialist post-acquisition by a Fortune 500 company, revealing a gap between advertised job autonomy and actual restrictions. It raises concerns about the integrity of recruitment practices as a manager suggests embellishing the job's appeal.

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