Corporate culture



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corporate culture

Tribal type of culture[edit]
David Logan and coauthors have proposed in their book Tribal Leadership that organizational cultures change in stages, based on an analysis of human groups and tribal cultures. They identify five basic stages:[42]

  1. Life sucks (a subsystem severed from other functional systems like tribes, gangs and prison—2 percent of population);

  2. My life sucks (I am stuck in the Dumb Motor Vehicle line and can't believe I have to spend my time in this lost triangle of ineffectiveness—25 percent of population);

  3. I'm great (and you're not, I am detached from you and will dominate you regardless of your intent—48 percent of population);

  4. We are great, but other groups suck (citing Zappo's and an attitude of unification around more than individual competence—22 percent of population) and

  5. Life is great (citing Desmond Tutu's hearing on truth and values as the basis of reconciliation—3 percent of population).

This model of organizational culture provides a map and context for leading an organization through the five stages.
Personal culture[edit]
Main: Personality psychologyIdentity (social science)
Organizational culture is taught to the person as culture is taught by his/her parents thus changing and modeling his/her personal culture.[43] Indeed, employees and people applying for a job are advised to match their "personality to a company's culture" and fit to it.[44] Some researchers even suggested and have made case studies research on personality changing.[45]
National culture type[edit]
Corporate culture is used to control, coordinate, and integrate company subsidiaries.[46] However differences in national cultures exist contributing to differences in the views on management.[47] Differences between national cultures are deep rooted values of the respective cultures, and these cultural values can shape how people expect companies to be run, and how relationships between leaders and followers should be, resulting in differences between the employer and the employee regarding expectations. (Geert Hofstede, 1991) Perhaps equally foundational; observing the vast differences in national copyright (and taxation, etc.) laws suggests deep rooted differences in cultural attitudes and assumptions about property rights and sometimes about the desired root function, place, or purpose of corporations relative to the population.

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