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Managing Organisational Culture

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Presentation on theme: "Managing Organisational Culture"— Presentation transcript:

1 Managing Organisational Culture
Dr. John Whiteoak University of the Sunshine Coast

2 Culture = Soft BUT Soft = Hard

3 PASSIVE-AGGRESSIVE Organisational Cultures
SOURCE: Neilson et al. Harvard Business Review

4 Passive-Aggressive Cultures
3 out of 10 people in the US report having a passive-aggressive cultures Feigning sweetness between subordinates and supervisors Robotic submission to leadership Put in only enough effort to appear compliant Lack of dissenting opinion – making waves is the ultimate sin. Blaming outside sources for poor performance. A vicious – highly effective grapevine Bosses use intimidation Very few consequences for bad behaviour Environment is secretive –ripe for scandals, sexual harassment, and financial misdeeds.

5 What is our strategy? Or more importantly Why is our strategy?

6 Why Do Organisations Vision?
Brings people together around a common dream Co-ordinates the work of different people Helps everyone make decisions Builds a foundation for business planning Challenges the comfortable or inadequate present state Makes incongruent behaviour more noticeable

7 A POWERFUL VISION STATEMENT
Presents where we want to go. Easy to read and understand. Captures the desired spirit of the organisation. Dynamically incomplete so people can fill in the pieces. Provides a motivating force, even in hard times. Is perceived as achievable. Is challenging and compelling, stretching beyond what is comfortable.

8 “So What Are You On About?”
A mission statement answers the basic question…. “So What Are You On About?”

9 ELEPHANT HUNTING No more than 6
The Issues, Challenges, KRAs (The Big Stuff) Environmental Scans – Conduct Research Doing a SWOT is not strategy No more than 6 About 3 strategies per issue Measures and accountability developed for each strategy

10 The “Big Three” “Justa”s “The strategy is right
The “Big Three” “Justa”s “The strategy is right. It’s just a communications problem.” “The plan is dead on—it’s just an implementation problem.” “Look, we’ve got the strategy right—we just need to fix the people bit.”

11 (Darryl Krook, MD, CPEM Consulting)
Successfully executing strategy depends to a great extent on how well the organisation is aligned with the strategy (Darryl Krook, MD, CPEM Consulting)

12 “Execution is strategy.” —Fred Malek fffffii

13 Vision statements count for little if more than half the employees do not share the company values
SEEK Employee Satisfaction & Motivation Survey 2004

14 Stanford Research on Values
More effective companies have three qualities in common around their values: Consensus Clarity Intensity

15 Typical Organisational Values
Career Resilience Employment at “Will” Select people for skills not attitudes and fit Buy rather than make talent Lean staffing Periodic downsizing Money is the primary motivator Individual incentives Pay-for-performance Share holder value 1st and last

16 Assumptions about people
Effort averse Management and employee interests are not aligned People are opportunistic – (self-interest seeking, will take advantage) Mangers need to design incentive systems to overcome these differences High powered incentives (money) are better than low-powered People work for money and will comply with management to get it

17 Management Hot Air “All organisations routinely say that ‘people are our greatest asset’. Yet few practice what they preach, let alone truly believe it … organisations have to market membership as much as they market products and services – and perhaps more”. (Peter Drucker, 1992)

18 Culture is about Getting Good People?
The war for talent (The Mckinsey Quarterly, 1998) Get great results with ordinary people (Hidden Value, O’Reilly & Pfeffer,1996)

19 Source: Wall Street Journal, 10.29.08, Geoff Smart and Randy Street
“In short, hiring is the most important aspect of business and yet remains woefully misunderstood.” Source: Wall Street Journal, , review of Who: The A Method for Hiring, Geoff Smart and Randy Street

20 #1 cause of Dis-satisfaction?

21 Employee retention & satisfaction: Overwhelmingly, based on the first-line manager! Source: Marcus Buckingham & Curt Coffman, First, Break All the Rules: What the World’s Greatest Managers Do Differently

22 “You have to treat your employees like customers
“You have to treat your employees like customers.” —Herb Kelleher, complete answer, upon being asked his “secrets to success” Source: Joe Nocera, NYT, “Parting Words of an Airline Pioneer,” on the occasion of Herb Kelleher’s retirement after 37 years at Southwest Airlines (SWA’s pilots union took out a full-page ad in USA Today thanking HK for all he had done; across the way in Dallas American Airlines’ pilots were picketing the Annual Meeting)

23 Press Ganey Assoc: 139,380 former patients from 225 hospitals: none of THE top 15 factors determining Patient Satisfaction referred to patient’s health outcome P.S. directly related to Staff Interaction P.S. directly correlated with Employee Satisfaction Source: Putting Patients First, Susan Frampton, Laura Gilpin, Patrick Charmel

24 “Natural selection is death
“Natural selection is death. ... Without huge amounts of death, organisms do not change over time. ... Death is the mother of structure. ... It took four billion years of death ... to invent the human mind ...” — The Cobra Event

25 The greatest danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, but that it is too low and we reach it. Michelangelo

26 Mediocrity is a Disease

27 Complacency No obvious ‘Crisis’ Great resources
Management “happy talk” General low standards Complacency Denial of bad news Focus on narrow functional goals Low confrontation culture Internal measures have inappropriate performance indices Inadequate external reporting feedback

28 Management Support True Believer: highly committed to the values and persistent Believer: supports values but other priorities dominate Skeptic: doubts about values being effective Detractor: open, visible troublemaker, undermines values Source: Adapted from McDonald, G. (1989). Manager attitudes to training. Asia Pacific HRM, 27(4).

29 Manager’s 10 point checklist self assessment
In the past month I have…. ….Used stories to reinforce the organisation’s values ….Verbally acknowledged individual’s efforts and achievements ….Written a note to someone to acknowledge special effort and achievements ….Had a discussion with one of my direct reports in relation to their role, personal development and career aspirations ….Provided constructive feedback to one of my direct reports on how they could improve the way they are doing things ….Invested some one-on-one time with one of my direct reports to ‘chew the fat’ ….Invested some face time with employees at lower levels in the organisation ….Invested some time in ‘tapping the pulse’ listening to people’s issues and concerns ….Had a conversation concerning poor performance and how to deal with it effectively ….Prompted people to collaborate and share information and experience with people in other parts of the organisation Minimum target 7


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