GLOBAL MBA 21-22 What is culture? Business and Culture Workshop One Week 4 Exploring the nature of national culture and workplace culture Learning Objectives • What is culture? • Understanding the layer of culture • Sharing cultural experiences • Sterotyping • Why does culture matter to Business Ship Wrecked: 26 different nationalities, no common language, different ages, men, women and children. What are some of the big decisions you would need to make? Defining culture … the coherent, learned, shared view of a group of people about life’s concerns that ranks what is important, furnishes attitudes about what things are appropriate, and dictates behaviour” Varner & Beamer, 2011, p.5) Learned: we are not born with it; culture is learned from those View of a group : around us agreed, shared views of a society What is important : influences what we see as important Impacts behaviour: influences the way we do things Defining culture … “a complex frame of reference that consists of patterns of traditions beliefs, values, norms, symbols, and meanings that are shared to varying degrees by interacting members of a community” (Ting-Toomey, 1999, p.10) Traditions: rituals, ceremonies, rites of passage Beliefs values, norms: underlying principles governing behaviours Symbols: language (verbal, non-verbal) also images • Defining culture … “a complex frame of reference that consists of patterns of traditions beliefs, values, norms, symbols, and meanings that are shared to varying degrees by interacting members of a community” (Ting-Toomey, 1999, p.10) Meanings: Interpretations of symbols held by members ‘Shared to varying degrees’: Not every single member of the culture to the same degree! “A frame of reference” for making sense of the world The Iceberg of Culture In awareness Out of conscious awareness Visible Invisible The Iceberg of Culture Fine arts Literature Drama Classical music Popular music Folk dancing Games Cooking Dress Notions of modesty Conceptions of beauty Ideas about child raising Rules of descent Cosmology Relationship to animals Courtship practices Patterns of superior/subordinate relations Definitions of sin Conceptions of justice Notions of leadership Incentive to work Tempo of work Attitudes to the dependent Approaches to problem solving Patterns of group decision making Eye behaviour Conceptions of cleanliness Theories of disease Conception of status mobility Roles in relation to status by age, sex, class, occupation, kinship etc Definition of insanity Nature of friendship Conception of self Patterns of visual perception Body language Facial expression Notions of logic and validity Patterns of handling emotions Conversational patterns Conception of past & future Ordering of time Preference for competition or cooperation Social interaction rate Notions of adolescence Arrangements of physical space The Fundamentals of Culture (Hofestede) Signs and Symbols Visible culture …open to the foreigner Behavioural Norms Values & Beliefs • Think How long might it take an outsider to understand these values? Culture’s rules …an effort for the foreigner Culture’s core assumptions …difficult to access for the foreigner Sharing your Dominant National Identity TASK! Create a visual representatio n of your National Identity, Include, text, videos 1. Start with the visual cues that are easy to identify (National symbols, objects with meaning, national heros, culture, language, words, music, art) 2. Can you identify some behaviors/cultural norms to your national identity 3. What are core values to your National identity. Tip on Values! Read the descriptions of national values for China, India and Britain (handout ‘National Values’ in Learning Materials) Ireland Signs & Symbols Irish Behaviours and Norms • Irish Humor: “The Craic” • Meeting Etiquette: Handshake and Eye Contact, Causal, Friendly • Communication Style: appreciate modesty and dislike a superiority complex of any sort. Understated, and avoid conflict and offence. Expect a great deal of discussion at meetings. • Irish work hard but they also take time to enjoy life and expect others to do the same. • Employees expect to be consulted on decisions • They prefer to offer noncommittal responses such as "maybe". • The Irish are more impressed by results than promises. Irish Values and Beliefs Superiors are accessible….low power distance Individualistic Masculine society Ok with uncertainty. Indulgent Word Cloud: Modesty, Patriotism, Creativity, Earn Respect, Low context culture, direct/indirect feedback, trusting, very low comfort with silence Comparing and Contrasting National Values Hofstede ‘The Onion’ Manifestation of Culture at Different Depths HOFSTEDE & MINKOV, M. (2010). P8 Symbols: words, pictures, objects that carry a meaning, superficial easy to copy and disregard Heroes: alive or dead, real or imaginary who possess characteristics that are high valued in society Rituals: greetings, religious and social ceremonies Practices: (rituals and heroes) visible to the outside observer, but cultural meaning is invisible Values: tendencies to prefer certain states of affairs over others (Moral vs immoral, evil vs good, ugly versus beautiful, forbidden vs permitted The Learning of Values and Practices HOFSTEDE & MINKOV, M. (2010). P8 Bi-culturalism and cultural hybrids • Bi-cultural individuals identify with the values and cultural practices of two different cultures. • Bi-culturals navigate different worlds in their working and social lives, constantly switching cultural frames. • Cultural hybrids have absorbed several cultural influences. They may include ‘3rd culture kids’ whose cultural identity lies in-between space. Infra-national levels: below the level of nation Layers or levels of culture Can you think of Examples for both? Supra-national levels: above the level of nation Layers of culture: sub-cultures • In every society there are also many other types of sub-cultures, defined by, for example: • social class, gender, sexual orientation, occupation, age (youth culture), political culture (e.g. dissident subcultures). • Members of these subcultures vary in certain distinctive ways from the norms and values of the national culture (spreading around the central tendency). NATIONAL CULTURE IS… ‘…the collective programming of the mind that distinguishes the members of one group or category of people from others’ • • ‘…shared values and belief systems’ • ‘…culture is learned’ Source: Cultures & Organisations: Software of the Mind (3rd Edn) Hofstede, Hofstede, Minkov Multi-cultural societies Global migration on an unprecedented scale in the last decades has contributed to diversity and change in the world’s populations. The world today has huge populations living outside of their country of birth/citizenship: transnationals * Cultures shift from homogenous to heterogenous Rise of new global cities. * Includes economic migrants migrants for settlement educational migrants refugees & asylum seekers ‘Superdiverse’ cities • Since the early 90s, the scale of migration has escalated to a point where ‘multicultural’ has now been replaced by ‘superdiverse’. • Superdiversity* refers to the transformation of large numbers of world cities: ‘the world in one city’ “Is Dubai a Super-diverse City”?, what are examples of Super-diverse city. WHY DOES NATIONAL CULTURE MATTER? • Culture frames our personal preferences Culture frames our behavioural expectations of others • Culture frames our reactions to others’ behaviour • Culture is ‘The Software of the Mind’ (Hofstede) • WHAT ABOUT CULTURAL STEREOTYPING? • Cultural Generalization: Making a statement of probability based on systematically collected data; identifying a tendency demonstrated by a majority of cultural group members • Stereotyping: The application of a cultural generalisation to every member in a cultural group, or generalising from only a few group members or inadequate data WHAT ABOUT CULTURAL STEREOTYPING? ..normal distribution / national average scores Group Learning task • What challenges in dealing with other cultures, have you found so far in university, business, personal? • Why does it matter in a business or work context? • Have you found cultural differences coming to Dubai, ever experience differences working in teams, in the Workplace or in University, any challenges you noticed? What is organizational culture and why does it matter so much? • Organisations have their own culture: values, practices, procedures, conventions • Frameworks for national cultures cannot necessarily be applied to organisations • When two organisations merge – clashes of culture are common, though it’s not always clear if it is a national culture clash or an organisational culture clash • Employees overnight are expected to follow a new and different code of values, procedures and expectations of behaviour. • When an individual moves from working in one company to another, similar ‘culture shock’ can be experienced because of different organisational cultures. “Appreciating cultural differences is paramount to the success of a deal; companies who pass over them pay a steep price” Katherine LaVelle, Managing Director of Accenture, 2021 “Cultural factors and organizational alignment are critical to success (and avoiding failure) in mergers. Some 95 percent of executives describe cultural fit as critical to the success of integration. Yet 25 percent cite a lack of cultural cohesion and alignment as the primary reason integration efforts fail” McKinsey, 2019 “CULTURE has become one of the most important business topics of 2016. CEOs and HR leaders now recognize that culture drives people’s behavior, innovation, and customer service: 82 percent of survey respondents believe that “culture is a potential competitive advantage.” Deloitee, 2016 Accenture (2021): “Acquiring companies in mergers with a particularly wide cultural disparity between the acquirer and the acquiree saw an average net income drop of more than US$600 million per year. Companies looking to complete a merger often fail to follow through with assessing and creating a long-term strategic roadmap for merging cultures, thus creating an opening for deal failure.” Some Takeaways • • • • • • • Definitions of culture The iceberg and the onion Presentation Takeaways Multi-culturalism Sterotyping Corporate Culture Next Cultural Frameworks Resources • National Values Handout • Hofstede and Minkov (2010) • Spencer and Oatey (2009) • Hofstede (2011) Dimensionalizing Cultures