What is a corporate culture? For Namibia how do you create a corporate culture
Corporate Culture
By EVAN TARVER
Updated May 7, 2019
What Is Corporate Culture?
Corporate
culture refers to the beliefs and behaviors that determine how a company's
employees and management interact and handle outside business transactions.
Often, corporate culture is implied, not expressly defined, and develops
organically over time from the cumulative traits of the people the company
hires. A company's culture will be reflected in its dress code, business hours,
office setup, employee benefits, turnover, hiring decisions, treatment of
clients, client satisfaction, and every other aspect of operations.
Corporate Culture
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Corporate culture refers to the
beliefs and behaviors that determine how a company's employees and
management interact.
- Corporate culture is also influenced
by national cultures and traditions, economic trends, international trade,
company size, and products.
- Corporate
cultures, whether shaped intentionally or grown organically, reach to the
core of a company’s ideology and practice, and affect every aspect of a
business.
Understanding Corporate Culture
Alphabet (GOOGL), the
parent of Google, is well known for its employee-friendly corporate culture. It
explicitly defines itself as unconventional and offers perks such as
telecommuting, flextime, tuition reimbursement, free employee lunches, and on-site
doctors. At its corporate headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., the company
offers on-site services such as oil changes, car washes, massages, fitness
classes, and a hair stylist. Its corporate culture helped it to consistently
earn a high ranking on Fortune magazine's list of "100 Best Companies to Work For."
History of Corporate Culture
Awareness
of corporate or organizational culture in businesses and other organizations
such as universities emerged in the 1960s. The term corporate culture developed
in the early 1980s and became widely known by the 1990s. Corporate culture was
used during those periods by managers, sociologists, and other academics to
describe the character of a company. This included generalized beliefs and
behaviors, company-wide value systems, management strategies, employee
communication, and relations, work environment, and attitude. Corporate culture
would go on to include company origin myths via charismatic chief executive
officers (CEOs), as well as visual symbols such as logos and trademarks.
By
2015, corporate culture was not only created by the founders, management, and
employees of a company, but was also influenced by national cultures and
traditions, economic trends, international trade, company size, and products.
There
are a variety of terms that relate to companies affected by multiple cultures,
especially in the wake of globalization and the increased international
interaction of today's business environment. As such, the term cross-culture refers to “the interaction of people
from different backgrounds in the business world”; culture shock refers to the confusion or anxiety
people experience when conducting business in a society other than their own;
and reverse culture shock is often experienced by people who spend lengthy
times abroad for business and have difficulty readjusting upon their return.
To
create positive cross-culture experiences and facilitate a more cohesive and
productive corporate culture, companies often devote in-depth resources,
including specialized training, that improves cross-culture business
interactions.
The current awareness of corporate culture is
more acute now than ever.
Examples of Contemporary Corporate Cultures
Just
as national cultures can influence and shape a corporate culture, so can a
company’s management strategy. In top companies of the 21st century, such as
Google, Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Netflix Inc. (NFLX), less traditional
management strategies such as fostering creativity, collective problem solving,
and greater employee freedom have been the norm and thought to contribute to
their business success.
Progressive
policies such as comprehensive employee benefits and alternatives to
hierarchical leadership—even doing away with closed offices and cubicles—are a
trend that reflects a more tech-conscious, modern generation. This trend marks
a change from aggressive, individualistic, and high-risk corporate cultures
such as that of former energy company Enron.
High-profile
examples of alternative management strategies that significantly affect
corporate culture include holacracy, which has
been put to use at shoe company Zappos (AMZN), and agile management techniques applied at
music streaming company Spotify.
Holacracy is
an open management philosophy that, among other traits, eliminates job titles
and other such traditional hierarchies. Employees have flexible roles and
self-organization, and collaboration is highly valued. Zappos instituted this
new program in 2014 and has met the challenge of the transition with varying
success and criticism.
Similarly, Spotify, a
music-streaming service, uses the principles of agile management as part
of its unique corporate culture. Agile management, in essence, focuses on
deliverables with a flexible, trial-and-error strategy that often groups
employees in a start-up environment approach to creatively tackle the company’s
issues at hand.
Characteristics of Successful Corporate
Cultures
Corporate
cultures, whether shaped intentionally or grown organically, reach to the core
of a company’s ideology and practice, and affect every aspect of a business,
from each employee to customer to public image. The current awareness of
corporate culture is more acute than ever.
The Harvard
Business Review identified six important characteristics of successful corporate cultures in
2015. First and foremost is "vision": from a simple mission statement to a corporate manifesto, a company’s
vision is a powerful tool. For example, Google’s modern and infamous slogan:
“Don’t Be Evil” is a compelling corporate vision. Secondly, "values,"
while a broad concept, embody the mentalities and perspectives necessary
to achieve a company’s vision.
Similarly,
"practices" are the tangible methods, guided by ethics, through which a company implements its
values. For example, Netflix emphasizes the importance of knowledge-based,
high-achieving employees and, as such, Netflix pays its employees at the top of
their market salary range, rather than through an earn-your-way-to-the-top
philosophy. "People" come next, with companies employing and
recruiting in a way that reflects and enhances their overall culture.
Lastly,
"narrative" and "place" are perhaps the most modern
characteristics of corporate culture. Having a powerful narrative or origin
story, such as that of Steve Jobs and Apple, is important for growth and public image.
The "place" of business, such as the city of choice and also office
design and architecture, is one of the most cutting-edge advents in
contemporary corporate culture.

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