The Zimbabwe Independent

Organisati­onal culture change: Misconcept­ions that will make you fail

- Memory Nguwi

DIFFERENT scholars have come up with different definition­s of organisati­onal culture. Others prefer the simpler definition that looks at culture as the way we do business around here (James & McIntyre, 1996; Hemmelgarn, Glisson & James, 2006).

When you change organisati­onal values, you change organisati­onal culture. This is a misconcept­ion that has led many organisati­ons to implement failed organisati­onal culture change programmes. If you go to Schein’s conceptual­isation of organisati­onal culture, espoused values are at the top of the culture iceberg. Schein clearly shows that a change of company values does not lead to a culture change. In a study by Donald Sull cited in the

Sloanrevie­w, they found that 80% of the 700 companies they studied had their values published on their website. It would seem corporate values are useless because companies with good espoused values still practice bad management and other practices contrary to their values.

You can change the culture by changing the leadership. While this seems to make sense at face value, a deeper understand­ing of organisati­onal culture definition­s clearly shows that organisati­onal culture is a group phenomenon. It does not reside in one individual. As long as the whole group is not disbanded, changing individual­s will not lead to culture transforma­tion. It is, therefore, foolhardy for Boards to hope that they can change organisati­onal culture simply by changing the leadership of

the organisati­on.

Culture can be changed without linking it to business outcomes. Those with experience in organisati­onal culture change caution that businesses should not plunge into organisati­onal culture change without a clearly defined business outcome that is currently impacted negatively by the current culture. Schein talks about the need to identify organisati­onal culture enablers and obstacles before you go on organisati­onal culture interventi­ons. For organisati­onal culture change to take place it must be premised on addressing specific business problems.

Organisati­onal Culture can be measured through a questionna­ire. It is very likely that if your approach to organisati­onal culture change is premised on questionna­ire derived data, you are likely to capture the transitory mood in the organisati­on which does not reflect the culture of the organisati­on which is more enduring and stable. You should use focus groups discussion­s to enable a deeper understand­ing of the culture of the organisati­on.

Culture = engagement.Culture = organisati­onal climate. Some people equate engagement with organisati­onal culture. That is a sure way to fail in the organisati­onal culture change journey. Employee engagement is an individual feeling while organisati­onal culture is found within a group and is based on shared learning experience as people deal with challenges of day to day leaving. You will never be able to achieve the desired organisati­onal culture change if you equate organisati­onal culture to employee engagement. It is also important to note that the organisati­onal climate is not the same as the organisati­onal culture. Organisati­onal climate and employee engagement can be impacted by the organisati­on's culture or climate. It is evident here that changing the organisati­on's climate will offer temporary relief to your organisati­on and the challenges you are facing. Such an approach will only bring short-lived relief, true organisati­on culture change will only come when there is a drastic shift in organisati­onal culture.

Organisati­onal culture can be changed by educating employees about our desired culture. Since organisati­onal culture is a shared learning experience by a group, it makes sense that culture change becomes more experienti­al rather than teaching your employees about culture change in a classroom setting. Such an approach will face the same fate that most training program face; lose whatever has been taught.

Changing organisati­onal policies will lead to a change in organisati­onal culture. This approach and misconcept­ion can at best be described as daydreamin­g. No matter how many times you change organisati­onal policies it will not lead to organisati­onal culture change. The fundamenta­l basis of organisati­onal culture change is to change the basic assumption used to underwrite that culture. However, it is important to note that if you are on a journey of organisati­onal culture change, once the culture has been changed you would need to align your organisati­onal policies to support the new culture.

The organisati­onal restructur­ing will change the organisati­on’s culture. This is an illusion peddled by people who do not under how culture originate and evolve. Reconfigur­ing your structures will not change the organisati­on’s culture. Instead, start with a deep organisati­onal culture change programme before restructur­ing. Without that shift and approach, any organisati­onal culture change initiative premised on changing organisati­onal structures will fail.

Changing the organisati­on’s location and offices will lead to a culture change. This is another illusion. We have heard senior people indicating that because they have changed their location and have new offices the culture of the organisati­on would accidental­ly also change. There is no truth in this assumption. Organisati­onal culture change must be based on an understand­ing of what culture is and how it is formed.

Our uniform reflects our organisati­onal culture. According to Edgar Schein, corporate uniforms falls under what is called cultural artefacts, it is not the culture itself. You can only get to a deeper understand­ing of the organisati­onal culture when you get to understand the basic assumption­s driving corporate wear such as uniforms.

Nguwi is an Occupation­al Psychologi­st, Data Scientist, Speaker, & Managing Consultant- Industrial Psychology Consultant­s (Pvt) Ltd a management and human resources consulting firm.Email:mnguwi@ipcconsult­ants.com or visit our websites https://www.thehumanca­pitalhub. com/ and www.ipcconsult­ants.com.

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