Operation Managment Assignment 2
Operation Managment Assignment 2
Operation Managment Assignment 2
Submitted By:
Awwad, Hasan
Operation Management
Charisma University
Saeed, Walaa
15/10/2022
Organizational Culture 2
According to (Awadh & Alyahya 2013) Culture is defined as a mixture of values, sets, beliefs,
The main idea of culture comes from sharing in learning processes that have been based upon systematic
allocation of resources.
Counter Culture
Sub Culture
Strong Culture
Weak Culture
performance is the degree of an achievement to which an employee’s fulfill the organizational mission
Organizational culture is a system of shared values, assumptions, beliefs, and norms that unite the
members of an organization. Organizational culture reflects employees’ views about “the way
things are done around here.” Culture gives meaning to actions and procedures within an
organization and may be considered to be the personality of the organization. The culture
specific to each firm affects how employees feel and act as well as the type of employee hired
According to Gomez-Mejia& Balkin, (2012) There are three aspects of an organization’s culture
1. Visible culture The aspects of culture that an observer can hear, feel, or see
2. Eespoused values The aspects of corporate culture that are not readily observed, but
instead can be perceived from the way managers and employees explain and justify their
3. Core values A firm’s principles that are widely shared, that operate unconsciously, and
Gomez-Mejia& Balkin, (2012) argue that Using Organizational Culture as a Business Tool as next
WEAK.
Strong cultures give employees useful performance information. For example, innovative cultures
encourage employees to take risks and experiment with new ideas and avoid punishing them
when an experiment does not bear fruit. Often experimental ideas that fail lead to successful
outcomes later.
Leaders that link their vision to the organizational culture and its values are more likely to influence
followers to be more committed to the vision rather than simply comply with it. Committed
followers require less supervision so the leader has more time to focus on work that may have
Orientation programs teach employees company history, the key products and services the company
provides to the customer, and about company traditions. For example, the Walt Disney Company
offers an orientation program to all new employees at a corporate training facility called Disney
University
• Visible culture—things people can hear, see, or feel, such as formality or informality of employee
dress.
According to Gomez-Mejia& Balkin, (2012) states that Organizational culture performs several
The processes through which organizational culture can be developed and sustained. (Gomez-
• Cultural symbols
• Stories • Language
• Leadership
• Self-interest
• Uncertainty
Examples of how the company you have selected uses its organizational culture as a business tool
1-Cisco Systems:
has a culture that emphasizes teamwork and innovation that gives it a competitive advantage in the
Cisco Systems is a technology company with $36 billion in Cisco Systems technology firms, having
acquired 127 companies between ability to integrate the technology and people of the firms it
acquires into its line of businesses, which is unusual in expanding into businesses beyond its line
maker of handheld recorders for The company has used its newly acquired Cisco’s greater
culture at Cisco, CEO Chambers reorganized Cisco’s lines of businesses into an elaborate system
of committees made up of managers from different functions. “councils” that are in charge of the
largest markets up to $10 billion in revenues and “boards” in charge of smaller Supporting both
councils and boards are working the councils and boards. enables Cisco to increase the speed at
which businesses CEO Chambers sets the tone for the culture of style and by encouraging other
leaders to develop skills of Many managers have leading roles both in a function such managers
perform in teams determines 30 percent of their Those managers who work well with others have
2- Domino’s Pizza
Patrick Doyle to change the pizza after its recipe had remained the same since the founding of the
company 50 years ago. Not only did CEO Doyle decide to substantially change the pizza but he
took a calculated risk to advertise it this way and announced to the world that Domino’s would
Organizational Culture 6
change every part of its core pizza. The decision for change of this magnitude is a bold one
because CEO Doyle had no backup plan if the taste of the new pizza did not catch on with
Domino’s customers. By refusing to consider going back to the old pizza formula, CEO Doyle
indicated that the company would be committed to the changed pizza. One way CEO Jack Welch
reshaped and changed General Electric’s (GE) culture was the Work Out program. Work Outs
for each business unit followed the same basic pattern: hourly and salaried workers came
together from many different parts of the organization in an informal three- to five-day meeting
to discuss and solve problems. Work Out is no longer an event today but instead is the process
by which work is done and problems are solved at GE. The format for Work Out follows seven
steps: Choose a work process or problem for discussion. Meet for several days and come up with
recommendations to improve work processes and solve problems. GE’s Work Out process solves
problems and improves productivity for the company, but the benefits go beyond these goals
(Gomez-Mejia& Balkin,(2012)
4- Autorobot
Product development has been the foundation of Autorobot, which manufactures and markets collision
repair equipment and measuring systems. This 48-year-old family-owned business has around
100 patents and exports to 70 countries worldwide. The company participated in the Pake Savo
project to learn more about service design thinking to progress customer orientation in its
modernize its production and machinery. The Pake Savo project provided training and coaching,
business model and service design with Savonia Innovation Tool (InTo), and consultancy for
“Pake Savo training and small group coaching gave us a different view to modernize operations and also
new ideas we would never thought of, and especially InTo brought new excitement for us,”
stated the marketing designer of the company, who also credited the employees’ long work
history (20–30 years) for bringing them together as a team. Autorobot has a need to become
more of an adhocracy type of organization and less of the hierarchy type, which has clearly, with
small impact, happened due its participation in the business model development project (Santti,
etal ,2017)
According to Schmiedel, etal (2012) successful business process management (BPM) implementation
goes beyond using the right methods and putting the right systems in place.
culture in BPM. The model is based on a comprehensive review of the literature on Business
Process Management
the tool is implemented as an online survey that allows representatives of organizations to do a self-
an assessment tool to measure the cultural fitness of an organization for business process management
References
Santti, U., Eskelinen, T., Rajahonka, M., Villman, K., & Happonen, A. (2017). Effects of
Schmiedel, T., vom Brocke, J., & Recker, J. (2012). Is your organizational culture fit for