Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Exhibits
- Preface
- 1 Global realities and management challenges
- 2 Developing global management skills
- 3 Culture, values, and worldviews
- 4 Inside the managerial mind: culture, cognition, and action
- 5 Inside the organizational mind: stakeholders, strategies, and decision making
- 6 Organizing frameworks: a comparative assessment
- 7 Communication across cultures
- 8 Leadership and global teams
- 9 Culture, work, and motivation
- 10 Negotiation and global partnerships
- 11 Managing in an imperfect world
- 12 Epilogue: the journey continues
- Appendix A Models of national cultures
- Appendix B OECD guidelines for global managers
- Index
- References
5 - Inside the organizational mind: stakeholders, strategies, and decision making
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Exhibits
- Preface
- 1 Global realities and management challenges
- 2 Developing global management skills
- 3 Culture, values, and worldviews
- 4 Inside the managerial mind: culture, cognition, and action
- 5 Inside the organizational mind: stakeholders, strategies, and decision making
- 6 Organizing frameworks: a comparative assessment
- 7 Communication across cultures
- 8 Leadership and global teams
- 9 Culture, work, and motivation
- 10 Negotiation and global partnerships
- 11 Managing in an imperfect world
- 12 Epilogue: the journey continues
- Appendix A Models of national cultures
- Appendix B OECD guidelines for global managers
- Index
- References
Summary
There are no universal solutions to organization and management problems … Organizations are symbolic entities; they function according to implicit models in the minds of their members, and these are culturally determined.
Geert Hofstede Maastricht University, The NetherlandsGlobalization does not mean imposing homogeneous solutions in a pluralistic world. It means having a global vision and strategy, but it also means cultivating roots and individual identities.
Gucharan Das Former CEO, Procter and Gamble-IndiaMany years ago (in the late 1930s, to be precise) telecom CEO Chester Barnard defined an organization as a system of consciously coordinated activities of two or more persons. In the intervening eight decades, no one has come up with a better definition. Barnard went further to point out that the survival of any organization depends on its members' ability and willingness to cooperate, communicate, and work towards a common objective. In particular, he noted that in any theory of organization or management, communication must play a dominant role. While Barnard was thinking about US firms in the 1930s with a fairly narrow business focus, his observations still apply today when considering both large and small firms doing business around the world. What has changed is not the fundamental challenges facing companies, but rather the magnitude of these challenges, as well as the manner in which firms organize and “think” collectively to accomplish their core mission.
Consider Wipro and Intel, two highly successful IT companies doing business globally, yet headquartered in very different regions of the world.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Management across CulturesChallenges and Strategies, pp. 126 - 154Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010