1. Organizational climate
Organizational climate (sometimes known as Corporate Climate) is the process of quantifying the
“culture” of an organization; it precedes the notion of organizational culture.
It is a set of properties of the work environment, perceived directly or indirectly by the employees, that
is assumed to be a major force in influencing employee behavior.
Climate and culture are both important aspects of the overall context, environment or situation.
Definition: Properties of the business environment in a workplace observed by staff that strongly
influence their actions and job performance. For example, a perceptive business manager might take the
trouble to survey employees about the organizational climate to identify and promote those aspects
that are most conducive to achieving corporate objectives. Also called corporate climate.
Organizational climate, on the other hand, is often defined as the recurring patterns of behavior,
attitudes and feelings that characterize life in the organization, while an organization culture tends to be
deep and stable. Although culture and climate are related, climate often proves easier to assess and
change. At an individual level of analysis the concept is called individual psychological climate. These
individual perceptions are often aggregated or collected for analysis and understanding at the team or
group level, or the divisional, functional, or overall organizational level.
Organizational Climate is the umbrella term to indicate the process of quantifying the organizational
culture of an organization. It is a set of properties of the work environment, perceived directly or
indirectly by the employees, that is assumed to be a major force in influencing employee behavior.
OCL can also be defined as the recurring patterns of behavior, attitudes and feelings that characterize
life in the organization, while an organizational culture tends to be deep and stable and involve deeply
held values, beliefs and assumptions, symbols, heroes, and rituals.
Climate refers to perceptions of organizational practices reported by people who work there (Rousseau
1988). Studies of climate include many of the most central concepts in organizational research.
Common features of climate include
- communication (as describable, say, by openness),
- conflict (constructive or dysfunctional),
- leadership (as it involves support or focus) and
- reward emphasis (i.e., whether an organization is characterized by positive versus negative
feedback, or reward- or punishment-orientation).
When studied together, we observe that organizational features are highly interrelated (e.g., leadership
and rewards).
2. Climate characterizes practices at several levels in organizations (e.g., work unit climate and
organizational climate). Studies of climate vary in the activities they focus upon, for example, climates
for safety or climates for service.
Climate is essentially a description of the work setting by those directly involved with it.
Organization’s climate features (particularly leadership, communication openness, participative
management and conflict resolution) are associated with employee satisfaction and (inversely) stress
levels (Schneider 1985).
Stressful organizational climates are characterized by limited participation in decisions, use of
punishment and negative feedback (rather than rewards and positive feedback), conflict avoidance or
confrontation (rather than problem solving), and non supportive group and leader relations.
Socially supportive climates benefit employee mental health, with lower rates of anxiety and depression
in supportive settings.
When collective climates exist (where members who interact with each other share common
perceptions of the organization) research observes that shared perceptions of undesirable
organizational features are linked with low morale and instances of psychogenic illness.
When climate research adopts a specific focus, as in the study of climate for safety in an organization,
evidence is provided that lack of openness in communication regarding safety issues, few rewards for
reporting occupational hazards, and other negative climate features increase the incidence of work-related
accidents and injury.
Since climates exist at many levels in organizations and can encompass a variety of practices,
assessment of employee risk factors needs to systematically span the relationships (whether in the work
unit, the department or the entire organization) and activities (e.g., safety, communication or rewards)
in which employees are involved. Climate-based risk factors can differ from one part of the organization
to another.
Organizational climate, while defined differently by many researchers and scholars, generally refers to
the degree to which an organization focuses on and emphasizes:
Innovation
Flexibility
Appreciation and recognition
Concern for employee well-being
Learning and development
5. The power culture is most often found in small entrepreneurial organizations. Its structure can be
pictured as a web.
The power culture depends on a central power source with rays of power and influence spreading out
from that central figure. The rays may be connected by functional or specialist strings but the power
rings are the centers of power and influences.
This organization works on precedent and by anticipating the wishes and decisions of the central power
sources. There are few rules and procedures and little bureaucracy. Control is exercised from the center.
It is a political organization in that deci sions are taken larged based on the balance of influence rather
than on logical or procedural grounds.
A power culture can move very quickly and react rapidly to threats or opportunities. These cultures put
a lot of faith in the individual, little in committees. They judge by results and care very little about the
means used to obtain results. Size is a problem for power cultures; when they get large or when they
seek to take on too many activities, they can collapse.
________________________
The role culture is called a bureaucracy. The structure for a role culture can be pictured as a Greek
temple.
The role culture works by logic and rationality. Its strength in its its pillars or functional specialties, e.g.
the finance department, the technical services department, the public services department. The work of
the functional departments is contro lled by:
6. >Procedures for roles -- Job descriptions, authority definitions
Procedures for communications -- required sets of copies of memos
Rules for settlement of disputes -- appeal process.
The functional departments are controlled at the top by a small group of senior managers (the pediment
of the temple). It is assumed that these folks are the only co-ordinators required if the separate
departments do their job as laid down by the rules and procedures and the overall plan.
In the role culture, the job description is often more important than the individual who fills it. Individuals
are selected for satisfactory performance of a role and the role is usually so described that a range of
individuals can fill it. Performance above and beyond the role prescription is not required and can even
be regarded as disruptive. Position power is the major power source; personal power is frowned upon
and expert power limited to its proper place. The efficiency of this culture depends o n the rationality of
the allocation of work and responsibility rather than on individuals.
The role organization will succeed very well in stable environments where little changes from year to
year and predictions can be made far in advance. Where the organization can control its environment,
where its markets are stable, predictable or controllable, the rules and procedures and the programmed
approach to work will be successful.
Role cultures are slow to perceive the need for change and slow to change even when the need is seen.
If the market, the product/service needs, or the environment changes, the role culture is likely to
continue without change until it collapses or until the top management is replaced.
Role cultures offer security and predictability to the individual -- a steady rate of ascent up the career
ladder. They offer the change to acquire specialist expertise without risk. They tend to reward those
wanted to do their job to standard. A role culture is frustrating for the individual who is power-oriented
or who wants control over his/her work. Those who are ambitious or more interested in results than
method may be discontent, except in top management.
The role culture is found where economies of scale are more important than flexibility and where
technical expertise and depth of specialization are more important than product innovation or product
cost.
7. __________________
The task culture is job or product oriented or focused on service delivery. Its accompanying structure
can be represented as a net.
Notice some of the strands of the net are thicker and stronger than the others. The power and influence
in a task culture lies at the intersections. A matrix organization is one form of the task culture.
The task culture seeks to bring together the appropriate resources, the right people at the right level of
the organization, and then to let them get on with it. Influence is based more on expert power than on
position or personal power, although these power sources have an effect. Influence is more widely
dispersed than in other cultures and each individual in the culture tends to think he/she has influence.
The task culture is a team culture where the outcome, the result, the product of the team's work tends
to be the common goal overcoming individual objectives and most status and style differences. The task
culture uses the unifying power of the group t o improve efficiency and to identify the individual with
the objective of the organization.
The task culture is highly adaptable. Groups, project teams, or task forces are formed for a specific
purpose and can be reformed, abandoned or continued. The net organization works quickly since each
group ideally contains within it all the decision-m aking powers required. Individuals have a high degree
of control over their work in this culture. Judgment is by results. There are generally easy working
relationships within the group with mutual respect based upon capacity rather than age or status.
The task culture is appropriate where flexibility and sensitivity to the market or environment are
important. The task culture fits where the market is competitive, where the product life is short, where
speed of reaction is important.
8. The task culture finds it hard to produce economies of scale or great depth of expertise. Large scale
systems are difficult to organize as flexible groups. The technical expert in a task culture will find
him/herself working on various problems and in various groups and thus will be less specialized than
his/her counterpart working in a role cultures.
Control in a task culture is difficult. Control is retained by top management through the allocation of
projects, people and resources. But little day-to-day control can be exerted over the methods of working
or the procedures without violating the nor ms of the culture. Task cultures flourish when the climate is
agreeable, when the product is all-important, when the customer is always right, and when resources
are available for all who can justify using them.
When resources of money and people have to be rationed, top management may wish to control
methods as well as results. When this happens, team leaders begin to compete for resources using
political influence. Morale will decline and the job become less satisfying as individuals begin to reveal
their individual objectives. When this happens the task culture tends to change to a role or power
culture.
The task culture is usually the one preferred as a personal choice to work in by most managers especially
those at junior and middle levels. It is the culture which most of the behavioral theories of organizations
point towards with their emphasis on g roups, expert power, rewards for results, merging individual and
group objectives. It is the culture most in tune withcurrent ideologies of change and adaptation,
individual freedom and low status differentials.
________________________
The person culture is an unusual one and won't be found in many organizations but many individuals
cling to some of its values. In this culture the individual is the central point. If there is a structure or an
organization it exists only to serve and assist the individuals within it. If a group of individuals decide
that it is in their own interests to band together in order to do their own thing more successfully and
that an office, a space, some equipment, some clerical support would help, then the resulting
organization will have a person culture. Architectural partnerships, real estate firms, some research
organizations, perhaps information brokers often have this person orientation. Its structure is minimal, a
cluster or galaxy of individual stars may be the best picture.
9. As most organizations tend to have goals and objectives over and above the set of collective objectives
of their members, there are few organizations with person cultures. Control mechanisms or even
management hierarchies are imposssilbe in their cultures except by mutual consent. The organization is
subordinate to the individual and depends on the individual for its existence. The individual can leave
the organization but the organization seldom has the power to evict an individual. Influence is share and
the power base is usually expert.
The kibbutz, the commune, the co-operative, are strive for the personal culture in organizational form.
Rarely does it succeed beyond the original creators. Very quickly the organization achieves its own
identify and begins to impose it on its individuals. It becomes a task culture at best, but often a power or
role culture.
Although there are few organizations with person cultures, many individuals with a personal preference
for this type of culture operate in other kinds of organization. Specialists in organization often feel little
allegiance to the organization but regard it rather as a place to do their thing with some benefit accruing
to their employer. Individuals with this orientation are not easy to manage. As specialists employment
elsewhere is often easy to obtain so resource power has less potency. They rarely acknowledge other
people's expert power. Coercive power is not usually available which leaves only personal power and
such individuals are not easily impressed by personality.
___________
Within an large organization different types of cultures may be found as shown in the diagram below:
The second diagram below points out some of the organization design policies variables that need to be
considered when considering the nature of an organization and its fit with its environment.
10. As most organizations tend to have goals and objectives over and above the set of collective objectives
of their members, there are few organizations with person cultures. Control mechanisms or even
management hierarchies are imposssilbe in their cultures except by mutual consent. The organization is
subordinate to the individual and depends on the individual for its existence. The individual can leave
the organization but the organization seldom has the power to evict an individual. Influence is share and
the power base is usually expert.
The kibbutz, the commune, the co-operative, are strive for the personal culture in organizational form.
Rarely does it succeed beyond the original creators. Very quickly the organization achieves its own
identify and begins to impose it on its individuals. It becomes a task culture at best, but often a power or
role culture.
Although there are few organizations with person cultures, many individuals with a personal preference
for this type of culture operate in other kinds of organization. Specialists in organization often feel little
allegiance to the organization but regard it rather as a place to do their thing with some benefit accruing
to their employer. Individuals with this orientation are not easy to manage. As specialists employment
elsewhere is often easy to obtain so resource power has less potency. They rarely acknowledge other
people's expert power. Coercive power is not usually available which leaves only personal power and
such individuals are not easily impressed by personality.
___________
Within an large organization different types of cultures may be found as shown in the diagram below:
The second diagram below points out some of the organization design policies variables that need to be
considered when considering the nature of an organization and its fit with its environment.