last updated 9/12/2010
    Culture is Created and
    Maintained by Communication
		  Organizational culture is more 
		  a research-based approach to understanding how organizations develop 
		  and function than it is a "method" of management.  However, by 
		  viewing organizations as cultures it is possible tounderstand how the 
		  organization can obtain coordination and control while alos allowing 
		  opportunity for individuals to meet their needs - a way of resolving 
		  the central dilemma without sacrificing one side or the other.
  
A
	  Definition of Organizational Culture
- A system of shared meanings and patterns of interaction
- expressed through various symbolic forms
- which hold people together
Culture makes sense of organizational reality and creates it.
- The dialectic of organizational culture and individual identity.  
   [ culture <--> individual
  ]  
- Organizational culture is partially
a product of national culture 
Organizations 
don't have cultures they 
ARE cultures!
- Members share how to perceive, interpret and explain
  and perform within the organization.
- Cultures are historical, including:
- past events and their interpretations (as
  typified by heroes and in rites and rituals)
- expectations, formal and informal (values)
- symbolic forms (rituals, myth, metaphors)
- Organizations don't  have a culture (It's
  not an owned property.) The organization;  IS a culture. 
- Although organizations have (intentionally or
  not) a "cultural network"  (a communication systems that
  transmits and reinforces the culture) still, managing culture is hard to do.
- Actions are symbolic as well as instrumental
- Organizations have sub-cultures. ( e.g. athletic teams, fraternities,
  sales groups, etc.
Features 
of Organizational Culture
	- It is learned 
- It is shared 
- It is trans-generational and cumulative (over time)
	
- It is symbolic 
- It is patterned
- It is adaptive