last updated 9/20/2016
Why Use a Cultural View
		Lee McGaan
        
A Cultural Definition of Organization: 
"An organization is the organizing activities of its
    members" (as created and reflected in Communication).
		
Managers who use a cultural view 
hope to resolve the central dilemma by accomplishing the organization's 
need for coordination and control through shared meanings, goals, and commonly 
understood values and procedures. A shared, strong culture allows individual 
members to coordinate actions through shared understandings while making their 
own decisions (meeting their own needs) about how to accomplish the 
organizations goals.
          Implications:
		
        
  
    - Organizational membership consists of those in a social collectivity who identify
      themselves as members or participants
- Organizational structure consists of the communicative relationships established by
      membership. The "shape" is continually evolving
- Since organization = communication, the organization is a communication
      event built on communicative behaviors/acts which produce both the sense
      of membership, the organizational structure, and the means by which
      members interact.
- The "meaning" of an organization is the sum of its
      communicative transactions and the organizational environment.
  - Neither organizational structure nor "cultural" practices
    (behaviors and meanings) come first – the
    social dialectic brings both into existence simultaneously.
  
Why use the cultural view? 
        
        
  
    - It accesses the meanings of the organization in terms of the people who
      are the organization. Organizational culture focuses on communication.
- It focuses on both everyday/ informal and formal communication
- It goes beyond the rational actor model of business management
- It allows insights into individuals' understandings of things at all
      levels