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Organizational Culture
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Organizational culture refers to the shared values, beliefs, norms, and practices that shape how people behave within a company or institution. It is a central subject in business programs, appearing in courses on organizational behavior, strategic management, human resources, and leadership. The topic attracts academic attention because culture operates beneath formal structures, quietly influencing how decisions get made, how employees interact, and how effectively a company can adapt to change. Understanding why some organizations thrive while others struggle often requires examining the cultural assumptions that guide everyday actions at every level of the hierarchy.

Student papers on this topic approach it from several directions. Some focus on well-known companies such as Nike and Apple to examine how culture intersects with knowledge management, innovation, and competitive strategy. Others take a theoretical angle, exploring frameworks drawn from organizational dynamics, development, and behavior to explain how culture forms and evolves. A number of papers address applied concerns such as HR policies, customer service outcomes, strategic leadership, and ethical decision-making, treating culture as both a cause and a consequence of management choices. Project management and environmental scanning also appear as contexts where cultural factors carry practical weight.

A strong essay on organizational culture begins with a clearly bounded thesis — arguing, for example, how leadership reinforces or transforms cultural values rather than simply describing culture in general terms. Evidence drawn from specific company practices, policy analysis, or established organizational theory tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating culture as a vague backdrop rather than a dynamic force with measurable effects on employee behavior, strategic outcomes, or ethical performance.

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Organizational Change the Burke-Litwin Model Contains Twelve
This paper is about the Burke – Litwin Causal Model theory of organizational change. The Burke – Litwin Causal Model is applied to the U. S. Army, with a discussion of the different variables that are in the model and their relative importance to the change process at the U. S. Army.
Paper Undergraduate
Leadership change and organizational impact
Suggested Changes to Leadership Structure and Style Before Going Public:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Organizational Behavior (Psychology) Applied Comprehension
Organizational Psychologists continually seek the creation of relevant approaches for the application of organizational psychological principles. Central to the application of Industrial Organizational psychological…
Research Paper Undergraduate
The state of homeland security 2007 report card
How secure is the United States against terrorism? How safe should Americans feel when it comes to the sanctity and security of their homeland? The first question is difficult to answer precisely, but given the…
Essay Doctorate
Change Management Plan for Palms West Hospital
Lewin's change model represents the best match for instituting organizational change at Palm West Hospital. Implementation of the EMR System is necessary, with little option to maintain the old outdated paper system. The most difficult part of the change will be garnering the support of staff and acceptance of the new system. Lewin's change model will prepare staff for the upcoming change and allow them to adjust. MITRE's analysis approach will add to Lewin's model in the ability to develop specific actions and to identify key issues. Lewin's change model ends with the freeze component where the model is in place and has hopefully gained acceptance. A survey will help to determine when the system has been successfully "frozen" in a positive manner in the organizational culture of the hospital.
Essay Doctorate
Strategic information technology planning and audit exercises for business organizations
At Oesterlen, the goal is to care for troubled youth in the community. In order to do that, the facility has to have the appropriate technology. Lately they have been struggling with that, because they don't always have the best places for their servers. That can lead to data access problems and other issues. Since the need to have good technology is growing, Oesterlen has become focused on moving its servers and collaborating with companies that can help it succeed, so it can continue to help youth in the community.
Paper Doctorate
Socio-technical systems theory contributions to work environments and contemporary relevance
The role of Socio-Technical Systems Theory (STS) continues to be a galvanizing factor in the planning, development, implementation and continual fine-tuning of enterprise systems worldwide. Pursuing cost reductions through the use of manufacturing economies of scale and advanced lean process management techniques within organizations is paradoxically leading them into even greater conflicts internally how to attain balance of their STS-based initiatives (Kim, Kaplan, 2006). STS-based initiatives based on transformational leadership within the best-performing companies have shown potential to overcome the over-reliance on technical subsystems that by using technologies to make social systems more accurate, accelerated and trust-based (Amrit, Van Hillegersberg, 2010). The intent of this analysis is to evaluate how enterprise software platforms including Enterprise Resource Planning Systems (ERP) over time dictate the culture of an organization based on the information flows supported or not (Das, Jayaram, 2007). This is why many manufacturing companies fail to stay in step with the needs of their customers, as they continually are struggling to make their own internal systems reflect external reality. For the manufacturers who can manage this transition, they are able to survive in turbulent industries. STS-based frameworks are invaluable in defining why certain companies in general and manufacturers specifically are able to regain agility and stay focused on market dynamics while others wither and eventually exist markets and eventually go out of business. The premise of companies who are able to manage uncertainty and turbulence is that they have used STS-based concepts to balance their social and technical subsystems without overcompensating on either. An ancillary finding from completing this analysis is that the cultural integrity and resiliency of any organization can over time be predicted by the balance of social and technical subsystem balance or equilibrium (Manz, Stewart, 1997). A proposed Socio-Technical Equilibrium Model For Enterprise Systems has been created based on insights from this analysis and is shown in Figure 1. One of the most significant findings is that while data and system integration is often consider essential for enabling greater transaction accuracy, efficiency and process performance it also has a strong cultural effect on social subsystems throughout organizations (Carlsson, Henningsson, Hrastinski, Keller, 2011). The proposed Socio-Technical Equilibrium Model For Enterprise Systems seeks to illustrate graphically how organizations can be more agile and responsive to market requirements by aligning their social and technical subsystems for greater information and knowledge transfer across broad functional and strategic boundaries. The consensus of the research completed for this analysis illustrates how divided and conflicting social and technical subsystems are throughout organizations however (Carlsson, Henningsson, Hrastinski, Keller, 2011). The literature review also highlighted that across all enterprise systems, the ERP platforms had the most divisive effect on corporate cultures, fragmenting them across functional and strategy areas, creating information siloes in the process (Carlsson, Henningsson, Hrastinski, Keller, 2011). Ironically ERP systems have a balkanization effect on companies instead of a unifying one. Using a more equilibrium-based approach to balancing technical and social subsystems throughout an organization by using role-based ERP systems that have systems of record defined by strategy and not by functional areas shows significant potential to avert organizational and cultural clashes that occur when a siloed approach to defining how a given technical subsystem supports socially-based processes. The capability of any organization to overcome the limitations of its IT structure and still attain a congruency across technical and social subsystems is critical for STS-based frameworks to deliver value throughout an enterprise (Appelbaum, 1997).
Research Paper Undergraduate
Management and leadership principles and practices
Examine the roles and responsibilities of leaders in creating and maintaining a healthy organizational culture
Paper Undergraduate
Employee Turnover and Its Impact on HR Departments
¶ … Employees' Turnover on Human Resource Department
Paper Undergraduate
Education concepts and foundations
The inclusion of disabled individuals in the general social, educational and occupational contexts which are welcoming to mainstream populations is a goal which appears to parallel the progressive orientation of our…