Feature
posted 1 Dec 1999 in Volume 3 Issue 4
Book
Review: The New Corporate Cultures, by Terrance Deal & Allan Kennedy
Victor Newman reviews
this new title published by Orion, London 1999.
ISBN: 0738200697
This book is the
direct successor to Deal and Kennedy's original and influential 1982 book 'Corporate
Cultures'. In brief, their idea was that distinctive, organisational cultures
expressed in qualitative terms which helped to express a shared value-system and
sense of purpose, tended to outperform those organisations whose goals were
expressed as quantitative performance targets. The components of successful,
robust cultures were prescribed as founded on a 'deep and abiding shared
purpose' based upon the continually reinforcing interplay of cultural elements:
history, values, heroic exemplar figures, rituals and storytelling.
The contribution of the
original 1982 book was to promote the issue of organisational culture to a
strategic concern and to recognise cultural projects as a legitimate form of
work (and not just an academic occupation of limited relevance). Cultural
affinity became a dimension that influenced merger-decisions. Human Resource
departments took on the work of cultural measurement through staff attitude
surveys; and more recently, cultural benchmarking initiatives have attempted to
influence performance through the emulation of 'winning' cultures.
The authors' stated hope
is that managers will use their book to connect organisational competitiveness
with the individual's intrinsic need to belong to organisations that have a life
of their own or a meaning, beyond profit. The authors feel that the revolutions
of organisational redefinition, of leanness and reengineering have been achieved
through the destruction of individuals' sense of membership, shared identity and
meaning. This observation is ironic, it's almost crocodile tears when one
considers that Deal and Kennedy did point out that culture was the obstacle to
change. It's not surprising that those driving change took them at their word
and chose to ignore the issue of creating distinctive, replacement cultures. It
was just so much easier to destroy than to build when you're being paid to cut
the fat out of organisations, to cut out the muscle that could be used to
deliver the future. Of course, the problem is that in cutting out the heart of
the organisation and focusing organisational design onto efficient processes,
all that happened (which is the subtext to the book) was that the ability to
innovate began to disappear as organisations became very efficient at competing
on price.
The
book is in three parts including thirteen chapters. The first part is a single
chapter that reworks the original content using current management literature to
reinforce the original messages linking strong culture and success. The problem
with much of the supporting research is that it cannot prove that strong culture
determines success. A successful organisation's ability to provide vision may
just mean that they know how to play the culture/ brand associations game. The
impact of Deal and Kennedy's original theory may just mean that successful
organisations don't miss a trick, and that includes playing this game (and well
enough to fool journalists and industry analysts!)
Part two documents the damaging
impacts of shareholder value, downsizing, outsourcing, mergers, networked
computers, and globalisation of company cultures.
Part three concentrates on the
practice of rebuilding cohesive cultures from the damaged players:
re-emphasising the importance of cultural leadership clarifying and consistently
reinforcing the power of clear identity, and shared values to drive successful
behaviour.
This
book is ably illustrated with examples and stories that reinforce the old
message. The key weakness is the tendency to view culture as a technology in its
own right without understanding that it is the by-product of an ongoing process
of successfully solving the problems that deliver new technologies and values to
the customer. The fundamental message from the authors is valuable. It's not
about whether to work on competitive advantage or culture: You need to do
both.
Victor
Newman is Director of Knowledge Development Centre at Cranfield University. He
can be contacted at: v.newman@cranfield.ac.uk
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