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National Culture and IT Management
ECIS591
Culture…isn’t everyone basically the same?
• Japanese prefer fax to email…• Israelis are not big users of word-
processing packages• Indian programmers are too polite…• In Spain, the “OK” symbol is considered
vulgar• Malaysian programmers may be fluent in
English but have no idea of slang terms….
What is Culture?
• “…culture is defined as an integrated system of learned behaviorlearned behavior patterns that are characteristic of the members of any society. It includes everything a group thinks, says, does, and makes – its customscustoms, languagelanguage, materialmaterial artifactsartifacts, and shared systems of attitudesattitudes and feelingsfeelings “- Czinkota, et al (1996), p.298
Researchers agree that…
• Culture is learnedlearned and sharedshared from generation to generation
• Cultural norms may be acquired through parents, schools, religious organizations, and social organizations
• Elements of culture include both verbal and non-verbal language, religion, values and attitudes, perceptions, and protocols
Dimensions of Culture
• Hofstede– Power Distance– Individualism/Collectivism– Masculinity/Femininity– Uncertainty Avoidance– Confucianism/Dynamism
• Hall– Space– Material Goods– Friendship– Time– Agreement
Hofstede’s Dimensions of Culture
• Conducted between 1967-1978
• Collected over 100,000 surveys from IBM employees around the world
• Single, consistent control group
• National differences emerge despite strong corporate culture
Power distance
• Also referred to as Revering HierarchyRevering Hierarchy
• Extent to which subordinates expect and accept the fact that power is distributed power is distributed unequallyunequally in a firm
• Some cultures see large gaps between hierarchical levels
• Panama scores highest, Israel lowest
Individualism/Collectivism
• Extent to which individual sees themselves as part of a group
• Individualistic Cultures– Expected to have opinions– Stress personal achievements– Independence– Individual rights
• Collectivist Cultures– Harmony– Welfare group
Implications for IS Management?
• Systems Design– Inherently group effort– Process designed for conflict
• Incentive Schemes– Reward individual or group?
Masculinity/Femininity
• Taking care of business– “toughness” in meeting goals– “softness” in taking care of people and quality
of life
• Japan ranks as highly masculine• Scandinavian countries rank low• Implications?
– Work hours
Uncertainty Avoidance
• Attitudes towards risk, ambiguity, predictability, and control
• “High avoidance” cultures place emphasis on stability
• “Low avoidance” countries embrace change and innovation
• Japanese high on Uncertainty Avoidance• Hong Kong low on Uncertainty Avoidance
Confucianism/Dynamism
• Recent addition to cultural dimensions• Here-and-now vs. future• Confucian traits
– Thrift– Persistence– Diligence– Patience– Patriarchal authority
Hall’s Dimensions of Culture
• Space– Close-talker?– Queues
• Materialism– Danish CEO admired for driving old car– Americans fight for corner office with biggest desk– Japanese manager may sit with other employees to
downplay role of status and material goods
Hall’s Dimensions
• Friendships– Some western cultures make and lose friends
quickly (due to high mobility)– Other cultures may take longer to develop
relationship but long-lasting– Holds for businesses as well … relationship
first, then business
Hall’s Dimensions
• Time– Monochronic cultures
• See time as linear• Events taken one at a time• Stress on punctuality and deadlines
– Polychronic cultures• See time as non-linear, simultaneous, unlimited• Plans constantly change• Delays less important
• Germans considered monochronic, French are polychronic
High Vs. Low Context Cultures
High contextHigh context(Implicit details)(Implicit details)
Low contextLow context(Explicit details)(Explicit details)
Japanese, Chinese,Japanese, Chinese,Mediterranean, Latin, IndianMediterranean, Latin, Indian
American, German, English,American, German, English,ScandinavianScandinavian
Opinion 1: Culture Does Not Matter
• Cougar et.al (1990)– Compared motivation and personal growth
needs of systems analysts– Compared US, Austria, Singapore, Israel– Found great similarities between all countries– Suggests overpowering effects of professional
culture
Culture not important….
• 1996 study of software development tool preferences between Europe, Japan, US… no significant differences
• 1989: Danish and Canadian analysts had similar design values– First technical values– Second, economic values– Sociopolitical values (concern for users)
Opinion 2: Culture matters
• Mostly anecdotal evidence…– French better at object-oriented design– Japanese better at metrics– British know about Jackson Methodology…
unknown in US– Belgians more “process-oriented”– Americans code first and design later
Consider Japan
• Quality assurance– Japanese fixed all bugs… regardless of severity
• Meaning of requirements– Americans see the requirements as a contract
negotiation… Japanese do not charge for minor changes
• Designers– Americans tend to take a top down approach… Japan
takes bottom up approach
Global Information Systems
• Information Technology (IT) facilitates the global transformationglobal transformation of business
• Crossing border poses challenges to technology managers– geographic– legal– cultural– temporal
• need radical changes to existing technology infrastructures and management
Types of global enterprises
• Devised by Bartlett and Ghoshal (1989)
• International
• Global
• Multinational
• Transnational
The International Strategy
• Subsidiaries leverage parent competencies
• Coordinated federation
Global
• R&D, manufacturing done at HQ
• Strategic decisions are centralized
• Central hub
Multinational
• Multidomestic
• Aims at local responsiveness
• Knowledge developed/retained at subsidiary level
• Decentralized federation
Transnational
• Shared decision-making
• Complex coordination
• Centers of excellence
• Dispersed resources
• Integrated network
Jarvenpaa and Ives (1993)
• Built on work by Karimi and Konsysnki
• Based their work on Information Processing Theory (Galbraith 1973)– Good fit when information processing
capacities of firm match requirements of environment and technology
• Jarvenpaa and Ives develop typology of 4 global IT management configurations
The Global IT Strategies
• Intellectual Synergy
• Headquarters Driven
• Independent IT Operations
• Global Integrated IT
• IS managers strive for best fit between above strategy and perceived global strategy
Intellectual Synergy
• Includes several global systems• Each likely to be tailored for individual use• Each run independently by the subsidiary• Subsidiary-HQ IS relationship
characterized by – Personal contacts– Cooperation– Shared learning
Headquarters Driven
• All IT-related decisions made by headquarters
• Goal is– To achieve efficiency– To avoid duplication of development effort
Independent IT Operations
• Independent systems initiatives in each subsidiary
• Focus on local responsibility
• Few, if any, common systems through the firm
• Fosters sense of systems ownership
Global Integrated IT
• Strives for worldwide integration of IT that supports core competencies of firm
• Dispersed resources
• Numerous common systems
• Applications for non-core areas run locally
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