Cultural values

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Revision as of 15:18, 18 November 2022 by Student905558 (talk | contribs)

Cultural values are guiding and fundamental principles. They often bind an entire community together. This community relies on them and thus also maintains relationships. The concept consists of several parts:

  • Customs, which include traditions and rituals
  • Values, which are beliefs
  • Culture, which includes all the guiding values of a group

Cultural values are ideas about what is desirable that are shared by members of a social group. Moreover, they are values that people have given to things through their associations. Cultural values can manifest in non-physical and/or physical objects and include spiritual values, cultural practices, knowledge, songs, stories, art, buildings, pathways, and human remains (Essien 2020, pp. 347-371).

Hofstede’s cultural dimensions theory

Hofstede analysed six dimensions of culture. The cultural dimensions represent independent preferences for one state over another that distinguish countries and societies from one another. The six dimensions are as follows: (Hofstede Insights 2022)

  • Power distance
  • Individualism vs. collectivism
  • Masculinity vs. femininity
  • Uncertainty avoidance
  • Long term orientation vs. short term normative orientation
  • Indulgence vs. restraint

Cultural values at the workplace

Increasing globalization is also having a greater impact on the international business environment, which is more culturally diverse than ever before. The wide variety of ethnicities in the workplace can enrich the company. Yet many managers have been underprepared for the task of assessing, understanding and harnessing the potential of a multicultural workforce. First and foremost, it is important to be sensitive to cultural differences. Through Hofstede's studies, it was recognized that many thought processes, behavior patterns, and unspoken rules of interaction can go almost unnoticed in one's own culture. If individuals go abroad for work, the differences between the two cultures can lead to confusion or conflict. Most differences are found in greetings, business meetings, communication and working hours. The first step in realizing the full potential of cultural diversity in a company is to recognize, analyse and understand these differences (Kooyers 2015, 399).


Multinational teams

There are different leadership styles in business from country to country. This aspect is often forgotten when building cross-border teams. In some cultures, leaders show off their technical expertise, put facts before feelings, and focus their own and their employees' attention on successes and results. Others, however, are much more extroverted, relying on their rhetoric as well as persuasion, and inspiring with human power. Whatever the case, no two cultures understand leadership in the same way (Gates 2016).

References


Author: Alexandra Schewior