Effective, sustainable cultural change requires evolution, not disruption The Corporate Culture Survival Guide is the essential primer and practical guide every organization needs. Corporate culture pioneer Edgar H. Schein breaks the concept of 'culture' down into real terms, delving into the behaviors, values, and shared assumptions that define it, and explains why culture is the central factor in an organization's success―or failure. This new third edition is designed specifically for practitioners needing to apply these practices in real-world settings, and has been updated with new coverage of globalization, technology, and managerial competencies. You'll learn how to get past subconscious bias to assess whether or not your existing culture truly serves your organization, and how to introduce change and manage the change process over time for a best-case-scenario outcome. Case studies illustrate successful change in real companies, providing models and setting the bar for dismantling dysfunctional cultures. Corporate culture begins with the founder, and evolves―or not―over time. Is your culture working for or against your organization? How can it be optimized? This book separates the truth from the nonsense to provide real-world guidance on initiating and managing cultural change. Each of us is a part of many cultures―what you do, where you live, where you grew up, what you enjoy, how you live; in the workplace, many different people with many different cultures come together toward a common goal―will these cultures clash or synergize? The Corporate Culture Survival Guide shows you how to create an overarching corporate culture that gets everyone on the same page to drive your organization's success.
Edgar Henry Schein is the Society of Sloan Fellows Professor of Management Emeritus and a Professor Emeritus at the MIT Sloan School of Management.
Schein investigates organizational culture, process consultation, research process, career dynamics, and organization learning and change. In Career Anchors, third edition (Wiley, 2006), he shows how individuals can diagnose their own career needs and how managers can diagnose the future of jobs. His research on culture shows how national, organizational, and occupational cultures influence organizational performance (Organizational Culture and Leadership, fourth edition, 2010). In Process Consultation Revisited (1999) and Helping (2009), he analyzes how consultants work on problems in human systems and the dynamics of the helping process. Schein has written two cultural case studies—“Strategic Pragmatism: The Culture of Singapore’s Economic Development Board” (MIT Press, 1996) and “DEC is Dead; Long Live DEC” (Berett-Kohler, 2003). His Corporate Culture Survival Guide, second edition (Jossey-Bass, 2009) tells managers how to deal with culture issues in their organizations.
Schein holds a BPhil from the University of Chicago, a BA and an MA in social psychology from Stanford University, and a PhD in social psychology from Harvard University.
A good comprehensive guide for corporate culture in its entirety. What I miss though is tools and techniques to detect and identify emerging weak culture characteristics as an external observer. At least at an approximate level.
"If you want to change some element of your culture, you must recognize that you are tackling some of the most stable parts of your organization." p.35
Edgar Schein is THE authority on culture. Unless you have carefully read and applied his books you are only guessing about what culture is an how it is influenced. The Corporate Culture Survival Guide distills all Dr. Schein has learned in decades of culture work and packages it for used by leaders looking to use culture as a tool of change. it does take some effort to fully comprehend his the deep meaning of his concepts in the book. Still, this is a must read for leaders.
This was a great overview of what culture is, how to understand it, and how to guide or change it over time. Leaders of organizations can gain a lot from this book in an effort to create the best outcomes for everyone involved.
Taking a break from my usual reads and investing into my own professional development with this book. One needs a break from all the fantasy worlds at one point or another, right?
All in all, if you work in a corporation or attempting to start your own venture into the world of business this is a very solid foundation.
This book focuses on culture of an organization and its differences between young and established corporations. It speaks about what it is and how to be a catalyst of change without alienating your entire workforce so that your business can continue to thrive in always changing marketplace.
If you are not an entrepreneur or work for a corporation, safe to say: move along. Nothing to see here.
Ich durfe selber zwei Unternehmens M&A (Aufkaufen oder Aufkaufen) mitmachen. Leider hatte - so musste man jedenfalls annehmen - niemand vorher dieses Buch gelesen.
Was ich bestätigen kann: Einfach ist es nicht und man sollte tatsächlich alle Annahmen insbesondere - die in der anderen Firma denken genau so wie wir - in Frage stellen.
Also_ Gute Lektüre für Übernehmer und Übernommene.
Thought the book gave some very practical advice and suggestions. This book is great when discussing companies and other profit-organizations. There are many good things to take out of this book for nonprofit organizations, however if you are looking to change your organization in a church or other nonprofit organization, maybe another book would be better.
This isn't as much of a review, as a comment / advice to future readers who are considering this in audiobook format. I listened to the audiobook, but there was quite a bit to it and in retrospect, I think I should have gotten the ebook instead so I could take notes while reading. I'm going to need to re-listen to get the full value.
Schein is the world's top expert on corporate culture. Not just in terms of how he thinks about it, but in terms of his experience helping clients work through culture change and culture diagnosis. This is a short book containing practical advice on how to assess culture specifically for the purpose of fixing a problem or capturing an opportunity.
A fresh take on culture from someone that's been exploring it for several decades
The two authors helpfully establish the argument that in today's world. It's not just about the individual or the organisation. It's more about groups and how they work inwardly and with other groups. It's this interaction that the organisation's value is established.
It is a good book on understanding the complexities of organizational culture. Essential definitions provide concepts and examples of uncovering and understanding those complexities to bring about change.
The book deciphers many doubts about organizations struggles throughout any transformative change. One of the valuable book ever in the field of leadership and management.