Organisational
Culture is a set of shared values, often seen as the unwritten rules that guide employees
towards acceptable and rewardable behavior.
Roger
Harrison’s four-culture typology theory describes four types of organsiational
culture and are as follows:
A
Power Culture is when an organisation concentrates managerial power among a
few. Power Cultures have few rules and little bureaucracy, decisions are
centralized around one key individual.
In
a Role Culture, people have clearly delegated authorities within a highly
defined structure. Typically, these organizations form hierarchical
bureaucracies. Power derives from a person's position and little scope exists
for expert power.
A
Task Culture, teams are formed to solve particular problems. Power derives from
expertise as long as a team requires expertise. These cultures often feature
the multiple reporting lines of a matrix structure.
And
Atomistic (Power) Culture exists where all individuals believe themselves
superior to the organization. This is not a favorable approach and could hinder
a firm, because the concept of an organization suggests that a group of
like-minded individuals pursue the organizational goals.
The
type of culture that the NSW Rugby Union employs would be that of a Role
Culture. In each function or department, individuals are assigned a specific
role or job. My colleagues and I have a job description listing the tasks each
of us is responsible for. Role culture enables large organisations like the NSW
Rugby Union to spread tasks among their employees and ensure key tasks are
covered without unnecessary duplication. This is particularly useful for in the
NSW Rugby as they have specialist departments. E.g. sales, marketing,
development, operations, media, etc. Specialist roles should increase
productivity as employees are completing tasks they are fully trained and
experienced to do.
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