Organizational practices across cultures: An exploration in six cultural contexts
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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessDate
2014Author
Fischer, RonaldFerreira, Maria Cristina
Assmar, E. M. L.
Barış, G.
Berberoğlu, G.
Dalyan, F.
Boer, D.
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This study examined organizational practices in a sample of 1239 employees from various organizations in Argentina, Brazil, Malaysia, New Zealand, Turkey, and the United States. Twenty-four items measuring employee-orientation, formalization, and innovation practices showed a clear factorial structure across all samples, along with good reliabilities. Significant organizational position differences were found for employee-orientation and innovation practices. Sector differences were found for formalization and innovation practices. Cultural differences were found for employee-orientation and innovation practices, which can be explained using macroeconomic indicators, tightness-looseness, and individualism. Our study demonstrates the importance of individual, organizational, economic, and cultural level for understanding perceptions of organizational practices across a wider range of societies
Source
International Journal of Cross Cultural ManagementVolume
14Issue
1Collections
- Makale Koleksiyonu [791]
- Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu [8325]