Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.

To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to  upgrade your browser .

Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link.

  • We're Hiring!
  • Help Center

paper cover thumbnail

Organizational culture and effectiveness: A study of values, attitudes, and organizational outcomes

Profile image of Christopher Shook

2009, Journal of Business Research

Related Papers

European Journal of Business and Management

Anthony Siaw

research paper on organizational culture pdf

Journal of Applied Psychology

Daniel Denison

We apply Quinn and Rohrbaugh's (1983) competing values framework (CVF) as an organizing taxonomy to meta-analytically test hypotheses about the relationship between 3 culture types and 3 major indices of organizational effectiveness (employee attitudes, operational performance [i.e., innovation and product and service quality], and financial performance). The paper also tests theoretical suppositions undergirding the CVF by investigating the framework's nomological validity and proposed internal structure (i.e., interrelationships among culture types). Results based on data from 84 empirical studies with 94 independent samples indicate that clan, adhocracy, and market cultures are differentially and positively associated with the effectiveness criteria, though not always as hypothesized. The findings provide mixed support for the CVF's nomological validity and fail to support aspects of the CVF's proposed internal structure. We propose an alternative theoretical approach to the CVF and delineate directions for future research.

CONTRIBUCIONES A LAS CIENCIAS SOCIALES

MARCIA MELLO COSTA DE LIBERAL

The contribution of this article lies in its efforts to describe the relationship between health professionals' work values and perceptions of the perceived organizational culture in a public hospital. The central objective was to promote reflection on personal values by comparing them with the thinking of the general population to understand the organizational culture perceived and desired by all involved in the process. According to the results presented, it was clear that the value domains "work" and "relationships" are predominant in healthcare professionals. The "work" values were also investigated, thinking about the effort, the time, the commitment to finish the task, and the quality of the service, considering the type of activity in the professional environment. With the significance of these findings, it was possible to conclude that the dimensions "work" and "relationships" are scored by health professionals, and the ...

Emmanuel Oteng

The subject of organizational culture became of much interest to researchers in the 1980’s and to date it still carries weight in business cycles, as a results more and more research is carried into this field of study. This work is focused on assessing and defining the effects of organizational culture on the performance of an organization. The purpose is to examine the various concepts/models of organizational culture and tries to find out the relationship between organizational culture and performance in a business setup. Earlier research reviews have shown that there is direct impact or effect on the variety of organization’s processes, employees and its performances. Research further indicates that if employees are committed and they have the same norms and values as that of the organization they work in, there is a high chance that there can be an increase in performance towards achieving the overall organizational goals. More research can be done in this area to comprehend th...

The objective of this review article is to demonstrate the relation between two variables i.e. organization's culture & its performance. After study and analysis of wide literature, it is reasoned out that organizational culture has deep impact on the variety of organizational process, employees and its performance. This also describes the different dimensions of the culture which have impact on organizational performance. Research shows that if employee are committed and having the same norms and value as per organizations have, can increase the performance toward achieving the overall organization goals.

Sol Salazar

International Journal of Knowledge and Systems Science

Anas Bashayreh

Organizational culture is an important part to be considered by dynamic organizations in order to develop some competitive advantage to ensure enhanced organizational performance. This study aims to close the gap between understanding the role of organizational culture and the effect on organizational performance among the employees in insurance companies. The objective of this study is to examine the relationship between the dimensions of organizational culture and organizational performance among insurance companies operating in the Jordanian market. A sample of 240 respondents that were selected randomly from insurance companies participated in this study. Data were collected by survey questionnaire. Both descriptive and influential statistic namely frequency, mean, and multiple regression were used to analyze the data. The result shows that there is limited significant relationship between organizational expectations, encourage development, behavioral styles, and stability and c...

John Wingender

In the current environment of shifting demographics, escalating costs and regulatory activism, hospitals increasingly need to harness the power of their employees’ effort, knowledge and talents. A key determinant of their ability to do so is their organizational culture, which is derived from their vision and mission, as well as systems and practices.This study reports survey findings from managers at fifteen hospitals which show significant differences between higher and lower performing hospitals on eight dimensions of organizational culture. As compared to their lower performing counterparts, the higher performing hospitals exhibit higher levels of integration, vitality, clarity of purpose and performance orientation. They also have different practices in the areas of human resource development, management style, decision making and compensation. These findings suggest potential directions for hospitals to improve their organizational cultures through changes in their systems and...

Aneil Mishra

IOSR Journals publish within 3 days

Abstract: This paper focuses on the definition of organizational/corporate culture and sheds the light on the important studies on the topic. Various definitions of corporate culture as discussed by various authors have been analyzed. The different types of cultures and what researchers have found out about their effects on organization performance has been reviewed in this paper. A number of studies that linked the relationship between organizational culture and the organizational performance have been discussed. The researcher realized that as cited by Jennifer et al., (2011) the relationship between culture and organizational performance is still not well understood by many researchers. They bring out the criticism of strong and weak cultures citing that what matters is not the strength or weakness of a culture but how forcefully the norms are held by organizational members (its intensity), and how widely members agree about the norms within the organization (consensus) (O’Reilly, 1989; Jackson, 1960). The researcher agrees with this finding as supported by Sørensen (2002) who theorized that an organization cultures lead to consistency in performance by increasing employee consensus and willingness to endorse organizational goals, reducing uncertainty through goal clarity, and increasing motivation. Although Wilderom and Berg (1998) argued that instead of striving for strong culture, researchers should attempt to reduce the gap between employees’ preferred organizational culture practices and their perception of the organizational practices. This prompts a further study to explore the reasoning by Wilderom and Berg. Key words: Corporate culture, Organization performance, Strong culture and organizational culture & performance.

RELATED PAPERS

ERP Management

Christoph Wecht

Andrei Magyarov

Journal of Learner-Centered Curriculum and Instruction

Mi Kyong Kim

Nuur Azreen Paiman

Physical Review Letters

N. van Bakel

Revista Tecnologia e Sociedade

Lucca Pérez

Joachim De Beule

Cancer Control

Amit Abraham

Chiara Criscuolo

Plant Biology

Vietnamese Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine

Quang Anh Nguyễn

Cuadernos del CURIHAM

hernan stenta

Reproductive BioMedicine Online

Rakesh Sharma

IOSR Journal of Pharmacy (IOSRPHR)

Dr.Lata Gupta

Nina Zulida Situmorang

European Urology Focus

Norihiko Tsuchiya

Egyptian Journal of Chemistry

Manal Sorour

Raymond Kilduff

Ade R. Tamada

Ade R Tamada

Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters

Walter José PELAEZ

JAINAL ABIDIN

yyyijuj klklk,l

Scientific Programming

Field Actions Science Reports

Chantell Witten

See More Documents Like This

RELATED TOPICS

  •   We're Hiring!
  •   Help Center
  • Find new research papers in:
  • Health Sciences
  • Earth Sciences
  • Cognitive Science
  • Mathematics
  • Computer Science
  • Academia ©2024

Organizational culture, innovation and performance: a study from a non-western context

Journal of Management Development

ISSN : 0262-1711

Article publication date: 13 January 2020

Issue publication date: 13 October 2020

The purpose of this paper is to examine the links between organizational culture, innovation and banks’ performance in Palestine.

Design/methodology/approach

Data were gathered from 186 employees working in the Palestinian banking sector. The data gathered were analyzed using the PLS-SEM approach.

The findings of the study show that organizational culture and marketing innovation have a positive impact on banks’ performance. Moreover, it was found that marketing performance partially mediates the relationship between organizational culture and banks’ performance.

Practical implications

The paper may be of use for banks managers to create an organizational culture, which fosters both innovation and performance.

Originality/value

The paper is unique as it examines organizational culture, innovation and performance links in a non-western context.

  • Performance
  • Technological innovation

Organizational culture

  • Marketing innovation

Aboramadan, M. , Albashiti, B. , Alharazin, H. and Zaidoune, S. (2020), "Organizational culture, innovation and performance: a study from a non-western context", Journal of Management Development , Vol. 39 No. 4, pp. 437-451. https://doi.org/10.1108/JMD-06-2019-0253

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Mohammed Aboramadan, Belal Albashiti, Hatem Alharazin and Souhaila Zaidoune

Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. This article is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this article (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

Introduction

Nowadays, organizations need to operate in business environments, which are characterized by fast technological changes, intensive international competition and continuous changing client’s preferences ( Droge et al. , 2008 ). Given these complexities, innovation is seen as one of the critical factors for achieving organizational success and sustaining competitive advantage ( Damanpour and Gopalakrishnan, 2001 ). It is well documented in the literature that innovative organizations have more flexibility and can respond quickly to changes, in order to take advantage of business opportunities ( Drucker, 1985 ). Innovation is considered as a competitive mechanism for organizations’ performance and success, and is regarded as an important instrument to adapt to a continuously changing business environment ( Blackwell, 2006 ). Furthermore, previous studies provide evidence that innovation can positively affect performance (e.g. Baker and Sinkula, 2002 ; Damanpour and Gopalakrishnan, 2001 ; Luk et al. , 2008 ; Naranjo-Valencia et al. , 2016 ; Uzkurt et al. , 2013 ).

Because of the critical role innovation plays in different organizational settings, several scholars have attempted to determine the factors that are associated with influencing innovation ( Koc and Ceylan, 2007 ). One of the factors that seems to have an impact on innovation is the organizational culture ( Büschgens et al. , 2013 ; Lin et al. , 2013 ; Martins and Terblanche, 2003 ; Tushman and O’Reilly, 1997 ).

On the other hand, organizational culture has been studied in terms of definitions, theoretical scopes, conceptualizations, characteristics and types (e.g. Lavine, 2014 ; Schein, 1996 ). Although organizational culture was argued to contribute to achieving common values promotion ( Naranjo-Valencia et al. , 2016 ), competitive advantage ( Calciolari et al. , 2018 ) desirables employees’ behaviors ( Nazarian et al. , 2017 ; Zhang and Li, 2016 ) and innovation ( Lin et al. , 2013 ), empirical support is still limited ( Hartnell et al. , 2011 ; Kim and Chang, 2019 ).

Regardless of the important role organizational culture plays in promoting innovation, most of the studies were carried out in western contexts. Moreover, a very limited number of studies examined the association between organizational culture and performance through the intervening mechanisms such as innovation (e.g. Martins and Terblanche, 2003 ; Naranjo-Valencia et al. , 2016 ; Uzkurt et al. , 2013 ).

Our study contributes to the literature in several ways. First, we attempt to investigate the “black box” of the organizational culture-performance relationship through the mediating effects of marketing and technology innovation. Based on a critical review of previous empirical studies, very limited research (e.g. Naranjo-Valencia et al. , 2016 ; Tseng et al. , 2008 ; Uzkurt et al. , 2013 ) examined the role of innovation as a mediator between organizational culture and performance. Second, our study responds to the different scholarly calls to advance empirical research on innovation and organizational culture ( McLaughlin et al. , 2008 ; Nakata and DiBenedetto, 2012 ; Tellis et al. , 2009 ). Finally, most of the studies examining organizational culture and performance were carried out in western setting. For instance, Budhwar et al. (2019) suggested that there is a need to enrich the literature of HRM and organizational behavior research in the Middle Eastern region. Among the suggestions made by Budhwar et al. (2019) was to investigate the mechanisms which govern the relationship between OB, HR factors and organizational performance. Given this discussion and to respond the scholarly calls to advance the organizational behavior and HR research in the Middle East, our study aims at investigating the relationship between organizational culture and banks performance via the mediating role of innovation. Moreover, we argue that more studies are needed in diverse non-western settings, in order to better understand the relationship between organizational culture and performance.

Theory and hypotheses

Organizational culture, definitions and models.

Chang and Lin (2007) consider culture as one of the vital factors for organizations and their activities. In literature, many definitions were given to organizational culture, each from a different perspective. Overall, organizational culture commonly represents the routine activities taking place in an organization ( Lundy and Cowling, 1996 ). More specifically, it refers to the shared set of values and behaviors inside an organization ( Deshpande and Webster, 1989 ). It is also used to describe the set of assumptions and behaviors employees within an organization have adopted ( Martins and Terblanche, 2003 ). Many researchers were interested in the field of organizational culture assuming it is a driving factor to the organization’s innovation, productivity and financial performance ( Blackwell, 2006 ).

Many studies were conducted to determine the different categories of organizational culture ( Blackwell, 2006 ; Martins and Terblanche, 2003 ). Some of them have considered that organizational culture can be divided into four categories, namely, clan, hierarchy, adhocracy and market ( Cameron and Freeman, 1991 ; Deshpande et al. , 1993 ; Quinn, 1988 ). Quinn and Spreitzer (1991) have suggested that organizational culture is composed of four different cultures: development culture, group culture, rational culture and hierarchal culture. Similarly, Chang and Lin (2007) believe that organizational culture follows the four concepts of: innovativeness, cooperativeness, effectiveness and consistency. In addition, Wallach (1983) suggested a simpler classification of the organizational culture following its functions: bureaucratic, innovative and supportive perspectives. A further classification for the culture was presented in the organizational culture profile suggesting that it is related to seven main values: innovation, aggressiveness, result orientation, stability, people orientation, team oriented and a detail focus culture. The organization’s culture can be also classified according to being a: service culture organization that focuses on providing the highest value to its customers, or a safety culture that focuses on having strong work-place standards, or both ( O’Reilly III et al. , 1991 ). Moreover, according to Robbins (2001) , characteristics like leadership, risk aversion, amount of detail, result focus, people focus, team focus, hostility and stability are the main characteristics of organizational culture.

Organizational culture and performance

Organizational culture has a significant impact on banks’ performance.

Innovation, on the other hand, is used to refer to new products, services, processes or technologies that require acceptance and eventually adoption and implementation ( Damanpour, 1991 ; Thompson, 1965 ; Zaltman et al. , 1973 ). Innovation is the factor that enables the innovative processes to produce new products and services, new technologies and new concepts ( Sutanto, 2017 ).

According to Padilla-Meléndez and Garrido-Moreno (2012) , knowledge of innovation needs more communication, and interaction between not only researchers, but also stakeholders affected by this, as well as, leaders. This way new ideas, processes and interactions can have an economic and commercial benefit. Hence, leaders, managers and researchers in organizations and universities should be aware of the different ways of innovation.

Innovation, in the literature, can be divided into different types. The most popular typology of innovation divides it into three types: “administrative vs technical,” “product vs process” and “radical vs incremental” ( Gopalakrishnan and Damanpour, 1997 ). Another classification of the typologies of innovation was developed by Jensen et al. (2007) . According to this classification, innovation can be classified as: “Science, Technology and Innovation” (STI) that is based on analytical knowledge and “Doing, Using, and Interaction” that is subject to knowledge retrieved from the engineering field ( Coenen and Asheim, 2006 ; Lorenz and Lundvall, 2006 ). Innovation can be divided into three groups: product-related, technology-related and behavior-related perspectives. The technology-related innovation is related to the readiness to adopt current technologies and processes and the tendency of the organization to adopt new technologies and processes internally ( Kitchell, 1995 ). Behavior-related innovation relates to the speed, at which the organizational system is ready to adopt new ideas relative to competitors ( Rogers, 1995 ). Lastly, product-related innovation is about the ability of an organization to generate new ideas, products, services and processes, or to buy them ( Stalk et al. , 1992 ). Moreover, as innovation is responsible for implementing totally new or ameliorated versions of products, services or processes within the organization, or in the external relations ( OECD and EUROSTAT, 2005 ), innovation can be classified into four categories. First, product innovation, which refers to the radical changes or ameliorations done to products and services. Second, process innovation, which refers to the major changes done to the production system or to the delivery mode. Third, organizational innovation, which refers to the adoption of new business processes that affect the business process within the organization and or on external relations. And fourth, marketing innovation, which refers to any change made to one of the four marketing Ps (product, price, placement and position) ( OECD and EUROSTAT, 2005 ).

Organizational culture and innovation

As innovation plays a significant role in determining an organization’s success, several studies attempted to examine its antecedences ( Crossan and Apaydin, 2010 ). Different studies found that organizational culture and organizational design are the most influential determinants ( Mumford, 2000 ).

Organizational culture can affect the innovative attitude in two ways. The socialization process teaches individuals how to behave and act toward one another. Moreover, the organization’s structure, policy system, procedure and management orientation can be affected by the basic “values, beliefs and assumptions” ( Martins and Terblanche, 2003 ). Hence, culture can encourage innovation among employees, because it drives them toward accepting innovation as a philosophy of the organization ( Hartmann, 2006 ). Different values of culture were regarded as means to foster innovation. Examples of these cultural values were creativity and initiative ( Jamrog et al. , 2006 ), entrepreneurial mindset ( McLean, 2005 ), freedom and autonomy ( Ahmed, 1998 ), risk taking ( Wallach, 1983 ), teamwork ( Arad et al. , 1997 ), marketing orientation and flexibility ( Martins and Terblanche, 2003 ).

Organizational culture has a significant impact on marketing innovation.

Organizational culture has a significant impact on technology innovation.

Innovation and performance

Research has found that innovation plays a significant role in organization performance ( Higgins, 1995 ; Hult et al. , 2004 ). Organizations able to innovate are more capable to deliver new products and services, improve processes in a faster way to fit the market’s needs and capitalize on opportunities better than non-innovative organizations ( Jiménez-Jiménez et al. , 2008 ). Moreover, innovation has been associated with higher levels of growth and profitability ( Li and Atuahene-Gima, 2001 ).

Marketing innovation has a significant impact on banks performance.

Technology innovation has a significant impact on banks performance.

The present study is a quantitative study applied to the Palestinian banking sector with the purpose of examining the hypothesized positive relationships between organizational culture, marketing innovation, technological innovation and banks’ performance. Data were gathered using a self-administered questionnaire distributed to the employees of banking sector located in Gaza strip. The distribution and collection method were the drop-off and pick up approach. A total of 320 employees were invited to fill the questionnaire. A total of 186 filled and usable questionnaires were gathered and valid for statistical analysis. The response rate in our study is 58 percent.

Respondents’ profile

Most of the respondents were male (70 percent). In total, 25.8 percent of the respondents were aged higher than 44 years, 25.8 percent were aged less than 30 years, 38.7 percent were aged from 30 to 38 years and 9.7 percent were aged from 38 to 44 years. Regarding experience, 32.3 percent had 5–10 years of experience, 16.1 percent had 10–15 years of experience, 22.6 percent had an experience of more than 15 years and 29 percent had less than 5 years of experience. Concerning education, most of the respondents had a bachelor’s degree (87.1 percent).

This scale is measured using 22 items adopted from previous studies, such as Claver et al. (1998) , Denison and Mishra (1995) , Jamrog et al. (2006) , McLean (2005) and Wallach (1983) . These items were “teamwork, communication, openness, work autonomy, commitment, employee’s involvement, flexibility, creativity, responsibility, objective orientation, customer focus, continuous learning, risk taking, adaptability, entrepreneurial mindset, performance incentives, excitement, work engagement, decision making, marketing orientation, and high standards and values.” The internal consistency was 0.956. A five-point Likert scale was used to assess the items of this construct.

Marketing and technology innovation

Marketing innovation and technological innovation were measured by a three-item scale for each. Both scales were adopted from Hogan et al. (2011) . A sample item for marketing innovation is “Our bank develops, revolutionary for the industry, marketing programs for our services/products” and a sample item for technology innovation is “Our bank adopts the latest technology in the industry.” The values of international consistency for marketing and technological innovation were 0.848 and 0.765, respectively. A five-point Likert scale was used to assess the items of these two constructs.

Banks’ performance

Respondents assessed this measure using a seven-item scale adopted from Agbényiga (2011) . Examples of this self-reported assessment were “effective services, customer satisfaction, organizational reputation, quality of the service.” The internal consistency value was 0.921. A five-point Likert scale was used to assess the items of this construct.

Initial analysis

Table I shows correlations and descriptive statistics of the research variables. The means and SDs for the examined variables were (Mean: 4.15, SD: 0.55) for organizational culture, (Mean: 4.44, SD: 0.48) for marketing innovation, (Mean: 4.56, SD: 0.45) for technology innovation, and (Mean: 4.30, SD: 0.60) for banks’ performance. According to the results, correlations were significant between marketing innovation, organizational culture and performance.

Assessing the measurement model

For the purpose of checking the internal consistency of the items, factor loading was calculated for each variable. Three items of organizational culture were removed from the model due to their low loading. All other items loadings were retained as their factor loading was higher than 0.5 as presented in Figure 1 . Furthermore, we have checked for the variables’ reliability by calculating the average variance extracted and composite reliability ( Hulland, 1999 ). As presented in Table II , AVE values for all variables were higher than 0.5 and CR values were higher than 0.7 ( Hulland, 1999 ). Hence, all variables in the model can be regarded as internally reliable and consistent.

For the purpose of examining discriminant validity, two approaches were utilized. First, the heterotrait–monotrait (HTMT) method was used, in which the results ( Table III ) show that HTMT values are lower than the value of 0.90, as suggested by Henseler et al. (2015) . The second method was the Fornell and Larcker (1981) technique by estimating the square root of the AVE and comparing it with the correlations between latent variables. The results in Table IV show that all square roots of the AVE are higher than the correlations between the examined variables. Hence, the discriminant validity condition was met.

Assessing the structural model

Table V shows that the R 2 values for banks’ performance and marketing innovation exceed the acceptable moderate ratio as suggested by Chin (1998) . Banks performance has an R 2 value of 0.561, marketing innovation an R 2 value of 0.112. Technological innovation had a week value of R 2 of 0.055. On the other hand, the effect size f ² for the research variables was also calculated. Results of f ² values presented in Table VI showed medium effects for the following relationships: organizational culture on performance, organizational culture on marketing innovation and marketing innovation on performance. On the contrary, the effect was week for the technological innovation and performance link.

Testing the hypotheses: direct and mediating effects

For the purpose of testing the research hypotheses H1 – H5 , we have calculated the direct effects. Table VII shows all the hypotheses were supported expect for H5 . Organizational culture is positively related to banks’ performance ( β =0.596, p =0.000). Organizational culture is positively related to both marketing innovation ( β =0.334, p =0.000) and technology innovation and ( β =0.234, p =0.000). Marketing innovation was found to exert a positive effect on performance ( β =0.297, p =0.000). The relationship between technology innovation and performance was not significant ( β =−0.001, p =0.982).

For the purpose of testing the mediating effects of both marketing and technology innovation, we have calculated the indirect effects. The results show that marketing innovation mediates the relationship between organizational culture and banks performance ( P =0.007, t =2.698***). Technology innovation did not exert a significant mediating effect between organizational culture and performance.

Discussion and implications

The purpose of our study was to examine the links between organizational culture, innovation and banks’ performance in a non-western context (Palestinian context). The findings of our study provide evidence for the relationship between organizational culture and banks performance, supporting H1 . The results of our study are in line with previous studies demonstrating a positive relationship between organizational culture and performance (e.g. Daft, 2007 ; Fey and Denison, 2003 ; Kim and Chang, 2019 ; Kraśnicka et al. , 2018 ; Ngo and Loi, 2008 ; Salimi and Aveh, 2016 ). The results imply that the values and philosophy adopted within Palestinian banks contribute positively to the banks performance.

Concerning the relationship between organizational culture and innovation, our results show that organizational culture is a significant predictor of both marketing and technology innovation at Palestinian banks, lending a support for H2 and H3 . The results are consistent with previous studies, which investigate organizational culture-innovation links ( Büschgens et al. , 2013 ; Chang and Lee, 2007 ; Lau and Ngo, 2004 ; Lin et al. , 2013 ; Miron et al. , 2004 ; Naranjo-Valencia et al. , 2016 ; Rezaei et al. , 2018 ; Tseng et al. , 2008 ; Uzkurt et al. , 2013 ). The results imply that organizational culture fosters both marketing and technology innovation.

Although our results provide empirical evidence on the links between marketing innovation and banks’ performance ( H4 ) and are in line with previous empirical support ( Afcha, 2011 ; Artz et al. , 2010 ; Baker and Sinkula, 2002 ; Damanpour, 1991 ; Farley et al. , 2008 ; Luk et al. , 2008 ; Tseng et al. , 2008 ), technology innovation did not exert any significant effect on banks performance, lending no support for H5 . These results can be justified by the fact that in a developing country like Palestine, technology-related innovation might not attract customers, due to the lack of culture and trust in using different technologies (ATM machines, online banking, etc.). This means that innovating at the technological level does not necessarily contribute to higher performance in the Palestinian banking sector.

Finally, our results show that marketing innovation plays an intervening role in the relationship between organizational culture and banks performance. Marketing innovation partially mediates this relationship, suggesting that organizational culture affects marketing innovation and marketing innovation, in turn, generates higher performance.

Implications

Our results contribute both to the theory and practice. Theoretically, the study is one of the very few studies conducted in a non-western context in the banking sector. In Middle Eastern region and specifically in Palestine, there is a lack of research on the culture-innovation-performance relationships.

Practically, our results provide useful recommendations to banks’ senior management on the significance of organizational culture and innovation and their contribution to performance. Our findings provide fertile grounds for the banking sector in Palestine on the importance of organizational culture as a tool for encouraging innovation and banks performance. The presence of a strong culture that is characterized by teamwork, communication, openness, work autonomy, commitment, employee’s involvement, flexibility, creativity, responsibility, etc., will positively contribute to innovation and firm performance alike. The existence of a climate that is characterized by objective orientation, customer focus, continuous learning, risk taking, adaptability, entrepreneurial mindset, performance incentives, excitement, work engagement, decision making, marketing orientation, and high standards and values, is of extreme importance to the firm success at different levels. Moreover, the results provide insights to the banking sector which is striving to be responsive to challenging environments through successfully adopting innovation.

The Palestinian banking sector encountered several environmental complexities in the last years, hence, innovation can be very useful in order to sustain competitive advantage. Managers in Palestinian banks should encourage their staff members to create innovative ideas and provide them the right reward to establish an innovative culture in the organization. Furthermore, communication between banks’ employees at the horizontal and vertical level can be very beneficial to find the best ways to implement innovation at different levels.

Limitations and future research

Like any other study, our study has some limitations. First, marketing innovation, technology innovation and banks’ performance were assessed by subjective measures. Future research might consider using more objective measures of innovation. Second, data were collected only from the Palestinian banking sector and this might restrict the generalizability of the results to other sectors. Hence, future research might replicate and extend this study to other sectors in Palestine and similar national contexts in the region such as Jordan and Lebanon. Future research using larger data and across different sectors will give more insights on the association between organizational culture and performance through innovation. Third, our research design does not allow the researchers to establish cause and effect links between the examined variables, hence, longitudinal research is recommended for future devours. In general, organizational culture research conducted using only quantities techniques provide restricted understanding. Hence, future studies might consider using qualitative methods to provide better explanation of the organizational culture, innovation and performance associations. Finally, our research analyzed only the role of marketing and technology innovation in the banking sector. Future studies might consider examining the role of other forms of innovation. Finally, it would be also interesting for future studies to investigate the different types of organizational culture and their impact on innovation and performance in the Middle Eastern region.

research paper on organizational culture pdf

PLS measurement model analysis

Means, standard deviation and correlation matrix

Heterotrait–monotrait ratio for the research variables

Fornell–Larcker criterion for the research variables

Direct and mediating effects analysis

Afcha , S. ( 2011 ), “ Innovaciones organizacionales y su efecto sobre el desempeño empresarial ”, Revista Venezolana de Gerencia , Vol. 16 No. 56 , pp. 544 - 563 .

Agbényiga , D.L. ( 2011 ), “ Organizational culture influences on service delivery: a mixed methods inquiry in a human services setting ”, Children and Youth Services Review , Vol. 33 No. 10 , pp. 1767 - 1778 .

Ahmed , P. ( 1998 ), “ Culture and climate for innovation ”, European Journal of Innovation Management , Vol. 1 No. 1 , pp. 30 - 43 .

Arad , S. , Hanson , M. and Schneider , R. ( 1997 ), “ A framework for the study of relationships between organizational characteristics and organizational innovation ”, Journal of Creative Behavior , Vol. 1 No. 1 , pp. 42 - 58 .

Artz , K.W. , Norman , P.M. , Hatfield , D.E. and Cardinal , L.B. ( 2010 ), “ A longitudinal study of the impact of R&D, patents, and product innovation on firm performance ”, Journal of Product Innovation Management , Vol. 27 No. 5 , pp. 725 - 740 .

Baker , W. and Sinkula , J. ( 2002 ), “ Market orientation, learning orientation and product innovation: delving into the organization’s black box ”, Journal of Market: Focused Management , Vol. 5 No. 1 , pp. 5 - 23 .

Blackwell , S.S. ( 2006 ), “ The influence of perception of organizational structure and culture on leadership role requirements: the moderating impact of locus of control and self-monitoring ”, Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies , Vol. 12 No. 4 , pp. 27 - 49 .

Budhwar , P. , Pereira , V. , Mellahi , K. and Singh , K.S. ( 2019 ), “ The state of HRM in the Middle East: challenges and future research agenda ”, Asia Pacific Journal of Management , Vol. 36 No. 4 , pp. 905 - 933 .

Büschgens , T. , Bausch , A. and Balkin , D. ( 2013 ), “ Organizational culture and innovation: a meta-analytic review ”, Journal of Product Innovation Management , Vol. 30 No. 4 , pp. 1 - 19 , available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpim.12021 .

Calciolari , S. , Prenestini , A. and Lega , F. ( 2018 ), “ An organizational culture for all seasons? How cultural type dominance and strength influence different performance goals ”, Public Management Review , Vol. 20 No. 9 , pp. 1400 - 1422 .

Cameron , K.S. and Freeman , S.J. ( 1991 ), “ Cultural congruence, strength, and type: relationships to effectiveness ”, Research in Organizational Development , Vol. 5 No. 2 , pp. 23 - 58 .

Chan , L.L.M. , Shaffer , M.A. and Snape , E. ( 2004 ), “ In search of sustained competitive advantage: the impact of organizational culture, competitive strategy and human resource management practices on firm performance ”, International Journal of Human Resource Management , Vol. 15 No. 1 , pp. 17 - 35 .

Chang , S. and Lin , C. ( 2007 ), “ Exploring organizational culture for information security ”, Industrial Management and Data Systems , Vol. 107 No. 3 , pp. 438 - 458 .

Chang , S.-C. and Lee , M.-S. ( 2007 ), “ The effects of organizational culture and knowledge management mechanisms on organizational innovation: an empirical study in Taiwan ”, The Business Review , Vol. 7 No. 1 , pp. 295 - 301 .

Chen , J.S. , Tsou , H.T. and Huang , A.Y.H. ( 2009 ), “ Service delivery innovation: antecedents and impact on firm performance ”, Journal of Service Research , Vol. 12 No. 1 , pp. 36 - 55 .

Chin , W.W. ( 1998 ), “ The partial least squares approach for structural equation modeling ”, in Marcoulides , G.A. (Ed.), Modern Methods for Business Research , Lawrence Erlbaum Associates , New York, NY , pp. 295 - 336 .

Claver , E. , Llopis , J. , Garcia , D. and Molina , H. ( 1998 ), “ Organizational culture for innovation and new technological behavior ”, Journal of High Technology Management Research , Vol. 9 No. 1 , pp. 55 - 69 .

Coenen , L. and Asheim , B.T. ( 2006 ), “ Constructing regional advantage at the Northern Edge ”, in Cooke , P. and Piccoluga , A. (Eds), Regional Development in the Knowledge Economy , Routledge , London , pp. 84 - 110 .

Coyne , K. ( 1986 ), “ Sustainable competitive advantage: what it is and what it isn’t ”, Business Horizons , Vol. 29 No. 1 , pp. 54 - 61 .

Crossan , M. and Apaydin , M. ( 2010 ), “ A multi-dimensional framework of organizational innovation: a systematic review of the literature ”, Journal of Management Studies , Vol. 47 No. 6 , pp. 1154 - 1191 , available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6486.2009.00880.x .

Daft , R.L. ( 2007 ), Organization theory and Design , 9th ed. , Thomson South-Western , Mason, OH .

Damanpour , F. ( 1991 ), “ Organizational innovation: a meta-analysis of effects of determinants and moderators ”, Academy of Management Journal , Vol. 34 No. 3 , pp. 555 - 590 .

Damanpour , F. and Gopalakrishnan , S. ( 2001 ), “ The dynamics of the adoption of products and process innovations in organizations ”, Journal of Management Studies , Vol. 38 No. 1 , pp. 45 - 65 .

De Clercq , D. , Thongpapanl , N. and Dimov , D. ( 2011 ), “ The moderating role of organizational context on the relationship between innovation and firm performance ”, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management , Vol. 58 No. 3 , pp. 431 - 444 .

Denison , D. and Mishra , A. ( 1995 ), “ Toward a theory of organizational culture and effectiveness ”, Organization Science , Vol. 6 No. 2 , pp. 204 - 223 .

Deshpande , R. and Webster , F.E. ( 1989 ), “ Organizational culture and marketing: defining the research agenda ”, Journal of Marketing , Vol. 53 No. 1 , pp. 3 - 15 .

Deshpande , R. , Farley , J. and Webster , F. ( 1993 ), “ Corporate culture, customer orientation and innovativeness in Japanese firms: a quadrad analysis ”, Journal of Marketing , Vol. 57 No. 1 , pp. 23 - 37 .

Droge , C. , Calantone , R. and Harmancioglu , N. ( 2008 ), “ New product success: is it really controllable by managers in highly turbulent environments? ”, Journal of Product Innovation Management , Vol. 25 No. 3 , pp. 272 - 286 .

Drucker , P. ( 1985 ), “ The discipline of innovation ”, Harvard Business Review , Vol. 63 No. 3 , pp. 67 - 72 .

Eisingerich , A.B. , Rubera , G. and Seifert , M. ( 2009 ), “ Managing service innovation and interorganizational relationships for firm performance: to or commit diversity? ”, Journal of Service Research , Vol. 11 No. 4 , pp. 344 - 356 .

Farley , J.U. , Hoenig , S. and Ismail , Z. ( 2008 ), “ Organizational culture, innovativeness, market orientation and firm performance in South Africa: an interdisciplinary perspective ”, Journal of African Business , Vol. 9 No. 1 , pp. 59 - 76 .

Fey , C. and Denison , D. ( 2003 ), “ Organizational culture and effective-ness: can American theory be applied in Russia? ”, Organization Science , Vol. 14 No. 6 , pp. 686 - 706 .

Fornell , C. and Larcker , D.F. ( 1981 ), “ Evaluating structural equation models with unobservable variables and measurement error ”, Journal of Marketing Research , Vol. 18 No. 1 , pp. 39 - 50 .

Galves , E. and Garcia , D. ( 2011 ), “ Cultura organizacional yrendimiento de las Mipymes de mediana y alta tecnología: unestudio empírico en Cali, Colombia ”, Cuadernos de Administración , Vol. 24 No. 42 , pp. 125 - 145 .

Gálvez , E. and García , D. ( 2012 ), “ Impacto de la innovación sobre el rendimiento de la MIPYME: un estudio empírico en Colombia ”, Estudios Gerenciales , Vol. 28 No. 122 , pp. 11 - 27 .

Glisson , C. ( 2007 ), “ Assessing and changing organizational culture and climate for effective services ”, Research on Social Work Practice , Vol. 17 No. 6 , pp. 736 - 747 .

Gopalakrishnan , S. and Damanpour , F. ( 1997 ), “ A review of innovation research in economics, sociology and technology management ”, Omega , Vol. 25 No. 1 , pp. 15 - 28 .

Gordon , G.G. and DiTomaso , N. ( 1992 ), “ Predicting corporate performance from organizational culture ”, Journal of Management Studies , Vol. 29 No. 6 , pp. 783 - 798 .

Hartmann , A. ( 2006 ), “ The role of organizational culture in motivating innovative behavior in construction firms ”, Construction Innovation , Vol. 6 No. 3 , pp. 159 - 172 .

Hartnell , C.A. , Ou , A.Y. and Kinicki , A. ( 2011 ), “ Organizational culture and organizational effectiveness: a meta-analytic investigation of the competing values framework’s theoretical suppositions ”, Journal of Applied Psychology , Vol. 96 No. 4 , pp. 677 - 694 .

Henseler , J. , Ringle , C.M. and Sarstedt , M. ( 2015 ), “ A new criterion for assessing discriminant validity in variance-based structural equation modeling ”, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science , Vol. 43 No. 1 , pp. 115 - 135 .

Higgins , J.M. ( 1995 ), “ How effective companies operate: lessons from Japanese strategy ”, Creativity and Innovation Management , Vol. 4 No. 2 , pp. 110 - 119 .

Hofstede , G. ( 1988 ), “ The Confucius connection: from cultural roots to economic growth ”, Organizational Dynamics , Vol. 16 No. 4 , pp. 4 - 22 .

Hogan , S.J. , Soutar , G.N. , McColl-Kennedy , J.R. and Sweeney , J.C. ( 2011 ), “ Reconceptualizing professional service firm innovation capability: scale development ”, Industrial Marketing Management , Vol. 40 No. 8 , pp. 1264 - 1273 .

Hulland , J.S. ( 1999 ), “ Use of partial least squares (PLS) in strategic management research: a review of four recent studies ”, Strategic Management Journal , Vol. 20 No. 4 , pp. 195 - 204 .

Hult , G.T.M. , Hurley , R.F. and Knight , G.A. ( 2004 ), “ Innovativeness: its antecedents and impact on business performance ”, Industrial Marketing Management , Vol. 33 No. 5 , pp. 429 - 438 .

Jamrog , J. , Vickers , M. and Bear , D. ( 2006 ), “ Building and sustaining a culture that supports innovation ”, Human Resource Planning , Vol. 29 No. 3 , pp. 9 - 19 .

Jensen , M.B. , Johnson , B. , Lorenz , E. and Lundvall , B.A. ( 2007 ), “ Forms of knowledge and models of innovations ”, Research Policy , Vol. 36 No. 5 , pp. 680 - 693 .

Jimenez-Jimenez , D. and Sanz-Valle , R. ( 2011 ), “ Innovation, organizational learning, and performance ”, Journal of Business Research , Vol. 64 No. 4 , pp. 408 - 417 .

Jiménez-Jiménez , D. , Sanz-Valle , R. and Rodriguez-Espallardo , M. ( 2008 ), “ Fostering innovation: the role of market orientation and organizational learning ”, European Journal of Innovation Management , Vol. 11 No. 3 , pp. 389 - 412 .

Kitchell , S. ( 1995 ), “ Corporate culture, environmental adaptation, and innovation adoption: a qualitative/quantitative approach ”, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science , Vol. 23 No. 3 , pp. 195 - 205 .

Kim , T. and Chang , J. ( 2019 ), “ Organizational culture and performance: a macro-level longitudinal study ”, Leadership & Organization Development Journal , Vol. 40 No. 1 , pp. 65 - 84 .

Koc , T. and Ceylan , C. ( 2007 ), “ Factors impacting the innovative capacity in large-scale companies ”, Technovation , Vol. 27 No. 3 , pp. 105 - 114 .

Kotter , J.P. and Heskett , J.L. ( 1992 ), Corporate Culture and Performance , Free Press , New York, NY .

Kraśnicka , T. , Głód , W. and Wronka-Pośpiech , M. ( 2018 ), “ Management innovation, pro-innovation organisational culture and enterprise performance: testing the mediation effect ”, Review of Managerial Science , Vol. 12 No. 3 , pp. 737 - 769 .

Lau , C.M. and Ngo , H.Y. ( 1996 ), “ One country many cultures: organizational cultures of firms of different country origins ”, International Business Review , Vol. 5 No. 5 , pp. 469 - 486 .

Lau , C.-M. and Ngo , H.-Y. ( 2004 ), “ The HR system, organizational culture, and product innovation ”, International Business Review , Vol. 13 No. 6 , pp. 685 - 703 .

Lavine , M. ( 2014 ), “ Paradoxical leadership and the competing values framework ”, The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science , Vol. 50 No. 2 , pp. 189 - 205 .

Li , H. and Atuahene-Gima , K. ( 2001 ), “ Product innovation strategy and the performance of new technology ventures in China ”, Academy of Management Journal , Vol. 44 No. 6 , pp. 1123 - 1134 .

Lin , H.-E. , McDonough , E. , Lin , S.-J. and Lin , C. ( 2013 ), “ Managing the exploitation/exploration paradox: the role of a learning capability and innovation ambidexterity ”, Journal of Product Innovation Management , Vol. 30 No. 2 , pp. 262 - 278 .

Lorenz , E. and Lundvall , B.A. ( 2006 ), How Europe’s Economies Learn: Coordinating Competing Models , Oxford University Press , Oxford .

Luk , C. , Yau , O. , Sin , L. , Tse , A. , Chow , R. and Lee , J. ( 2008 ), “ The effects of social capital and organizational innovativeness in different institutional contexts ”, Journal of International Business Studies , Vol. 39 No. 4 , pp. 589 - 612 .

Lundy , O. and Cowling , A. ( 1996 ), Strategic Human Resource Management , Routledge , London .

McLaughlin , P. , Bessant , J. and Smart , P. ( 2008 ), “ Developing an organizational culture that facilitates radical innovation ”, Inter-national Journal of Technology Management , Vol. 44 Nos 3-4 , pp. 298 - 323 .

McLean , L.D. ( 2005 ), “ Organizational culture’s influence on creativity and innovation: a review of the literature and implications for human resource development ”, Advances in Developing Human Resources , Vol. 7 No. 2 , pp. 226 - 246 .

Martins , E.C. and Terblanche , F. ( 2003 ), “ Building organizational culture that stimulates creativity and innovation ”, European Journal of Innovation Management , Vol. 6 No. 1 , pp. 64 - 74 .

Miron , E. , Erez , M. and Naveh , E. ( 2004 ), “ Do personal characteristics and cultural values that promote innovation, quality, and efficiency compete or complement each other? ”, Journal of Organizational Behavior , Vol. 25 No. 2 , pp. 175 - 199 .

Mumford , M. ( 2000 ), “ Managing creative people: strategies and tactics for innovation ”, Human Resource Management Review , Vol. 10 No. 3 , pp. 313 - 351 .

Nakata , C. and Di Benedetto , C.A. ( 2012 ), “ Forward to the future: the new knowledge needed to advance NPD-innovation theory and practice ”, Journal of Product Innovation Management , Vol. 29 No. 3 , pp. 341 - 343 , available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-5885.2012.00903.x .

Naranjo-Valencia , J.C. , Jiménez-Jiménez , D. and Sanz-Valle , R. ( 2016 ), “ Studying the links between organizational culture, innovation, and performance in Spanish companies ”, Revista Latinoamericana de Psicología , Vol. 48 No. 1 , pp. 30 - 41 .

Nazarian , A. , Atkinson , P. and Foroudi , P. ( 2017 ), “ Influence of national culture and balanced organizational culture on the hotel industry’s performance ”, International Journal of Hospitality Management , Vol. 63 , pp. 22 - 32 .

Ngo , H.Y. and Loi , R. ( 2008 ), “ Human resource flexibility, organizational culture and firm performance: an investigation of multinational firms in Hong Kong ”, The International Journal of Human Resource Management , Vol. 19 No. 9 , pp. 1654 - 1666 .

O’Reilly , C.A. III , Chatman , J.A. and Caldwell , D.F. ( 1991 ), “ People and organization culture: a profile comparison approach to assessing person-organization fit ”, Academy of Management Journal , Vol. 34 No. 3 , pp. 487 - 516 .

OECD and EUROSTAT ( 2005 ), Guidelines for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data: Oslo Manual , 3rd ed. , Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development and Statistical Office of the European Communities , Paris .

Padilla-Meléndez , A. and Garrido-Moreno , A. ( 2012 ), “ Open innovation in universities: what motivates researchers to engage in knowledge transfer exchanges? ”, International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour & Research , Vol. 18 No. 4 , pp. 417 - 439 .

Prajogo , D. ( 2006 ), “ The relationship between innovation and business performance: a comparative study between manufacturing and service firms ”, Knowledge and Process Management , Vol. 13 No. 3 , pp. 218 - 225 .

Quinn , R.E. ( 1988 ), Beyond Rational Management , Jossey-Bass management series , San Francisco, CA .

Quinn , R.E. and Spreitzer , G.M. ( 1991 ), “ The psychometrics of the competing values culture instrument and an analysis of the impact of organizational culture on quality of life ”, in Woodiman , R.W. and Pasmore , W.A. (Eds), Research in Organizational Change and Development , Vol. 5 , JAI Press , Greenwhich , pp. 115 - 142 .

Rezaei , G. , Mardani , A. , Senin , A.A. , Wong , K.Y. , Sadeghi , L. , Najmi , M. and Shaharoun , A.M. ( 2018 ), “ Relationship between culture of excellence and organizational performance in Iranian manufacturing companies ”, Total Quality Management & Business Excellence , Vol. 29 No. 12 , pp. 94 - 115 .

Robbins , S.P. ( 2001 ), Organizational Behavior , 9th ed. , Prentice Hall , New Delhi .

Roberts , P. and Amit , R. ( 2003 ), “ The dynamics of innovative activity and competitive advantage: the case of Australian retail banking (1981-1995) ”, Academy of Management Journal , Vol. 27 No. 1 , pp. 25 - 41 .

Rogers , E.M. ( 1995 ), Diffusion of Innovations , The Free Press , New York, NY .

Rosenbusch , N. , Brinckmann , J. and Bausch , A. ( 2011 ), “ Is innovation always beneficial? A meta-analysis of the relationship between innovation and performance in SMEs ”, Journal of Business Venturing , Vol. 26 No. 4 , pp. 441 - 457 .

Salimi , H.A. and Aveh , M.C. ( 2016 ), “ Relationship between organizational culture and innovation with the mediation of job enrichment in the Fars governor's staff ”, Indian Journal of Positive Psychology , Vol. 7 No. 1 , pp. 21 - 25 .

Schein , E.H. ( 1996 ), “ Culture: the missing concept in organization studies ”, Administrative Science Quarterly , Vol. 41 No. 2 , pp. 229 - 240 .

Stalk , G. , Evans , P. and Shulman , L.E. ( 1992 ), “ Competing on capabilities: the new rules of corporate strategy ”, Harvard Business Review , Vol. 70 No. 3 , pp. 57 - 69 .

Subramanian , A. and Nilakanta , S. ( 1996 ), “ Organizational innovativeness: exploring the relationship between organizational determinants of innovation, types of innovations, and measures of organizational performance ”, Omega , Vol. 24 No. 6 , pp. 631 - 647 .

Sutanto , E.M. ( 2017 ), “ The influence of organizational learning capability and organizational creativity on organizational innovation of universities in East Java, Indonesia ”, Asia Pacific Management Review , Vol. 22 No. 3 , pp. 128 - 135 .

Tellis , G.J. , Prabhu , J.C. and Chandy , R.K. ( 2009 ), “ Radical innovation across nations: the preeminence of corporate culture ”, Journal of Marketing , Vol. 73 No. 1 , pp. 3 - 23 .

Thompson , V.A. ( 1965 ), “ Bureaucracy and innovation ”, Administrative Science Quarterly , Vol. 10 No. 1 , pp. 1 - 20 .

Tseng , C.Y. , Kuo , H.Y. and Chou , S.S. ( 2008 ), “ Configuration of innovation and performance in the service industry: evidence from the Taiwanese hotel industry ”, The Service Industries Journal , Vol. 28 No. 7 , pp. 1015 - 1028 .

Tushman , M.L. and O’Reilly , C.A. ( 1997 ), Winning Through Innovation: A Practical Guide to Leading Organizational Change and Renewal , Harvard Business School Press , Boston, MA .

Uzkurt , C. , Kumar , R. , Semih Kimzan , H. and Eminoğlu , G. ( 2013 ), “ Role of innovation in the relationship between organizational culture and firm performance ”, European Journal of Innovation Management , Vol. 16 No. 1 , pp. 92 - 117 .

Wallach , E.J. ( 1983 ), “ Individuals and organizations: the cultural match ”, Training and Development Journal , Vol. 37 No. 2 , pp. 28 - 36 .

Wilderom , C. , Glunk , U. and Maslowski , R. ( 2000 ), “ Organizational culture as a predictor of organizational performance ”, in Ashkanasy , N. , Wilderom , C. and Peterson , M. (Eds), Handbook of Organizational Culture and Climate , Sage Publications , Thousand Oaks, CA , pp. 193 - 209 .

Zaltman , G. , Duncan , R. and Holbek , J. ( 1973 ), Innovations & Organizations , R.E. Krieger Publication , Malabar, FL .

Zhang , X. and Li , B. ( 2016 ), “ Organizational culture and organizational performance: a brief review ”, Journal of Advances in Social Science and Humanities , Vol. 2 No. 5 , pp. 16 - 21 .

Corresponding author

Related articles, we’re listening — tell us what you think, something didn’t work….

Report bugs here

All feedback is valuable

Please share your general feedback

Join us on our journey

Platform update page.

Visit emeraldpublishing.com/platformupdate to discover the latest news and updates

Questions & More Information

Answers to the most commonly asked questions here

IMAGES

  1. (PDF) A review paper on organizational culture and organizational

    research paper on organizational culture pdf

  2. (PDF) The Connection between National Culture and Organizational

    research paper on organizational culture pdf

  3. (PDF) Organizational Culture and Organizational Performance

    research paper on organizational culture pdf

  4. (PDF) 2) ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE AND ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT

    research paper on organizational culture pdf

  5. (PDF) Organizational Culture

    research paper on organizational culture pdf

  6. (PDF) The impact of organizational culture on knowledge sharing

    research paper on organizational culture pdf

VIDEO

  1. Organizational Behavior: Organizational Culture

  2. Quick Study: Who's to Blame?

  3. BBA 1st semester Organizational Behaviour previous year Question paper

  4. MGT502 (Organizational Behavior) Midterm Paper Spring 2023-Set 2-Tips & Tricks for Paper Preparation

  5. MGT502(Organizational Behavior) Midterm Paper Spring 2023 -Set 1-Tips & Tricks for Paper Preparation

  6. National Culture's Impact on Organizational Behavior: A Global Perspective

COMMENTS

  1. (PDF) ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE

    Organizational culture involves values and attitudes that "contribute to an organization's. unique social and psychological environment." According to Needle (2004), organizational culture ...

  2. PDF Measuring Organizational Culture: Converging on Definitions and

    Culture is one of the most interdisciplinary constructs in organizational research, drawing. insights from a vast range of disciplines including anthropology, psychology, sociology, and. economics. Given the interdisciplinary nature of organizational culture, and given the often-. lamented lack of a unifying definition of culture, it is not ...

  3. PDF Research in Organizational Behavior

    of organizational culture as a research area. We then consider the impact that an early interest among practicing managers has had on the evolution of the culture construct. We review theoretical and empirical models of culture and the most salient debates, including distinctions between culture and organizational climate, whether

  4. PDF Organizational Culture and Performance

    ture and the effect of organizational culture on performance. To put our focus on organizational culture and performance in context, we briefly review neighboring research. First, there is a growing literature on how large-scale and slow-moving aspects of culture can affect correspondingly large-scale and slow-moving economic activi-

  5. PDF Cultures of Genius at Work: Organizational Mindsets Predict Cultural

    When organizational mindsets and cultural norms permeate a company, research suggests that employees will work to embody these core beliefs and cultural norms so they will be positively evaluated and can reap the rewards of the setting (Berson et al., 2008; Kotter & Heckett, 1992; Murphy & Dweck, 2010). Furthermore, people are more likely to ...

  6. PDF Research in Organizational Behavior

    Worry at work: How organizational culture promotes anxiety. Organizational culture profoundly influences how employees think and behave. Established research suggests that the content, intensity, consensus, and t of cultural norms act as a social control system for fi attitudes and behavior.

  7. PDF Unpacking Organizational Culture

    Two examples demonstrate the way in which the three perspectives reveal a multiperspective view of organizational culture. First, in a study of employees in a federal agency, Hylmö and Buzzanell's (2002) use of integration, differentiation, and fragmenta-tion perspectives revealed a paradox.

  8. (PDF) Organizational culture and effectiveness: A study of values

    We apply Quinn and Rohrbaugh's (1983) competing values framework (CVF) as an organizing taxonomy to meta-analytically test hypotheses about the relationship between 3 culture types and 3 major indices of organizational effectiveness (employee attitudes, operational performance [i.e., innovation and product and service quality], and financial performance).

  9. Full article: How changing organizational culture can enhance

    For example, Naranjo-Valenciaa, Jiménez-Jimén and Sanz-Valle (Citation 2016) studied organizational culture types in Spanish companies and linked them to innovation in general. In another study, Hogan and Coote (Citation 2014) did the same but using a different organizational culture model. Although those studies were partially successful in ...

  10. PDF A Review Paper on Organizational Culture and Organizational Performance

    The use of organizational cultural practice to assess organizational culture was supported by Hofstede (1990); House et al., (2004); Pfeffer (1997), and Wilderom (1998). The objective of this review paper is to highlight the definition, conceptualization, and measurement of organizational culture and organizational performance. It also ...

  11. PDF ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE & EMPLOYEE BEHAVIOR

    3.4 Organizational culture and organizational behavior 16 3.5 Advantages organizational culture has on behavior 17 4 CASE STUDY 19 4.1 Case Overview 19 4.2 Organizational culture 19 4.2.1 Symbols 20 4.2.2 Rituals 21 4.2.3 Values 23 4.3 Culture dimensions measurement 23 4.3.1 Power distance 24 4.3.2 Individualism and collectivism 25

  12. PDF Organizational Behavior and Development Michael Beer Harvard University

    organizational behavior/culture, how organizational behavior/culture affects organizational performance and what is known about how managers can respond to misalignment with ... Another body of research and theory argues for the view that managers make choices based on cultural and political dimensions of their environment. National culture ...

  13. [PDF] Organisational culture and leadership

    Leadership and culture in organisations. A. Bryman. Business, Sociology. 1989. Public sector managers talk of the need for cultural change in their organisations, but organisational culture is a concept which needs careful analysis. Promoting cultural change requires…. Expand. 12.

  14. PDF Organizational Culture

    Organizational Culture: Research Paper: 6: Company values are closely related to culture and are typically an articulation of what is : important to the organization. However, many organizations espouse a set of values based on those they would like to have, not necessarily those that are current and manifest in the

  15. Organizational Climate and Culture

    Organizational climate and organizational culture theory and research are reviewed. The article is first framed with definitions of the constructs, and preliminary thoughts on their interrelationships are noted. Organizational climate is briefly defined as the meanings people attach to interrelated bundles of experiences they have at work. Organizational culture is briefly defined as the basic ...

  16. Impact of Organizational Culture on the Effectiveness of Organizations

    A research paper published by O'Riordan titled "Organizational Culture and The Public Service" strongly recommended that service organizations, very particularly, the public service and managers, need to have an appreciation of whether a failure to achieve strategic objectives or performance targets is related to organizational culture.

  17. Organizational Culture and Performance: Evidence From Microfinance

    In the wider ethnographic sense, culture relates to the complex whole encompassing knowledge, beliefs, art, ethical habits, and customs acquired by human beings through implicit education and socialization in the society (Geertz, 1973).Although several definitions of organizational culture have been proposed by researchers (Harris, 1998; Hofstede, 1980; Sathe, 1985; Schein, 1999), the basic ...

  18. Organizational culture, innovation and performance: a study from a non

    Innovation and performance. Research has found that innovation plays a significant role in organization performance (Higgins, 1995; Hult et al., 2004).Organizations able to innovate are more capable to deliver new products and services, improve processes in a faster way to fit the market's needs and capitalize on opportunities better than non-innovative organizations (Jiménez-Jiménez et al ...