Interview Questions for Managers

All job sectors require managers.

Meaning that the ‘management’ job role is one of the most commonly advertised job roles, globally. The ‘manager’ position includes varying levels of leadership roles:

  • Team leader/supervisor
  • Team manager
  • Project manager
  • Area Manager/head of department
  • Senior manager
  • Business owners, Director, CEOs, etc

Even with management positions being in demand, competition for leadership roles is tough.

Some roles may require industry-related experience and knowledge, while other employers focus the job interview criteria entirely on management skills, as the manager skill/experience is transferable across job sectors.

Depending on the advertised position, an employer may require a leadership and management qualification. And some roles require specific training such as a Prince2 for a project management role.

But not always. Having a large number of sector experience is enough to move onto the management career ladder or possessing many years of managerial experience can outweigh a leadership certificate.

What is key, is to be viewed as one of the strong job interview identities. Being perceived as lacking confidence and/or a low level of industry or managerial competencies can only end with a job interview rejection.

Successful interviewees normally have one of the following four interview identities:

The Management Job Interview Process

As a general rule of thumb, a supervisor or team leader interview will consist of a single panel interview.

Middle management recruitment processes will often have a structured job interview followed by an informal interview.

For senior leadership roles, the employer is willing to spend more time, money and energy into the hiring of a suitable applicant (as the salaries and responsibilities for a high skilled position demand a detailed analysis of all applicants). Human resource departments, therefore, will design a full-day recruitment process:

In the main, all managerial and leadership interviews, for all levels of job role, will be undertaken by a panel of interviewers.

The panel interview is designed to reduce the effect of an unconscious bias, creating a fair interview process based on managerial competencies alone.

Panel interviews are often made up of:

  • A member of the HR (human resource) team
  • A senior staff member – often the managers direct manager (once appointed)
  • A department team member – to ensure the level of industry knowledge

Increasingly, employers recruiting for managerial and leadership roles will outsource the recruitment of senior managers to an external specialist interviewing company.

The panel interview consists of around 10 managerial job interview questions – see below. And last for around 60 minutes.

This will be in the format of a structured job interview – every applicant will be asked the same job interview questions and answers will be cross-referenced against a job interview scorecard.

Interview presentations, commonly, take 15 minutes including a 5 minute Q&A session. Employers may give advance warning of a presentation, allowing an applicant to prepare their presentation in advance of the job interview. But some employers will state the presentation task on the day of the job interview giving candidates 10 minute notice period to prepare.

Tip – Always prepare for a potential presentation for all managerial job interviews

Group interviews are designed to observe soft skills; communication, teamwork, problem-solving and of course, for managerial roles, leadership skills.

The team task is often observed by several interviewers, all of whom will make notes on each group member. The recruitment team will view applicants’ temperament – who took the lead, did the applicant demonstrate an authoritative management approach or a laissez-faire management style?

The group task section last around 20 minutes, but can be up top 45 minutes in duration.

Roleplay. Increasingly popular, especially when the recruitment process is conducted by an outsourced interview company. The roleplay is seen as a vital step in the recruitment process.

For a management position, the 20 minute role-play is often an actor playing the part of a disgruntled team leader attending an appraisal or meeting. The actor will attempt to disrupt the meeting by stating that they need to get back to work due to an urgent deadline.

Employers observe the applicant’s response to the situation focusing on the candidate’s ability to work under pressure, their communication skills, creating authority, reasoning and remaining professional.

For many managerial candidates, this is the hardest test during the whole recruitment process and requires preparation and practice. Practice can be undertaken with a job interview coach.

Informal job interviews are often the last section of a recruitment process. Unlike the structured job interview where each candidate is asked the same questions, in an informal job interview (sometimes referred to as an unstructured job interview) employers generate questions based on the flow of the conversation that happens in the moment.

The idea here is for the interviewer to get to know the applicant; their personality, values, and leadership style.

This section of the interview is often a 1-2-1 talk with the potential employees future line manager and takes around 45 minutes to complete.

How to pass a managerial level job interview

Each of the various job interview sections for a managerial or leadership recruitment process is designed to check suitability. Employers look for:

  • How the applicant’s temperament and managerial style fits in with the company culture
  • The candidates level of managerial competencies – their knowledge and experience for leadership roles
  • What added value each applicant can bring to the organisation, if recruited
  • If required, their level of sector knowledge
  • And, their level of confidence which is vital for any level of managerial job role

In short; level of knowledge and experience vs level of confidence. Which, together, create an ‘interview identity’.

To pass a management job interview applicants need to out-score the competition by confidently communicating their competencies.

High scoring job interview answers, for management job interviews, are gained through:

  • Stating managerial models and theories as this shows understanding for the achievement of KPIs (key performance indicators) and project objectives
  • Using real-life examples for problem-solving and technical interview questions as this evidences competencies
  • Stating skills and experiences with confidence, using varied language approach which, research shows, increase authority
  • Framing all answers in a solution-focused approach to build likeability
  • Using management speak as language is associated with ability

Commonly Asked Interview Questions for Managers

Shortly, I will give you an explanation of how to approach key mangerial job interview questions.

First, the most commonly asked (generic) job interview questions can be found here: how to ace the job interview.

The management job interview is split into 3 sections:

  1. About you
  2. Management style and experience
  3. Skills and qualities

About you – interview questions

‘Why did you apply for this role?’

‘Tell me about your experience and how it relates to this position?’

‘What motivates you?’

‘About you’ questions are asked at the interview start, as an ‘ice-breaker’ question to help applicants relax into the job interview.

It is also a way for an employer to better understand the applicant and to assess them against the culture of the company, and their values.

Management style and experience – interview questions

‘How would you describe your management and leadership style?’

‘Give an example of managing a project from the initial conception stages to completion – what barriers did you face and how did you overcome these?’

‘Tell me about a time you have had to motivate an unmotivated team member?’

‘Have you ever had to deal with conflict within a team?’

Under the experience section, for some employers, interviewees will also be asked industry technical questions: ‘how would you (job duty)?’

Skills and qualities – interview questions

‘What management system are you familiar with?’

‘How do you prioritise tasks?’

‘Give an example of collaborating with a influential stakeholder?’

‘Which management tools do you utilise to achieve a project outcome?’

‘What is your approach to a stressful situation?’

Example answers to manager interview questions

In this final section, we have chosen some of the most commonly asked managerial job interview questions, breaking down each question to support applicants to create high scoring answers.

Tip – each employer requires a unique set of criteria. By identifying the job criteria helps in the creation of high scoring answers

Each answer is a guide. The successful interviewee will be able to take each example answer, editing this so it is relevant to their own experience.

Give an overview of your managerial experience?

The ‘overview’ question can be worded as:

  • ‘Tell me how your skills and experience suit this position?’
  • ‘Why have you applied for this role?’
  • ‘Can you introduce yourself, focusing on your key achievements?

Each question, no matter how the employer states the question, is an open question. This allows the applicant a free-range in their approach to the question.

Often asked as the initial interview question, the interviewee doesn’t need to detail specific examples of technical knowledge. Rather this question should be seen as a mood-setter.

A mood-setter is created from the frame of the response. Generally speaking, applicants will be viewed as a person of interest or as a time waste, employable or unsuitable, knowledgable or lacking competencies.

The mood-setter is the filter the employer uses for the remainder of the interview. For a positive ‘interview identity’ employers will isten more intently, whereas for a negative perception, teh employer will be wanting to end the interveiw quickly.

It is therefore important to answer the ‘overview’ question by creating interigue.

Interigue, in a job interview, is created by getting the employer excited about:

  • Duration in the industry; duration is associated with competencies
  • Qualification level; high levels of qualification is linked to perceived knowledge
  • Unique selling point; possessing an industry skill, that others don’t, is viewed as valuable (or profitable)

The interview formula is: Duration X qualification X USP

‘As a highly experienced manager specialising in (add USP) I can utilise my (duration as a manager/working in the industry) to (2nd USP) Qualified in (add highest qual level) I am able to use (knowledge) to (state outcome). In all my previous roles I have been able to (add 3rd USP)’

A unique selling point can relate to:

  • Change management
  • Turning around underperforming teams
  • System changes to reduce on-cost
  • Increasing profit
  • Improving staff retention
  • Decreasing overheads
  • Breaking into new markets
  • Taking a business global
  • Achievement of strategic outcomes
  • Project management
  • Operational planning

How would you prioritise tasks?

The common mistake mangers make during a job interview is by answering questions with a signal answer.

Stating various facts, processes, examples highlights a wealth of knowledge required for senior managerial roles.

The ‘priority’ interview question is a good example of this.

‘How would you priorities tasks?’ can be asked in the following ways:

  • ‘What is you approach to time-management?’
  • ‘How do you organise your workload?’
  • ‘Which time-management tools do you utilise?’

In many cases, the interviewee will state a tool or give an example. The answer meets the criteria and receives a medium score. Job offers, though, are offered to high scoring applicants.

Embedded into the answer should be reference to time management models, discussions around the appropriateness of tools and techniques, depending on the task/project and a summary of generic tools that may be required on the interview scorecard.

As an example an applicant may explain the Pareto Principle: 80-20 Rule. Vilfredo Pareto, an Italian economist, observed that 80% of the land in Italy was owned by 20% of the population. Later this same 80/20 rule was applied within the context of the workplace, where it was suggested that only 20% of your time (effort) is used to complete 80% of key task (results). “The Pareto Principle states that for many phenomena 80% of the output or consequences are produced by 20% of the input or causes” (Dunford et al., 2014).

Or an explant ion of the Time Management Matrix can be given to explain how you decide the order of completing tasks.

The time management matrix explains how task can be distributed into 4 quadrants, with each quadrant indicating the importance of the task.

Q1 Urgent/ important – includes upcoming deadlines, firefighting task, unforeseen problems. It is these task that need completing in the current moment as putting these off can result in a negative result IE not achieving a timebound KPI

Q2 Non-Urgent/Important – in this section you would collate long term projects, relationship building and all task that are key to the organisations or projects success but need a period of time to achieve

Q3 Urgent/non-important – includes low level emails (reminders to request a staff member to complete a task they are already aware of) meetings and general communications. These task, if many, can eat into the time need for actions in quadrant 1 & 2 Many of these task should be automated or delegated

Q4 Non-urgent/Non-important – task here are often a reason you give to yourself because you are procrastinating on another task.  Many of the task here such as checking social media, should be deleted giving you additional time for other actions

Or an in-depth breakdown of a well sued tool can be explained, such as Diary Management.

The use of diary management can support a leader to manage their time which then improves the ability to undertake their role due to a reduction in stress “time management models and theories should be designed to focus on improving management skills and reducing psychological stress resulting from untimely completion of responsibilities and task” (Jinalee and Singh, 2018)

If a manager has works in an environment where they have to attend various meetings and events, as well as having timeframes for completing various task, using a comprehensive diary management system can assist in the self-management of workloads.

The use of the recurring appointments feature on calendars can save time and proactively manage time, tentative and confirmation of meetings ensures that you aren’t double booked and the use of a colour coding system allows a manger to easily see, when reviewing the month ahead, the types of task and their allocated time for upcoming appointments.

The diary can also need used to collect data, including time spent, to reflect on their self-management and to change processes to reduce time spent on important tasks.

It doesn’t matter which tools and models are stated, what is important is to show understanding of several models.

Example Answer

‘Time management, for me, is more than filling 8hrs of a working day with 8hrs worth of task. Instead managing time is a process of making the most of the time given in a day. If for example I had two completing deadlines I would (add time management model 1). When I review reoccurring business as usual tasks I (add time management model 2). In addition to these I use diary-management, automation, delegation and to-do list which always result in a high standard of work being completed on time.’

Give an example of working with stakeholders?

Stakeholders are groups of people who have a certain stake in the organisation “..stakeholders are those individuals or groups that depend on an organisation to fulfil their own goals and on whom, in turn, the organisation depends” (Johnson, Whittington and Scholes, n.d.) and come in various forms from a supplier, partner, customer, shareholder, government, unions, community members and managers, to name a few, and can be an organisation, social group or individual. Stakeholders can be internal or external. 

To make an interview relevant, answer the ‘stakeholder’ question by giving an example of working with a stakeholder that the new company would collaborate with on a regular basis.

During the answer a manager needs to explain the complexities of working with stakeholders:

Each stakeholder has their own agenda and their own level of influence. A stakeholder can affect a business, this as an example could be in the form of a protest due to moral rights or a trade union going on strike, or be affected by a business – employees not being paid due to the organization going into liquidation.

In the sense the relationship between a stakeholder(s) and the organisation are intertwined. Managers then have to be aware of all stakeholders not just shareholders that often have a larger influence, and project how their actions could have wider implications on individual stakeholders “they argue that the role of management is to balance these stakeholder needs rather than simply focus on shareholders” (Henry, 2018)

Stakeholder Matrix

Stakeholders all have different impact on an organisation. It is useful to be aware of the influence of each stakeholder. This can be achieved by using a stakeholder power/influence matrix (Mendelow 1991)

Power is the influence in the organisation a stakeholder has. And, interest refers to a stakeholder’s willingness to influence “it is important therefore to understand the power different stakeholders have and their their likely attention to issues” (Johnson, Whittington and Scholes, n.d.)

High Power, Low InterestHigh Power, High Interest
Low Power, Low InterestLow Power, High Interest
Stakeholder Matrix

The influence and interest of each stakeholder can vary depending on the task, project. In this sense, the mapping of stakeholders is always fluid and it should not be presumed that a stakeholder who didn’t act on one point of the organisations business wouldn’t then act on another “even where stakeholders have low interest, they can be moved into a high-interest space by their response to activities the company engages in that are attracting unwanted media attention” (Henry, 2018)

To answer the stakeholders question, split the reply down into three sections:

  1. List relevant stakeholders
  2. Explain the stakeholder matrix theory
  3. Give a real-life example

Example answer:

‘I know that the key stakeholders for this organisation will be (list stakeholders) When working with a stakeholder it is important to understand where they sit on the ‘stakeholder matrix’. For this I review each stakeholders level of power vs interest as this helps to predict their reactions to new projects, changes and communications. Therefore, allowing me to change my approach to create a successful outcome. An example of this was (add 1) situation 2) actions 3) outcome.’

Evolve the mind book on Amazon

What is your approach to project management?

Businesses have two ways of working, business as usual (working on current processes to create the businesses output) and via projects (a new change that requires a new set of processes. Projects are temporary but can become business as usual)

When asked about ‘project management’ the employer needs a manger who possess the ability to take on, and achieve, a new challenge.

The same question can be asked in the following forms, often depending on much project management is required for the advertised role:

  • ‘Explain your understanding of project management?’
  • ‘Give an example of managing a success project?’
  • ‘What do you need to consider when starting a new project?’

For a project management interview, all questions will relate to the management of projects. For none-PM job roles there will only one or two questions relating to this topic.

The answer should be a detailed version of the following steps:

  • Receiving and analysing a project brief
  • Benefits and risks
  • Cost of the project (and risk of overspend)
  • Timescale vs quality of output (including quality check processes0
  • Project scope
  • Creating work packages
  • Communications

Example answer:

‘I have managed many projects. When I receive a project brief from a (stakeholder) I breakdown the desired objectives into the working tasks (give an example relevant to your sector) Prior to taking on a new project I will the benefits vs risk, often utislising lessons learnt from previous projects. I also consider timescales and how quality processes will be implemented. One of the key questions is the scope of the project – if and where there is flexibility. An example of this would be (add example). Once the project has been accepted and then break tasks down into work packages. This includes a communication plan, setting up training if required and a project launch. ‘

How you approach the process of a culture change within an organisation?

The ‘change’ question is very popular as industries, due to globalization and rapid changing technical, including AI, results in operational models’ needing to be adapted to satay competitive.

More information of managing organisational change can be found here: organisational change

Operational management is the planning, organisation, implementation and reviewing of process to support an organisation to achieve its own KPIs. According to Bartol et al (1998), operations management “Is the function, or field of expertise, that is primarily responsible for managing the production and delivery of an organisation’s products and services.”

There are 3 commonly used operational management theories.

BPR – Business Process Redesign. 

BPR is the process of redesigning (rather than just tweaking) an organisations processes, designed to reduce overheads and increase profit.  In a fast paced world where technology advances at a rapid rate it is easy for a business, without realising, to find themselves pushed out of a competitive market.

For many years, the company yellow pages had a monopoly on the world of small business marketing. Each home in the UK was given a free annual copy of the yellow pages which advertised a wide range of local businesses. By the 90’s most households had access to the internet and search engines such as Google were fast becoming to go to for the general public to search for local businesses and services. Yellow pages were becoming a thing of the past. To stay competitive the yellow pages created yell.com an online version of the yellow pages. This required a complete overall of the business process which lead the company no longer offering a printed directory. Other businesses were slow to react to the massive and often quick changes created by technology and online systems. HMV dominated the high street music business but as more customers moved to the music download system HMV missed out on an opportunity to remain competitive in this new music era. Due to not drastically redesigning their operational process HMV started to have reduced sales, reduced business and reduced profits.

BPR is the overhaul of a business’s current processes, designed to make the business more efficient by reducing cost, automating systems and making staff (or machines) more productive. The redesign of a business’s processes can lead to staff lay-offs, disruption in the current flow of producing outputs and can have an expensive initial outlay. But when successful the BPR system will eventually increase profits.

Six Sigma

Six Sigma is a quality controlled process with a focus on increasing profit by following a 5 step quality control process system.

Six sigma is designed to reduce waste and defects in essence increasing output with a reduction in errors. Six sigma looks to use tools and methods to source dependable and reusable data. It states that a business process that produces less than 3.4 defects per 1 million chances is efficient and therefore anything outside of this is a defect.

To begin six sigma ask for a six sigma champion to lead a team to achieve a specific goal by analyzing the current practices, objectives and by identifying a faulty process. The team then analysis’s the current performance reviewing all inputs. Each input is then isolated and reviewed to see if the specific input is causing an error, thus identifying all input errors. Once an error(s) is identified the team will work to improve the process and adds controls to monitor and review the input and process.

After being introduce in the 1980s six sigma is highly recognized as a quality control methodology to increase output and reduce errors, which has led to an industry received qualifications (similar to how prince2 has become a recognized certificate for project management) Six sigma uses data to recognize the error before a team of practitioners solve the problem and embed a quality assurance process to reduce future errors.

Lean Manufacturing

Lean manufacturing is wide spread across a vast range of industries which shows the diversity and impact of these operational management theory. 

Lean can be broken down into 3 stages; deliver values from a customer perspective, eliminate waste and continuous improvement (work, processes, people and purpose).

Lean has continued to evolve and develop overtime resulting in 5 common principles;

  1. Identify value. Customers purchasing a product or service that gives them value, something that allows them to solve a problem. As a business you need to think about your customer – what problem do they have? What solution do they require? What value can you add? By identifying the value you can create processes to achieve the desired customer value.
  2. Value stream mapping. Stage 2 is reflection, here you review current processes to identify what works and what doesn’t add value. At this stage you dig deep reviewing all aspects of the processes from input to output. This reflection stage allows an organization to understand how different teams have different influences in the process. If one team has an abundance of downtime is this due to their work ethic or a hitch in the production line? Process reviews may allow you to understand feedback loops; team A identify and report a gap, but how is this actioned? Who is responsible for checking the gap, who is responsible for the quality check and who is responsible for managing the situation? Any identified steps that don’t bring value can be eliminated from the process.
  3. Stage 3 looks at creating a continuous workflow. Embedding a process takes time but the end results can increase production and profits by having the whole team running a smooth well implement system that adds value at all stages. Each stage can be reviewed, created and implemented which allows organizations to look at specific areas of the process before looking at the whole process (which has too many elements to fully ensure value). Chunking a large process down into smaller chunks allows an origination to check for potential potholes, and to remedy these proactively rather than reactively. With an established workflow system you can now move on to the 4th stage creating pull
  4. Stage 4 creating a pull (or move away from making and storing goods in advance of orders to creating an on demand service). This system requires flexibility but also have cost saving benefits (especially for organizations to create physical products) An on-demand system allows customers to “pull” products on request. An example is on-demand book printing. Stage 4 can allow the organization to be flexible with their inputs.
  5. The final stage, stage 5, creates the everlasting cycle – continuous improvement. In lean you do not simply create a strong process and run it across the organization before sitting back and waiting for the profit sheet, instead you continuous review, amend and improve processes whenever you can. Here you can aim for perfection, and sometimes a small tweak can add tremendous value. Systematically you may review and amend process (using steps 1-4), or use employee and customer feedback to change your way of working, embed new technology and get rid of once good processes that no longer add value.

Example answer:

‘In my previous role the company undertake a change in terms of its (add values, customer market, product, processes) Leading on the change process I followed the (change process model) To begin (add detail) The barrier was (add potential problems) I solved this by (detail) which resulted in (positive outcome).’

How would you create a high-performing team?

For all managerial job interview questions there will be a question(s) around leadership and managerial style. Some will be specific like the ‘creation of a high performing team?’ or a question on ‘recruitment processes’ but may will be generic leadership questions.

  • ‘What is your preferred leadership style?’
  • ‘How do you motivate a team?’
  • ‘Are you a manager or a leader?’

To give a detailed answer it is important to understand leadership theories.

All people, including leaders, have a natural way of working often defined by their temperament. Being motivated or stressed can change the way you manage people (and yourself.)

A natural leadership style will creative a supportive environmental for people who naturally respond well to this leadership style or on task/actions that suit the leadership environment created by the manager.

But due to the difference in team members personality makeup, the various task and actions individuals are required to complete (compared to having one set task) and if there is a set timeframe(s), managers need to adopt a combination of leadership approaches, choosing the correct managerial leadership style to implement for specific projects or vary the way they manage and motivate individual staff members, based on the way that team member needs to be led. Peter  G Northhouse (Practice et al., 2019) explains that leadership is a process whereby an individual influences a group of individuals to achieve a common goal.

Hersey and Blanchard (Investopedia, 2019) talk about the leadership curve and how depending readiness of employees, the task and the relationship effects the maturity of those being led. An example of this is a new employee with a lack of experience which effects their confidence. They explain that a leader should mold their managerial style throughout 4 styles; delegating, participating, selling and telling to suit the employee. A staff member who needs managing in one style as a norm, may need a different leadership style depending on the circumstances (staff redundancy effecting moral, as an example)

Some organisations will adopt a top-down environment; the company will be operated my way. The recruitment process and company values will represent the desired environment and employees who work well under this management style will flourish, whereas other employees will often move on effecting staff retention at the initial change process period.

Other organisations will adopt a leadership style that is aimed to be supportive to employees, with a goal to improve staff retention thus improving output. The supportive leadership style is aimed are leading people in the best way that a particular individual can be led. The skills approach model explains that there a distinct skill set; conceptual – the big picture, how task, teams fit into the organisation as a whole, human – cooperative  team member and technical – process, method, procedure or technical driven activities (Schedlitzki and Edwards, n.d.)

The model goes on to explain how a senior manager spends more time on strategic activities; planning and organizing (conceptual). Whereas middle managers spend more time supervising (human)

Leadership styles

The first leadership style we will look at is the Autocratic leadership style. This is a “do it my way or the highway” leadership style. It excels in industries that have high output through repetitious actions and falls down in creative industries. As a controlled leadership style it doesn’t allow for innovation from its employees, instead it uses well used practices and instils stick procedures. It is a perfect leadership style for sectors or situations that need immediate actions such as armed forces, environmental disaster response teams and even in high stressed jobs such as financial markets.  The autocratic leader is rarely liked but can be respected and/or feared. Fearing a leader can seem a strange want, but fear can be a tool for producing results, as the employee is motivated to achieve a target rather the face the wrath of the autocratic manager. This leadership style in the wrong industry can result in massive staff turnover which has a direct effect on profits.

Going to the other extreme our next leadership style, Laissez-Faire, is a more open, flexible and creative leadership style. This leadership style works well with motivated and experienced teams who can use creativity to achieve results. The lack of structure and day to day leadership can be demoralising for some, but other employees find the freedom liberating and excel using their own skill base, rather than following a set process, to achieve the project objective. Often small teams, family companies will adopt the Laissez-Faire approach as a small team, compared to a multi-layered team, often feel emotional connected to company, as if they are one of the family. When having to react to a problem, the Laissez-Faire leader can fall down, as having to react quickly to a serious situation of requires a strong forceful leader that gets result, and gets results quickly.

Along the same lines, but not as laid-back as Laissez-Faire, is the Paternalistic leadership style. This leadership style recognises that collectively a team has a larger pool of resources, tools and experiences. The Paternalistic sees themselves as a head of a family, but unlike Laissez-Faire, they make the decision as does the Autocratic leader. This leadership style encourages loyalty, trust and obedience. The paternalistic leader communicate in a way to get employees to action willingly.

A democratic leader is a delegating leader.  They like staff to take the responsibility and to feel empowered. The democratic manager wants to get task completed, they will communicate the vision, listen to ideas from the team and encourage them (the staff) to take action – they encourage leadership in others. This style works well with staff working in outreach where the employee doesn’t have direct daily contact with a line manager. But for an employee who values constant direction and support this style can be highly demotivating and can lead to costly mistakes as the manger has a hands-off approach. Another downside to this leadership style is the manager can take too much time coming to a decisions, as they take on-board each team members opinion  which is some situations, long term projects can be effective, but with short deadline task a quick and decisive decision may be required.

In the job interview, an applicant needs to show an understanding of leadership styles, the impact on employees and how they adopt approaches depending on culture and duties or an organization.

”To be effective, a leader must therefore match his/her behaviour to the situation he/she faces”  (Schedlitzki and Edwards, n.d.)

Situational leadership theory contains 4 behavioral styles

Directing – this is a directive approach, where clear detailed communication and processes are used to ensure a key objective. An example of this would be working within the arm forces

Coaching – here the leader gives guidance in a directive way but also has a focused on employees needs and motivation.  This style works well on complex task and within a matrix management structure

Supporting – when an employee(s) knowledge and skills are key to achieving goals. The leader will use their people skills to support and motivate the team. This style can be seen in retail or the voluntary sector

Delegating – a hands-off approach where the leader has little involvement in the day to day task. This leadership style only works with highly competent staff. You will see this style in senior managers who have a reasonability to manage managers or project managers who oversee contractors.

Example answer:

‘There isn’t one signal management style that works to create a (add relevance to the interview question IE a high-achieving team). As a strong leader I understand the value of using a top-down process for (add sector related situation) or a coaching approach when (add sector related situation). With new staff it is important to build up their confidence through taking them through the four behavioral styles as stated in ‘situational leadership theory’. With this in mind I vary my management approach depending on the ability of the team, external and internal stresses IE during a change process, and the demand of the project. An example of this is time – the duration to achieve an objective helps me to choose between an autocratic or paternalistic leadership style.’

Job Interview Advice

What personal development opportunities have you undertaken recently?

‘I’ve been reading books’

‘I volunteer’

‘I recently attended an online webinar’

These three common replies to the ‘self-development’ question are low scoring answers.

The employer isn’t look for a list of small actions you have took. Instead, the interviewer is attempting to understand your position of being a life long learner.

As with all managerial questions, it shows a high level of knowledge when you can quote related models and theories.

KOLB LEARNING CYCLE

To learn something new, the learner has to, according to Kolb (1984) go through a 4 stage cycle;

  • Experience
  • Reflection
  • Conceptualisation
  • Experimentation.

Kolb believes that each stage supports the next “The cycle encourages managers and other learners to perceive a whole process of learning and to identify those parts of the process in which – for whatever reason – individuals are dependant on or stuck in particular parts of experimental awareness” (Vince, 1998)

The experience stage allows the learner to experience something new or experience a new perspective of an existing experience. Reviewing the experience against your current understanding and looking at differences helps the learn to reflect on the learning. Conceptualization helps to build on a current idea or creates a new idea. And finally, experimentation happens as the leaner embeds their idea in business as usual. The learning cycle can be entered at any of the 4 stages, but to be fully effective the learner does need to visit is stage “The approach emphasises the importance of the synthesis between individual’s behaviour and the evaluation of their actions” (Mullins, 2005)

Within this model are 4 learning styles.

Kolb believes that individuals have different ways to learn “The research claim that an understanding of ones learning style will enhance learning effectiveness, whether as a trainee or as a tutor” (Mullins, 2005)

But the cycle doesn’t cover the importance of learning from the experience of others “regardless of how much reasonability we take for learning from our own experience and learning with others, we also still have to rely a great deal on learning from the experience of others” (Vince, 1998)

The cycle doesn’t cover how with an anxious group – fearful of making mistakes, which is common among leaners, they aren’t ready to fit within the cycle as their emotional starting point is different to that of a confident leaner “the emotions at this point can take the learning in two directions – one that promotes learning and the other that discourages it” (Vince, 1998)

Kolb states that continuums; process (approach) and perception (how we think/feel about the task) It is the combination of the two continuums that create the learner styles:

Active Experimentation (Doing)Reflective Observation (Watching)
Concrete Experience (Feeling)Accommodating (CE/AE)Diverging (CE/RO)
Abstract Conceptualization (Thinking)Converging (AC/AE)Assimilating (AC/RO)

Each of the 4 learner styles approach learning differently. There isn’t a wrong and right learner style, they just vary due to the learner’s natural preference “An integrated and effective learner will be equipped to manage all four styles, even though the learner may have a preference for one” (Mullins, 2005)

  1. Accommodating learner are the hands-on learners that use intuition and creatively. They move away from chunking down into details and us other people’s statistics before talking a practical approach to a task
  2. Diverging leaners are idea generators. They observe before use creativity to problem solve. They are more of an observer then a doer, but their strength comes from having the ability to use perspective
  3. Converging learner are practical learners who focus on technical task. They like to experiment and prefer processes then people. They can come up with ideas, theories and solutions
  4. Assimilating leaners are logical individuals who require specific details to work well. They work well with abstract formats and learn through reading and seminars. They are more practical focused then people focused

By understanding that individuals learn in different ways and reflecting on yourself and your team, you can redesign activities to have a higher impact on the distance learnt “Exploration of the cycle has helped managers to see that learning can occur either from an individual’s rationality or their emotional reality” (Vince, 1998)

Example answer:

‘I am passionate about my personal and professional development. Through my career I constantly reflect on my areas of development and look to improve my skillset. I use Kolbs learning style theory which is in 4 sections; experience, reflection, conceptualisation, experimentation. An example of this was when I (started a new job/took on new reasonability) As I (name a duty or task that you lacked skill in) I released that my knowledge in this area was lower then I though it was. I reflected on (add specific) and decided to (add learning action) which resulted in (outcome).’

Sources:

Johnson, G., Whittington, R. and Scholes, K. (n.d.). Exploring strategy. 11th ed. Pearson.

Henry, A. (2018). Understanding strategic management. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Mullins, L. and Christy, G. (2016). Management and organisational behaviour. Harlow, England: Pearson.

stakeholder collaboration building bridges for conservation. (2000). 1st ed. Washington DC: World Wildlife Fund.

Northouse, P. (n.d.). Leadership. 5th ed. sage.

Schein, E. and Schein, P. (n.d.). Organizational culture and leadership. 4th ed.

Lock, D. and Scott, L. (n.d.). Gower handbook of people in project management. 10th ed. gower.

Dunford, R., Su, Q., Tamang, E. and Wintour, A. (2014). The Pareto Principle.

Jinalee, N. and Singh, A. (2018). A descriptive study of time management models and theories.

Bartol, K. and Martin, D. (1998). Management. Boston: McGraw-Hill Co.

Slack, N., Brandon-Jones, A. and Johnston, R. (n.d.). Operations management.

Womack 1990

Cleverism. (2019). Making Your Business More Competitive with Business Process Reengineering (BPR). [online] Available at: https://www.cleverism.com/business-competitive-business-process-reengineering-bpr/ [Accessed 7 Oct. 2019].

HISTORY. (2019). Ford’s assembly line starts rolling. [online] Available at: https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/fords-assembly-line-starts-rolling [Accessed 7 Oct. 2019].

Dana, B. (2012). SWOT Analysis to Improve Quality Management Production. Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences, 62, pp.319-324.

Bxlnc.com. (2019). [online] Available at: http://bxlnc.com/download/The-Six-Sigma-Revolution.pdf [Accessed 7 Oct. 2019].

Pettinger, T. (2019). The decline of Yellow Pages | Economics Help. [online] Economicshelp.org. Available at: https://www.economicshelp.org/blog/27868/economics/the-decline-of-yellow-pages/ [Accessed 7 Oct. 2019].

How to Manage Organisational Culture

The concept of Organisational culture

Each company has its own personalised company culture, its own personality. The company culture is the attitudes and behaviours of the company and its staff members; how employees interact, make decisions and what they value. The culture of a company directs employees, directly and indirectly, on how they should behave.

Some organisations purposely, through their mission, vison, values and processes, create their desired culture, “mission relates directly to what organisations call ‘strategy’ To fulfil its manifest and latent functions, the organization evolves shared assumptions about its ‘reason to be’ and formulates long-range plans to fulfil those functions. That involves decisions about products and services and reflects what could usefully be called the ‘identity’ of the organisation (Hatch and Schultz 2004)” (Schein, 2010) This ‘visibility’ helps with, as an example, recruitment, as applicants can clearly understand the desired culture the organisation is trying to create or has created.

‘Invisible’ culture also determines how a workplace operates and the attitudes of their employees. The accumulation of business decisions, or what the company prioritise, as an example, shape the culture of the company and how employees themselves make decisions and act. 

Employees, knowing how management require them to act, can make better informed choices as the beliefs of the organisation are embedded in the strategic structure of day to day activities. “A culture is not a painted picture; it is a living process, composed of countless social interactions. Like a river whose form and velocity are determined by the balance of those forces that tend to make the water flow faster, and the friction that tends to make the water flow more slowly the cultural pattern of a people at a given time is maintained by a balance of counteracting forces.” (Lewin, 1948)

To contrast two different cultures, a top-down organisation would expect employees to follow instructions and not to question the status quo. Gordan Ramsey, who has an Authoritativemanagement style, employs a top-down approach to ensure consistency in the dishes he produces as required for the Michelins star rating hew receives for his restaurants.  His staff must follow his processes and rarely have a say in the creation of new dishes.

In contrast, a widening participation project, often utilising a matrix management model, will have customer and employees at the forefront of the decision-making process. Employees in this example, who interact with customers daily, are viewed more as partners, equals, than as a labour force that creates output.

A top down vs bottom up culture has a direct effect on employees’ motivation, stress, and what behaviours the employees can show within the workplace. Two top down companies may on the service have similar cultures but when scrutinised, differences in culture can be viewed. The fire service require staff to wear a uniform, accept risk, dress appropriately and have a certain level of fitness, compared to a bank who require honesty, profit making and professionalism.

The culture, created from the vison, values and expectations, can create differences on a smaller scale. Workplace language, as an example, can vary with ‘humour’ being allowed in the fire service as one way to release the stress of being in life threatening tasks but not seen as appropriate in the financial sector where logical and professionalism is seen as a required skill.

The traits of power culture, role culture, task culture and person culture

Handys model of organisation culture states there are 4 types of culture: power, task, person and role. The model explains the various ways a business expects the employees to make a decision.

Power culture

As an example, the power culture has a small number of ‘powerful’ (often senior leaders) making all the decisions before delegating tasks, without the opinion of employees, to teams or individuals. An army operates using this style of culture making quick rapid decisions in times of need.

Power cultures attract power hungry career professional, individuals who will take high risks – at worst people with psychopathic traits, and often an authoritative management style is part of the culture. But on the other side of the coin, an entrepreneur just starting out, having limited resources, may adopt a power culture to ensure their business is a success by following their prepared business plan.

The power culture results in quick decisive action, compared to the slower more open or shared process of a ‘task’ culture. On the opposite hand, the power culture doesn’t gain the combined knowledge, experience and input from their workforce, due to their top-down culture.

Previous examples of power cultured organisations in the financial sector has seen a lack of scrutiny in these top-down companies, as senior leadership decisions aren’t allowed to be challenged, as an example the collapse of Enron, Lehman Brothers and RBS is often said to have been affected by an embedded power culture.

Role culture

Whereas the ‘role’ culture allows individuals, who have specialised skills, creating person accountability, to make decisions based on their experience and knowledgebase.

In the construction industry, where many specialised workers are required when building a new housing estate, the role culture works well as individual skilled workers make decisions for the objectives they are set. In this way, the role culture could be seen as a mini-power culture, but the actions from decisions, in terms of workload, end with the specialised worker, compared to the power culture model where decision effect, depending on the size of the organisation, a large number of employees.

In the main, the role culture has a focus on the ‘role’ not an individual. The specialist roles are required for a successful business, with leadership given from a small leadership team. The specialist then makes the decisions by following set processes attributed to their roles; a cog in the system. 3rd sector organisations often adopt a role culture which is often successful in a steady market or when future problems/challenges can be predicted. But if a crisis was to happen, the lack of direction, leadership, and authoritative managers, as the culture attracts a more laissez-faire manager, can result in disaster. A small organisation, with a role culture, would struggle if one or mor experts left or became sick, as specialist from other roles wouldn’t have the required knowledge or experience to be of assistance in the missing ‘role’. 

Due to a lack of leadership, even when a project manager is in place, a role culture can create problems as individuals feel they need to answer to anyone but themselves. Returning to the construction example, if, for example, the electrician hasn’t accurately planned their time, or foreseen problems that delay for the duration of their task, a costly knock on effect could happen as the plasterers, painter and decorators and carpet fitters are all delayed.

Another barrier is the change process required by organisations. In a power-culture change can be rapid but in a role culture, due to the individual specialist the implementation of company change can take a longer duration and maybe challenged.

Task culture

‘Task’ culture is the formation of teams created to achieve a KPI or project objective. As a collaborative culture, specialised staff join up creating a team that contribute to the overall objective “Decision acceptance refers to the motivation and commitment of group members in implementing the decision” (Mullins, 2005) Project management often adapts this style of culture, as do matrix style management systems.

Within a project team the specialist, unlike the experts working in a role culture, come together to discuss their collaborative objective. The task or ‘team’ approaches allow shared experiences and knowledge to shape the required tasks and resources. As an example, the recent government funded NCOP programme required different stakeholders to collaborate to produce a programme of higher educational aspirational activities that would impact on the progression of high school and college pupils.

Each stakeholder had a different responsibility and ‘task’, and individually couldn’t meet the project objectives. By working together, embedding a communication plan, being clear and honest, and following a strategic plan (where tasks can be reformed, abandoned, or agreed upon), key performance indicators could be achieved. If one stakeholder failed to action their required steps to achieve their own KPI, the project could stall or even fail. Therefore, each stakeholder or team had their own expertise, operational plan, and reward system.

NASA is another example of a task culture. In the 1960s NASA, working collaboratively with several agencies who all had individual objectives to achieve, were able to put a man on the moon. 

Without direct leadership, as seen in a power culture, unless an assertive manager has been appointed, arguments, creating loss time, can breakout about the most effective way forward or from differences of opinions. Resources, as an example, when in demand can create a competitive edge between the different working groups dissolving the feeling a ‘team’ approach.

Person culture

The rise in take away delivery firms such a Deliveroo employ people on a self-employed basis, or in years gone by factor workers paid piecemeal, has seen an increase in ‘person’ cultures. In a person cultured organisation, the employee is loyal to their self rather than a company.

In a task culture, the team long for success as this may increase company income securing their position. Some organisations, like Apple, have built a culture where employees feel proud to be an Apple worker.

With a person culture, the company is second to the values of the employee. Uber driver, as an example, will finish work when they want to, even if there is a number of pick-up requests in their area without thinking about the impact of the waiting time of a customer on the company brand.

These examples show how different culture are required for the different job sectors or business models. What is important is that the culture and processes supporting the culture, is clear to employees, helping to create confidence in their actions.

Internal and external factors that can influence organisational culture

Employees

Employees being one, if not the most, asset is an internal factor that influences the culture of an organisation.

A security company hiring ex-military personnel is likely to have a culture shaped by the attitudes of their staff, which for service people is likely to be one of following rules, processes, and orders. It is unlikely, therefore, that employees in this example would be late for work.

Whereas an organisation hiring graduates will create a culture of competition as a potentially younger workforce is wanting to impress managers and enhance their career opportunities.

New challenges to cope with potential future problems can result in a cultural change. Employees, going through a change process, can’t be expected to adapt naturally to a new culture. This same barrier is prevalent when a new management team is brought in to make rapid changes for organisations who are in financial trouble.

If, in the main, employees are unhappy with the change they can disrupt production. Even without a new organisational change, if the percentage of employees take a disliking to the company culture they can rebel or make their grievances known. During 1980s many trade unions strikes cost businesses a high percentage of their profits.

It’s during a change period where managers need to adapt their managerial and leadership styles as they take employees through Lewin’s 3 phase process model; unfreeze, movement, refreeze, due to the resistance of change. A change model helps the process, as research suggest that there is a resistance to change from both the organisation and employees.

Processes, procedures, company values and the company mission, supported by training, help to shape the organisations culture. Without these, or if the guidelines fail to be effective the personalities, and the behaviour of employees can shape the culture of the company through stories, mentoring and what is viewed as ‘normal’ day-to-day activities taken on by new employees through observational learning. 

Recruitment

Organisation control who they hire. The recruitment of one unsuitable individual, in terms of company culture, can have a negative effect on the whole team and the behaviours of other staff members, and therefore output.

Recruitment is controlled by the organisation, as long as the hiring manager follows employment law they can, essentially, hire who they believe are the most suitable candidate for the advertised role.  “The business of replacing or recruiting someone is an opportunity to rethink what we want the content of the job to be” (Weightman, 1999)

Strength-based interviewing, as an example, matches the applicant’s preference and preferred style of working to culture of the organisation, compared to situational and behaviour job interviewing which focuses, mainly, of competencies for the job role.

High skilled and suitable (new) employees, can also impact the company culture due to the culture of the country they grew up in. Hofstede’s cultural dimension theory, explains how one member of staff is more likely, due to the country culture, generically speaking, perform well or poorly within a particular organisation, depending on that organisations culture.

China, as an example, is what Hofstede would define as a ‘high power’ – an authoritative leadership style, where citizens, or employees, accept the hierarchal order. This temperament would do well within a ‘power’ culture.

If a number of employees are strong in one of the 6 dimensions the culture of the organisation will change. As an example, during a large recruitment process a high percentage of employees were hired from a country that scored low on the time orientation dimension, and therefore preference time served processes and dislike change. If the hiring company was an ‘innovative’ organisation, the culture of wanting to avoid changes would have a direct effect on the values of the company which could change their decision making processes, due to the behaviours of the majority of the workforce.

Resources

Herzberg’s motivation theory model states that there are 2 types of factors that an organisation can adjust to influence employee motivation: motivators and hygiene factors.

Without the hygiene factors, staff members will become demotivated, affecting the company culture. The lack of essential equipment, as an example, that is fit for purpose, changes the productivity levels of an employee. If feeling unworthy, a team member will lack the motivation to stay enthusiastic. The, now negative, attitude can have a disruptive effect on other team members.

Having the required resources can be seen by an employee and being valued. Not only does fit for purpose resources help complete job-related task and therefore meet project deadlines, it creates the culture of satisfied employees.

Another example of employee dissatisfaction is from the employee’s salary. If a salary is perceived to be ‘low’ the employee can become dissatisfied. The UK governments 2020 mean gender pay gap analyst shown how there is a 6.5% gap between male and female salaries.

Organisations, who by law, have to send gender pay gap details to the government, if they employ over 250 employees can reduce dissatisfaction from female employees by simply matching their pay to that of males. Companies, now more then ever before, are reviewing their salaries and comparing them to the average sector salary for that position and/or have a salary scale that increases year on year allowing loyal employees to receive a guaranteed increase in pay.

Politics

Politics, in a number of ways, impacts culture, from the direct influence of policy and law to economical factors. The recent covid-19 pandemic has resulted in advice and guidance, as well as laws that have directed how certain organisations can operate during ‘lockdown’ periods.

These directions or legislation create the boundaries that a company can move, with examples of restaurants offering a home-delivery service or bars hoping to get around rules selling scotch eggs (as government stated that a scotch egg was sufficient enough for a bar to be seen as selling drinks with a meal)

Another recent example is schools, due to Covid, teaching pupils virtually. Schools to continue to meet government benchmarks were required to quickly adapt to the pandemic to continue the education of the pupils. Some schools acted pro-actively creating a risk assessment, identifying, as an example that some pupils, who were part of a large family unit, lived in a one computer home reducing the access they would have to the required technology. Other schools, acting re-actively (maybe due to working within a power culture) were late to identify such issues, delaying the access to the resources their pupils required. 

Policy, therefore, affects the behaviour of an organisation. Politics is also designed to be ‘fair’ ensuring that one organisation doesn’t have an monopoly on an industry niche, or, as we are currently seeing, we review policies when weaknesses in the system are found such as global organisations paying tax in countries that they are ‘based’ in but don’t sell products or services in.

Competition

A new entry to an established market can change the culture of an organisation as they will be highly motivated adapt to stay competitive. Amazon, as an example, change the retail market as they successfully turn an online bookstore into the number 1 online retailer.

High street retailers were slow to move online, even with positive projections for foreseeable online shopping trends, with many large retails closing down – most recently Debenhams.

Competition is also positive as one brand can ‘test’ a new marketing idea or product, and if purchased by the public, the second brand can imitate this product. Pepsi and Coke Cola are known for following each other successes, with an example of this is Pepsi bringing out 2lt cola bottles in 70s only to be followed by Coke Cola.

Competition is a driver for change, and therefore a driver for company culture change. Yellow pages, prior to access of internet access on mobile phones, had the monopoly on small business advertisements.

As the internet grew in popularity, the yellow pages didn’t make the move to fully incorporate the online market within their business model. As different online websites, often specialising in job sectors (ratemybuilder.com etc) helped customers find the services they required, Yellow Pages saw a drop in demand, resulting in a drop in share prices. Later, after making massive changes internally, the yellow pages were rebranded as yell.com.

Technology

Many organisational cultures are changing as machinery, technology or artificial intelligence enters the workplace. Companies that once valued hard work, reliability and accuracy can now focus on other values, as machinery produces consistent result, working from home and flexi-hours doesn’t require reliability and ‘hard work’ which originally was physical is more mental; creative, innovative and problem solving.

As low skilled jobs are becoming automated, high skilled roles, requiring degree level candidates and a new set of skills, change the culture of the workplace.

If machinery, as an example, doesn’t required the number of workers of years gone by, the workplace and therefore the company culture will naturally evolve due new environment created from the number of required humans.

This is being seen in the retail sector as decisions to increase self-service checkouts rather then employing humans to work tills increases. This decision could be viewed as a cost saving process but depending on the retail outlet the decision may have been taken to improve customer service with self-checkouts being a quicker alternative to human intervention.

Big data is a driver of culture change, as employers with access to large amounts of data are finding new ways of working, new ways of engaging customers and thinking new opportunities created through the data sets. For some businesses, big data has opened up new business opportunities that weren’t previously thought off.

Values and cultures that encourage behaviours consistent with organisational strategy

Several different approaches help an organisation achieve its operational strategy.

An example would be creating a culture of self-reflection. One company may complete annual appraisals, a discussion with a senior employee; supervisor, manager, senior manager whereas another organisation may utilise a 360-degree review to help generate reflection from different viewpoints.

The varying times of reflection activities allow an employee or team to stop thinking about the ‘now,’ the current stresses or any projects and objectives, and instead review their strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. The ability to reflect allows lessons learnt to be utilised in new and future projects decreasing risk.

To create change, one company may create policy whereas another will use nudge theory techniques. Each approach is designed to help employees to take on the new changes but approaches this from a different motivational standpoint. Nudge theory encourages change subconsciously, bypassing residence, and policy directs change, forcing a new way of operating, which can increase resistance as studies show that humans feel comfortable with routine.

A more direct route to encourage behaviour is encouraging the embedding of values into employees’ day-to-day tasks. Many educational organisations do this successfully through the communication of their values in everything that they do. Operational plans, when communicated will be explained under each of the company’s values. Appraisals are also designed to incorporate questions to ask how an employee meets or uses the company values in business as usual task. Award systems are also set up, allowing colleagues and managers to reward employees who ‘live’ the company values.

Values don’t only inform staff members what the company stands for, they encourage decision making, especially when embedded into rewards, appraisals, and operational plans, that is inline the company mission and vision.

An employee retention focus, from an organisation perspective, creates a culture of ‘caring’. Creating an opportunity for employees to voice their ideas, problems or suggestions allows team members to feel listened to. In addition, hearing the employees voice, on, as an example, an unknown issue, raises that issue to the senior management team helping the company to quickly resolve something that if left could have resulted in a large-scale issue.

The communication of information, good or bad, fosters different behaviours. Having a comms plan that keeps all employees well informed, with an opportunity for the employee’s voice to be heard is, research shows, highly motivational. A lack of communication, half-stories or one employee learning of a change from another, can be frustrating affecting employees work performance.

Company communication process help create a culture on how communications are descended. For big events, one company use a mass email to communicate the update and another in a team meeting. The email is a quicker way to send information, but if the communication is ambiguous or doesn’t state enough information employees will spend time trying to understand the meaning of the email. A team meeting is more costly, as employees aren’t completing business as usual, but the live events allows confirmation of the communication through employee questions.

A culture of honesty and transparency allows all employees to feel in the ‘loop’. Attempting to ‘dodge’ employee questions or trick staff into thinking everything is OK when it is not, has a direct hit on motivation once the truth comes out. Distrust impacts production and staff retention. Stress can increase, adding to the number of sick days taken by team members.

Consistency is key here. Employers can’t be honest one moment and lack transparency the next.

Personal managerial behaviours and organisational values and cultures

To create a productive team, it is important for leaders to be aware of organisational culture forces that operate outside of employee’s awareness.

Leaders need to understand cultural forces to help understand people and how to manage them. These can include group norms, the language, customs, and traditions employees use/follow. How departments interact, unwritten rules employees have and the organisations principles.  Additional items could be added to the list, but what is important, for leaders to understand, is that organizational cultures can be visible or invisible.

A visible example is the organizations principles can also be seen in their vision and mission statements, or a company process can reiterate what is seen as right or wrong.

Unconscious cultural norms can be invisible, these can include basic assumptions that guide behavior. Assumptions change the way an employee(s) think. It is easy for the brain to filter the world around us through these assumptions and beliefs, the mind will delete, distort, and generalize the world to fit the belief system.

If the culture in one organization was to stop, think and reflect to be creative, and a manager observed an employee staring into space, the manager would encourage this behavior. Whereas in an organisation with the opposite culture; work hard for every minute of every day, the employee will be viewed as lazy. Culture can create the filter – the bias used before an assumption is made, for decision making.  

To motivate and inspire a team, different approaches are required for various situations. When leading a team, a consideration for the individual team member is required, their maturity (competence and confidence) and the task. It is also important to realize that an employee’s maturity can change overtime or can vary, depending on the environment/task.

Situational leadership theory contains 4 behavioral styles

Directing – this is a directive approach, where clear detailed communication and processes are used to ensure a key objective. An example of this would be working within the arm forces

Coaching – here the leader gives guidance in a directive way but also has a focused-on employees needs and motivation.  This style works well on complex task and within a matrix management structure

Supporting – when an employee(s) knowledge and skills are key to achieving goals. The leader will use their people skills to support and motivate the team. This style can be seen in retail or the voluntary sector

Delegating – a hands-off approach where the leader has little involvement in the day to day task. This leadership style only works with highly competent staff. You will see this style in senior managers who have a reasonability to manage managers or project managers who oversee contractors.

A new team member will initially require a directive leader who will explain what they do to do, how they will do it and will deliver supportive observations. As the employee becomes more confident and competent, they will require a different leadership style, from directive to coaching, from coaching to supportive, from supportive to, once fully competent and confident, delegation. But this constant change of management styles, and therefore what is expected of the employee, can be confusing and disruptive.

The leader should continue to observe employees and change their leadership style if the employee goes from a delegation support need to another of the 3 leadership styles. Using this theory, a manager can support and motivate a team to achieve their KPIs. The natural tendency of a situational leader Is to focus short-term; observing employees and changing leadership approaches, but a short-term focused removes the focus away from the long-term objectives, which can result in irrelevant short-term goals.

Situational leader theory allows to managers to delegate more effectively, by knowing with employees can be given a task with no additional support or those who can be given task but will need the mangers time and knowledge to complete the task. In this sense a manager is delegating task based on the employee’s ability, confidence, and competencies. For repetitive tasks, this a situational leader wouldn’t be required. Also, to make judgements based an employee’s confidence and competencies, managers need to possess the skill of judging employees’ maturity, something many leaders can’t do.

To improve performance a leader can create an effective group by having beliefs in shared aims and objectives, commitment to the group and being able to openly express themselves.

How to communicate organisational values to the organisational

A newly recruited manager, coming into an established team can set tasks, deadlines or deliver communications that don’t have the desired result they want due to the culture in that particular organization. 

Because cultures come from the beliefs, values and assumptions of the organizations,a leader should spend time understanding the complexity of a team and company.

With this knowledge a leader can change their communication to filter their goals effectively or reflect on their own values and change these to fit the culture of the organization – this is often a positive approach if the current team are achieving KPIs.   If a new leader has been brought into due to, let’s say, low performance, the leader may first need to focus on a cultural change process.

To change a culture, a leader will need to change employee’s filters. To do this (Schein and Schein, 2017) states 6 embedding mechanisms; what the leader pays attention to – the repetition of this subconsciously teaches people the value of a new hierarchy. Reactions to critical incidents – crisis increase anxiety and how a leader responds teaches new values. The organization learns from this experience and repeats its new behavior.

The allocation of resources or where the money is being spent – indirectly, the priority of resources and funds embeds organizational values. A newly started company that valued profit would make decisions based on lowering overhead cost and increasing profit. Managers here, are likely to decline costly CPD request for team members. In fact, staff might not even request CPD knowing the likely outcome.

As the company grows and becomes financially successful, the company values may evolve with the company’s current situation. The development of staff skills (for long term success) is shown in the company’s new values for professional development, being a leader in the field, etc. Mangers now, are more likely to allocate parts of their budget to staff development and may even be encouraged to this by the senior team.

Another example is a small company who value quality over one who values a quick turnaround.  The ‘quality’ company may be willing to extend project deadlines to ensure quality (and their reputation for quality) – a solicitors as an example, will delay the completion of a mortgage due to the checking of the details. A ‘quick turnaround’ company could make decisions based on the need to start the next job – a plumber may used an inadequate product, hoping ‘it will do the job’ to be able to finish the job and start the next one. 

The allocation of resources creates a belief system “that won’t get accepted because of X” this soon evolves into how an employee act.

Deliberate Role Modeling – the way a manger acts has a direct impact on employees.

At a basic level values can be communicated by written values, forming a value statement, meetings and through verbal communication. An indirect method is through observational learning.

Staff members, through observational learning, will mimic managers. This has a big effect on the output. Imagine a manager who likes to start lots of new tasks compared to a manager who prefers to start and finish one task before moving on to the next one. Depending on the organization depends of which culture would work best, but employees observing, as an example, that a task must be fully completed before another project is started will mimic this behavior, even when deadlines are looming.

Rewards and status create motivation. Values are often taught through appraisals as they often state the values, and through seeing rewards being given and what the organization punishes. Awarding what you prioritize gets the message home quickly to all staff members.

How leaders select, promote and excommunicate – when working with a current team, the recruitment process, designed to hire staff with (new values), shows the current team, in a subtle way, what is to be expected of them.

This is reinforced when a promotion happens. A previous competent member of staff may miss a promotion over a new employee because the new employee, recruited due to having the new values, act in a way that suites the new organizational culture that is being created.

These can again be reinforced by the allocation of task. Task come with a varying level of responsibility, an experienced staff member being given low level task will (they and colleagues) know something is wrong.

To lead people, leader needs to understand their employees, what motivates them, their levels of competencies and the culture and values of the organization.  Business as usual may be enough to keep the business productive and profitable or new changes may be required.

New changes can create stress which often requires more leadership from managers and big cultural changes can take time to be embedded. The actions of the leaders along with clear communication can explain what is required of a workforce and the direction the organization is taking. By leading a team, these changes can be motivational rather than stressful.

The tools available to an organisation to identify and develop its culture

Recruitment strategy

Job adverts and the job spec allow an employee to match the job role to their temperament, helping to assist the development of a culture, once employed. The organisations vision plays a role here. Being innovative, fast-paced and a leader in technology will encourage applicants with a certain mindset compared to a company who state that they are professional, well-established and process driven.

Research has shown that the number of criteria explicit on the job advert affects the employer’s ability to predict job performance. Job adverts, therefore, need to show enough of the company culture and job role to entice suitable applicants but not give too much away as unsuitable candidates may prepare high scoring interview answers in advance of the job interview.

With the company culture clear, employers can set interview questions that are designed to elicit the personal values, attitudes, and behaviours of a candidate.  Interview questions can be phrased in a way that help to best understand the applicant’s skill set to the company culture. As an example, if the fast paced IT company need employees to always be working in new sectors or with unknown technology, situational – asking questions about future scenarios may be better than a asking behavioural interview questions – relating to past behaviours,  which might not be suitable to their future job duties.

An equal opportunities employer may adopt a panel interview over a 1-2-1 interview are panel interviews decrease unconscious bias through collective hiring decisions.  Some organisations, being aware of prejudice in the job interview, use ‘blind’ application removing an applicant’s name, DOB, ethnicity, and gender.

Additional training is carried out throughout the year for all staff teaching new knowledge, behaviours, and attitudes, all designed at one level or another to create a desired culture. Even resources embed culture. Amazon warehouse staff, as an example, have to wear an electronic tag that trigger when a staff member is ‘slacking’.

Training and development

Once employed, new staff often attend mandatory induction sessions to learn about the company culture and processes and procedures. Embedded throughout the training and induction process will be the required behaviour, tasks and the company vision and mission, highlighting what the organisation values.

Training can be framed as ‘giving information’ that needs acting on, or ‘teaching’ to better improve knowledge or new ways of working. The latter option often includes employees bringing forward and sharing their own viewpoints from their learned experiences. Again, the culture or management style (top-down or down-up) affects how training is delivered.

Reward and punishment systems

Some organisations utilise an award system; payment per product made, bonuses, additional leave days for suggested ideas that are taken onboard. The reward system, in whatever format, is a reenforcing of culture. We value you output, so the more products you make the higher an income you will gain. We value employees’ input, if an employee has an innovative idea, we will reward that employee.

Bonuses even though are common, research suggest, are not a powerful motivator to increase output. Whereas laws against misbehaviour are.

Laws, processes, and procedures shape culture. Laws set my government, and any get-arounds, change the decision making of an organisation. It is well documented that many global companies used a clause in tax laws to pay taxes in a country with a low tax band even of the company doesn’t sell products there. Instead they are based there, on paper at least.  As countries are currently working together on this issue, it is likely that a new set of regulations will come into play changing how a business will operate in terms of paying its taxes.

In-company, laws or processes have the same affect. An example of this is when Tom Coughlin became the head coach for the New York Giants. At the time the giants were in a bad place, with players being complacent. Coughlin introduce a new law: ‘if you are on time you are late!’

Coughlin would start his meetings 5 minutes early and any player that was late (not 5 minutes early) would receive a $1000 fine. Initially players complained and even lost their first game of the session, but Coughlin stuck to his new law.

Coughlin wasn’t worried about time keeping particularly, instead he saw timekeeping as one element of a determined mindset. It was about respect for other players, and above all about discipline. His law created the values required for a winning culture.

Methods of dealing with messages and behaviours which are in conflict with organisational values

Conflict can easily form due to alternative viewpoints. Conflict isn’t necessary a bad thing, as a new perspective can be a driver for a positive change.  But even with this, conflict between employees and managers who have different objectives and contrasting individual goals can be easily created.

One cause of conflict can be as simple as language. Often ‘groups’ are created of specialised workers or employees with a workplace ‘identity’ created within their department, with each having their own ‘language’ and subculture. Conflict can be difficult to identify as it can hidden by a person’s personality – we believe there is no conflict, but we have people who don’t get on with each other.

One way to overcome the communication is barrier is via familiarity. Companies who promote cross-culture working, have department lead meetings, whole company updates increase face time between different groups of employees. The more time people share together the mor they understand each other, and the natural language used in sub-groups.

New staff can create the ‘cultural trap’ This is where a new organisation doesn’t recognise that new team members come from various subcultures. Therefore, a new common language is required to assist with interdepartmental communications, as misunderstandings and personality clashes are at the root of most conflicts.

A detailed induction process, that clearly states the culture of the company, embedded by the actions of employees and managers, as well as training new staff on the company values, processes and procedures, often through a combination on documents, workplace training and mentoring, reduces the chances of a cultural trap.  

Consistency and clear language can support leaders to handle conflict by supporting cultural change as inconsistency leads to problems. Leaders not paying attention to an employee, or having multiple distractions, can cause conflict as an employee use other ‘signals,’ often gained from their personal experience, to assume what is important or how to act.

The clarification of goals, having the required resources and embedding HR and organisation policy and procedures is a pro-active way to control conflict. On a personal level embedding regular reviews and catch up meetings assist in the transparency of a company helping employees to make informed choices. Google, as an example, have a culture of transparency with a view to reducing barriers to creativity. Google, therefore, encourage mistakes as this increase’s innovation. ‘Google talks’ was the precursor to ‘Google Meet’ Even though ‘Google talk’ was closed down the learning form this product, and many of the resources were used for ‘Google meet’

Hersey and Blanchard (2019) talk about the leadership curve and how depending readiness of employees, the task and the relationship effects the maturity of those being led; a new employee not knowing the organisations processes will lack confidence. A leader can adopt 1 of 4 managerial styles; delegating, participating, selling, and telling to suit the employee’s maturity. The managerial style is always in flux as an employee who is in the main being “delegated” to may need to come under “telling” depending on changes circumstances; a new project or recent staff redundancies that effects moral.  The delivery of the change of management style is important to keep the individual(s) motivated.

Evolve the mind book on Amazon

Strategies and tactics to influence people in support of organisational values

Having staff onboard with the organisational values improves workplace morale and productivity. Leaders often use a variety of conscious and unconscious influential techniques to align the employees to the organisational values.  

According to Bauer and Erdogan (2009), there are nine commonly used influence tactics that can be used within a workplace.

Rational persuasion requires the use of a logical argument. Presenting data, percentages, numbers, facts, and counter arguments and reframes to influence others. Even though commonly used, research suggest that most decisions are influence by emotions not just logic.

Inspirational appeals are an emotional based influencer using values and beliefs to create a pain or pleasure emotional motivation pull. Often delivered with a large objective in mind, as an example a new vision for an organisation.

Consultation relies on one team/person/department to persuade by stating that they are onboard with a change/project. In other scenarios, the team/person/department will communicate the change/project showing a buy-in. This is influential power of social proof.

Ingratiation influences as its aim is to make others feel good about themselves. The task can be related to a personal value, be framed as a good cause and meet a person’s motivational factors to help create action

Personal appeal is a direct request to someone who like you. By asking them for help, personally, the person who is in rapport with the manager is likely to oblige to the request. Used to often, though, can result in resistance.

Exchange works well as a give and take approach shows the employee that tasks or ideas aren’t just being pushed on to them. This approach works with negotiations with union reps, or with an increase in workload ‘do X and we can take Y from you’

Coalition is a group consensus. As an example, a union is a group of employees sharing one voice. The power is in the numbers. A group a senior leader can also use coalition to show unification. There is power in numbers. Examples of this is when business come together to lobby the government on a business legislation that they want changing.

Pressure is a threat. Do this or X will happen. The common example is a potential job loss for not achieving a set target. But pressure can be added at a smaller scale with a manager stating that a sale will be lost if a certain task isn’t completed, or that the team will be let down.

Legitimating is a power position persuasion tactic.  Stating the law or industry regulations creates the boundaries – you have to do it this way because the law says so. People respond well to authority as motivation is gained by knowing what is acceptable and that the law or regulation backs up their actions. Discrimination law is an example of this. The Laws stats that recruitment decisions can’t be based on a person’s ethnicity. Companies will have internal processes for checking that, in this example, HR teams and hiring managers, are following government set regulations. If a process hasn’t been adhered to, putting the company at risk, the employee in question could be dismissed or at the very lease receive a warning.

How national differences and cultures can impact on transferability of organisational structure, systems and processes

Hofstede’s 6 cultural dimensions system, created after a decade of research, found commonalities in the dimensions depending on the employee’s country of origin. 

Cultural norms shape beliefs and behaviours. Individual actions and motivations, unknowingly for most people, effect how that person acts within the workplace. There are no good or bad cultural norms, as the norms are common in that country.

What was missing from the model was the intricacies of nations; many countries have mixed ethnicities. Britain, as an example has a large Chinese population.  And how these mixed ethnicities living in one country also affect culture.

As globalisation and technology has resulted in organisations having employees working across countries, or customers, stakeholders and rivals being on a global scale, cultural differences impact many businesses.

Hofstede’s cultural dimensions allows an organisation, when setting up a new office in a new country or when recruiting globally can be a starting point in terms of creating processes, decision making and strategic planning.

Copying proven processes from one country and embedding it into a new country won’t always work as cultural difference, values and beliefs can be at contrast with the proven process.

An example of this would be with the use of the first cultural dimension – the power index.  Hofstede’s refers to the power balance and how some cultures accept a hierarchical distribution of power, where other cultures wouldn’t.

If, for example, a company recruited a member of staff from a high PDI country such as Malaysia and required the employee to be a self-starter, to initiate action and to work on their own initiative, they may find, even with a highly skilled worker, that the cultural norms results in the Malaysia employee waiting for a manager to take chair and direct the required work.

Another example, using Hofstede’s theory, is how staff members act within the organisation; does the employer require team or an individualism culture. Or as Hofstede’s describes it individualism vs collectivism.

Low IDV cultures don’t think about the ‘team’ rather they are self-focused and won’t take action if the ‘team’ are struggling as they naturally focus on their individual task taking joy from the prospect of a challenge a personal challenge.  Different organisations, deepening on the job sector, can be successful hiring applicants from certain cultures that their personal values meet the job criteria. On the other hand, if an industry that requires a ‘team’ approach has a group of individualism employees, each employee may be an effective worker but may not work collaboratively enough to meet the core objectives.

Once employed, a multicultural workforce may face communication problems. Ambiguous words can have different meanings, as do gestures and expressions, which can cause confusion and conflict. A mixed workforce: different skills, experiences and perspectives can be viewed as valuable as new ideas, predicted problems or working practices can add value to an organisation.

As company culture is created through stories, observational learning as well as processes, having a large number of one ‘dimensions’ employee in a company can create a natural company culture shift especially if the team had initial successes – if something works, why change it? Long term, this shift can affect the values of the company.

An example of this could be the uncertainly avoidance index, where people on the low side of the scale don’t have a sense of urgency. If company value being at the head of the curve, and hire a higher number of low UAI, the culture could result being stagnated as they are comfortable with routine and start to move away from being innovative.

These new values and the environment created by the workforce, result in a natural shift in processes and procedures, the values and mission of the company.

It is true that employers can’t stereotype people based on their country of origin, as each person’s own experiences, values, and beliefs shape who they are. What Hofstede’s research shown was that a majority of people, depending on the country, were shown to have similar traits. As discussed, job interview questions, when framed correctly, can help understand a person’s motivational traits allowing employers to match each interviewee to the culture of their company, but in some instances, especially if a company was looking to relocate to a new country, a change in culture maybe required to meet the needs of a predictive workforce.

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