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Cultural Considerations for BPM and other Methodologies

Hany Atchan Ph.D., PMP. Cultural Considerations for BPM and other Methodologies. November 29 th , 2011. What is Culture.

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Cultural Considerations for BPM and other Methodologies

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  1. Hany Atchan Ph.D., PMP Cultural Considerationsfor BPM and other Methodologies November 29th, 2011 Cultural Considerations for BPM

  2. What is Culture • Organizational culture is “the pattern of shared basic assumptions - invented, discovered, or developed by a given group as it learns to cope with its problems of external adaptation and internal integration - that has worked well enough to be considered valid and therefore to be taught to new members as the correct way to perceive, think, and feel in relation to those problems”. • Schein, E. (1985). Organizational Culture and Leadership. San Francisco, CA, Jossey Bass. • It is the set of values, symbols, interpretations, beliefs, and perspectives that distinguish one group of people from another in modernized societies; it is not material objects and other tangible aspects of human societies. Cultural Considerations for BPM

  3. What is Culture 1 Values, perspectives, beliefs, and symbols 2 Thinking/behavioral patterns & strategies 3 Formed by responding and adapting 4 They worked and are considered valid 5 Taught & reinforced Cultural Considerations for BPM

  4. How Do CulturesForm? • Uniqueness • Learning • Unlearning • Re-learning • Folklore and history • Founders impact • Differences among cultures • Macro vs. Micro cultures Cultural Considerations for BPM

  5. What Motivates People Hierarchy of Needs Abraham Maslow, d. 1970

  6. Geert Hofstede’s 5-D Cultural Model http://www.geert-hofstede.com Cultural Considerations for BPM

  7. Geert Hofstede’s 5-D Cultural Model Group cohesiveness, in-group membership, and unquestioning loyalty in exchange for protection. Cultural Considerations for BPM

  8. Geert Hofstede’s 5-D Cultural Model Accept inequality (from below) in power distribution; Acceptance of inequality translates into desire for control in one’s personal life Cultural Considerations for BPM

  9. Geert Hofstede’s 5-D Cultural Model Feminine cultures tend to be more submissive. Masculine cultures are assertive and driven. Cultural Considerations for BPM

  10. Geert Hofstede’s 5-D Cultural Model Degree of comfort in unstructured situations. Risk-averse, does not accept change, and thrives on repeatability. Cultural Considerations for BPM

  11. Geert Hofstede’s 5-D Cultural Model Respect for truth and perseverance vs. tradition, social obligation, and “face-saving”. (China, Taiwan, & Japan have largest LT score) Cultural Considerations for BPM

  12. Comparing Macro Cultures http://www.geert-hofstede.com Cultural Considerations for BPM

  13. Characteristicsof Cultural Groups • Motivated by external forces • Believes in collective effort • Disciplined in following Central C&C as long as perception of fairness • Democracy works for a time • BPM-like methodologies most effective • Unquestioned obedience to Central C&C • Pride in group achievement • Democracy is wrong Conforming • Very few standards and guidelines are acceptable • High Cohesiveness/Social influence • Democracy may be used to control them but very risky! • Willing to live with inconsistencies • Fairness is relative • Very sensitive to distance from power • Democracy is a must! Rebellious Individualistic Collectivist Cultural Considerations for BPM

  14. What is BPM? • A process of managing your business processes • A management discipline. • A technology or set of technologies • A rapid application development framework • BPM vs. BPI vs. BAP It Depends whom you ask! Cultural Considerations for BPM

  15. What isBPM? Cultural Considerations for BPM

  16. What is BPM? ABPMP: An ongoing organizational commitment to meeting the organization’s performance goals by managing its processes. It involves a continuous, feedback loop to ensure the organization’s business processes are aligned to its strategy and performing to expectations. Cultural Considerations for BPM

  17. Business Process Management • Communication • Sequencing • Repeatability/Consistency • Enabling Change& Transformation • BPM is primarily “sold” as a catalyst for Organizational Improvements, with the specific goals of increasing efficiency and profitability. Main Purposes Cultural Considerations for BPM

  18. Discrete Task DefinitionBackground and Assumptions • Scientific management • Efficiency movement (Fredrick Taylor, d. 1915) • Automation of tasks • Cultural Assumptions • Ability to select from a large pool of workers • Trainable workforce • Availability of HR remedies • Workers are not motivated by internal factors and therefore management needs to use external motivators (the carrot & the Stick) Cultural Considerations for BPM

  19. The Big Gap! It’s amazing that methodologies like BPM work at all! Cultural Considerations for BPM

  20. How to Plant Cultural Considerations for BPM

  21. Cultural Considerations for BPM

  22. Conclusion No Methodology is culture-neutral! Know your culture or your methodology will be stuck in neutral! Cultural Considerations for BPM

  23. THANK YOU! hatchan@rosekaysystems.com www.rosekaysystems.com Cell 05-30-24 24 20 Cultural Considerations for BPM

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