Global Leadership Teams and Cultural Diversity: Exploring how perceptions of culture influence the dynamics of global teams

M. Thunø, Jan Ifversen
{"title":"Global Leadership Teams and Cultural Diversity: Exploring how perceptions of culture influence the dynamics of global teams","authors":"M. Thunø, Jan Ifversen","doi":"10.7146/AUL.273.190","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In the 21st century, business engagements are becoming increasingly global, and global teams are now an established form of organising work in multinational organisations. As a result, managing cultural diver-sity within a global team has become an essential part of ensuring motivation, creativity, innovation and efficiency in today’s business world.Global teams are typically composed of a diversity of experiences, frames of references, competencies, information and, not least, cultural backgrounds. As such, they hold a unique potential for delivering high performance in terms of innovative and creative approaches to global management tasks; however, in-stead of focusing on the potentials of cultural diversity, practitioners and studies of global teams tend to approach cultural diversity as a barrier to team success. This study explores some of the barriers that cultural diversity poses but also discusses its potential to leverage high performance in a global context.Our study highlights the importance of how team leaders and team members perceive ‘culture’ as both a concept and a social practice. We take issue with a notion of culture as a relatively fixed and homogeneous set of values, norms and attitudes shared by people of national communities; it is such a notion of culture that tends to underlie understandings that highlight the irreconcilability of cultural differences.Applying a more dynamic and context-dependent approach to culture as a meaning system that people negotiate and use to interpret the world, this study explores how global leadership teams can best reap the benefits of cultural diversity in relation to specific challenging areas of intercultural team work, such as leadership style, decision making, relationship building, strategy process, and communication styles. Based on a close textual interpretation of 31 semi-structured interviews with members of global leader-ship teams in eight Danish-owned global companies, our study identified different discourses and per-ceptions of culture and cultural diversity. For leaders of the global leadership teams (Danish/European) and other European team members, three understandings of cultural diversity in their global teams were prominent:1)Cultural diversity was not an issue2)Cultural diversity was acknowledged as mainly a liability. Diversities were expressed through adifference in national cultures and could typically be subsumed under a relatively fixed numberof invariable and distinct characteristics.3)Cultural diversity was an asset and expressions of culture had to be observed in the situationand could not simply be derived from prior understandings of cultural differences.A clear result of our study was that those leaders of global teams who drew on discourses of the Asian ‘Other’ adherred to the first two understandings of cultural diversity and preferred leadership styles that were either patriarchal or self-defined as ‘Scandinavian’. Whereas those leaders who drew on discourses of culture as dynamic and negotiated social practices adhered to the third understanding of cultural di-versity and preferred a differentiated and analytical approach to leading their teams.We also focused on the perceptions of team members with a background in the country in which the global teams were co-located. These ‘local’ team members expressed a nuanced and multifaceted perspective on their own cultural background, the national culture of the company, and their own position within the team, which enabled them to easily navigate between essentialist perceptions of culture while maintain-ing a critical stance on the existing cultural hegemonies. They recognised the value of their local knowledge and language proficiency, but, for those local members in teams with a negative or essentialist view of cultural diversity, it was difficult to obtain recognition of their cultural styles and specific, non-local competences. 3Our study suggeststhat the way global team members perceive culture, based on dominant societal dis-courses of culture, significantly affects the understandings of roles and positions in global leadership teams. We found that discourses on culture were used to explain differences and similarities between team members, which profoundly affected the social practicesand dynamics of the global team. We con-clude that only global teams with team leaders who are highly aware of the multiple perspectives at play in different contexts within the team hold the capacity to be alert to cultural diversity and to demonstrate agility in leveraging differences and similarities into inclusive and dynamic team practices.","PeriodicalId":126978,"journal":{"name":"AU Library Scholarly Publishing Services","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-10-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"AU Library Scholarly Publishing Services","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.7146/AUL.273.190","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In the 21st century, business engagements are becoming increasingly global, and global teams are now an established form of organising work in multinational organisations. As a result, managing cultural diver-sity within a global team has become an essential part of ensuring motivation, creativity, innovation and efficiency in today’s business world.Global teams are typically composed of a diversity of experiences, frames of references, competencies, information and, not least, cultural backgrounds. As such, they hold a unique potential for delivering high performance in terms of innovative and creative approaches to global management tasks; however, in-stead of focusing on the potentials of cultural diversity, practitioners and studies of global teams tend to approach cultural diversity as a barrier to team success. This study explores some of the barriers that cultural diversity poses but also discusses its potential to leverage high performance in a global context.Our study highlights the importance of how team leaders and team members perceive ‘culture’ as both a concept and a social practice. We take issue with a notion of culture as a relatively fixed and homogeneous set of values, norms and attitudes shared by people of national communities; it is such a notion of culture that tends to underlie understandings that highlight the irreconcilability of cultural differences.Applying a more dynamic and context-dependent approach to culture as a meaning system that people negotiate and use to interpret the world, this study explores how global leadership teams can best reap the benefits of cultural diversity in relation to specific challenging areas of intercultural team work, such as leadership style, decision making, relationship building, strategy process, and communication styles. Based on a close textual interpretation of 31 semi-structured interviews with members of global leader-ship teams in eight Danish-owned global companies, our study identified different discourses and per-ceptions of culture and cultural diversity. For leaders of the global leadership teams (Danish/European) and other European team members, three understandings of cultural diversity in their global teams were prominent:1)Cultural diversity was not an issue2)Cultural diversity was acknowledged as mainly a liability. Diversities were expressed through adifference in national cultures and could typically be subsumed under a relatively fixed numberof invariable and distinct characteristics.3)Cultural diversity was an asset and expressions of culture had to be observed in the situationand could not simply be derived from prior understandings of cultural differences.A clear result of our study was that those leaders of global teams who drew on discourses of the Asian ‘Other’ adherred to the first two understandings of cultural diversity and preferred leadership styles that were either patriarchal or self-defined as ‘Scandinavian’. Whereas those leaders who drew on discourses of culture as dynamic and negotiated social practices adhered to the third understanding of cultural di-versity and preferred a differentiated and analytical approach to leading their teams.We also focused on the perceptions of team members with a background in the country in which the global teams were co-located. These ‘local’ team members expressed a nuanced and multifaceted perspective on their own cultural background, the national culture of the company, and their own position within the team, which enabled them to easily navigate between essentialist perceptions of culture while maintain-ing a critical stance on the existing cultural hegemonies. They recognised the value of their local knowledge and language proficiency, but, for those local members in teams with a negative or essentialist view of cultural diversity, it was difficult to obtain recognition of their cultural styles and specific, non-local competences. 3Our study suggeststhat the way global team members perceive culture, based on dominant societal dis-courses of culture, significantly affects the understandings of roles and positions in global leadership teams. We found that discourses on culture were used to explain differences and similarities between team members, which profoundly affected the social practicesand dynamics of the global team. We con-clude that only global teams with team leaders who are highly aware of the multiple perspectives at play in different contexts within the team hold the capacity to be alert to cultural diversity and to demonstrate agility in leveraging differences and similarities into inclusive and dynamic team practices.
全球领导团队与文化多样性:探讨文化观念如何影响全球团队的动态
在21世纪,商业活动正变得越来越全球化,全球团队现在是跨国组织组织工作的一种既定形式。因此,在当今的商业世界中,管理全球团队中的文化多样性已成为确保动力、创造力、创新和效率的重要组成部分。全球团队通常由不同的经验、参考框架、能力、信息以及文化背景组成。因此,他们拥有独特的潜力,在全球管理任务的创新和创造性方法方面提供高绩效;然而,全球团队的实践者和研究人员并没有关注文化多样性的潜力,而是倾向于将文化多样性视为团队成功的障碍。本研究探讨了文化多样性带来的一些障碍,但也讨论了其在全球背景下提高绩效的潜力。我们的研究强调了团队领导者和团队成员如何将“文化”视为一种概念和社会实践的重要性。我们认为文化是一套相对固定的、同质的价值观、规范和态度,是各国人民共有的;正是这样一种文化观念,往往成为强调文化差异不可调和的理解的基础。本研究采用一种更加动态和情境依赖的方法,将文化作为人们谈判和解释世界的意义系统,探讨全球领导团队如何在与跨文化团队工作的特定挑战领域(如领导风格、决策制定、关系建立、战略过程和沟通风格)相关的情况下,最好地从文化多样性中获益。基于对8家丹麦跨国公司全球领导团队成员进行的31次半结构化访谈的详细文本解读,我们的研究确定了不同的话语和对文化和文化多样性的看法。对于全球领导团队的领导者(丹麦/欧洲)和其他欧洲团队成员来说,他们在全球团队中对文化多样性的三个理解是突出的:1)文化多样性不是一个问题;2)文化多样性被认为主要是一种负担。多样性是通过国家文化的差异来表达的,通常可以被归入相对固定数量的不变的和明显的特征。3)文化多样性是一种资产,文化的表达必须在情境中观察,不能简单地从对文化差异的先前理解中得出。我们研究的一个明显结果是,那些利用亚洲“他者”话语的全球团队领导者坚持对文化多样性的前两种理解,并更喜欢父权制或自定义为“斯堪的纳维亚”的领导风格。然而,那些将文化话语作为动态和协商的社会实践的领导者坚持对文化多样性的第三种理解,并倾向于采用差异化和分析性的方法来领导他们的团队。我们还关注了具有全球团队所在国家背景的团队成员的看法。这些“本地”团队成员对他们自己的文化背景、公司的民族文化以及他们在团队中的地位表达了细致入微和多方面的观点,这使他们能够轻松地在文化的本质主义观念之间导航,同时保持对现有文化霸权的批判立场。他们认识到他们的当地知识和语言能力的价值,但是,对于那些对文化多样性持消极或本质主义观点的小组中的当地成员来说,他们的文化风格和具体的、非当地的能力很难得到承认。我们的研究表明,基于主流社会文化话语的全球团队成员感知文化的方式,显著影响了全球领导团队对角色和职位的理解。我们发现文化话语被用来解释团队成员之间的差异和相似之处,这深刻地影响了全球团队的社会实践和动态。我们得出的结论是,只有团队领导者高度意识到团队内部不同背景下的多重视角,才有能力警惕文化多样性,并在利用差异和相似点实现包容性和动态团队实践方面表现出敏捷性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信