Retrieved from: http://www.cross-culture.de/pics/cultural_iceberg.jpg
In our first
week of the course we made an approach to the concept of culture and the
importance of managing it. The two points I want to highlight as the most
relevant from this class are, first, that culture has no universal definition
as it encompasses a diversity of components; and second, values and morality
are relative, the scale of values for every person is highly influenced by the
culture it belongs to.
Regarding the
first point, culture is an abstract concept, we may understand what it refers to,
but is difficult to express that in words. That explains the idea “Culture is
what cultural scientists measure”, since culture involves language, behavior,
values, artifacts, viewpoints, clothing, traditions, and too much more, a final
definition will never be given I consider. The analogy of the Cultural Iceberg (Hall, 1976), supports
the idea that what we usually identify as culture represents only 10% of what
culture really is, the 90% left is the core of culture, so no definition would
embrace the 100% of what culture means.
Research Question
How does culture contribute to sustainability in business and society?
Sustainable
development in the economic and environmental dimensions must be based on a
value system that is sustainable as well. The value system we usually hear
about in the media is the one which promotes an increasing consumption, what is
clearly not sustainable (Hawkes, 2001). Then, how the value system is set in
each target market is fundamental in order to grant long-term relationships
with integrative deals, the most effective strategy may fail if it goes against
people’s culture. In conclusion, culture manifest and preserve identity, values
and beliefs that impact the business environment, becoming a prior variable to
be taken into account when designing business strategies. As Hawkes (2001)
states “A sustainable society depends
upon a sustainable culture. If a society’s culture disintegrates, so will
everything else”.
References
Hall, E. T. (1989). Beyond culture. Random House LLC.
Hawkes, J. (2001) The fourth pillar of
sustainability: culture's essential role in public planning. Retrieved from: htttp://books.google.com.co
[July 2014]
Steidlmeier, P. (1999) Gift Giving, Bribery and
Corruption: Ethical Management of Business Relationships in China. Journal of Business Ethics. Vol. 20, No. 2M
pp. 121-132. Retrieved from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25074125
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