In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
The personality of a business
Organizational culture is the personality of a company — the unwritten rules, shared values and habits that decide how people actually behave once the formal rules are put away. It is often summed up as 'the way things are done around here', and it quietly shapes everything from motivation to whether a merger succeeds or falls apart.
Think of a friendship group. It has inside jokes, an unspoken sense of how you talk to each other, and things you all quietly value. A newcomer has to learn that 'vibe' to fit in — nobody hands them a rulebook. A company's culture works the same way but at scale: it tells employees how to make decisions, how to treat customers, and what really gets rewarded, none of which appears on the organization chart. And just like a friendship group, when two very different groups are forced together — say after a merger — the clash of habits can be painful and slow to settle.
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Read the culture from its signs — office layout, dress code, how meetings run, what stories get told and who gets promoted reveal the values underneath.
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Classify it using Handy's four types: power (central boss), role (rules and hierarchy), task (project teams) or person (the experts come first).
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Trace how that culture drives employee behaviour and performance — motivation, innovation, loyalty and customer service all flow from it.
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Judge what happens when culture must change or two cultures collide — expect resistance, cost and time, and weigh whether the effort is worth it for this business.
Explore the concept
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Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
What organizational culture means
Organizational culture is the collection of shared values, beliefs, norms and assumptions that govern how people behave within an organization. It is the firm's informal personality — the unwritten 'way things are done around here'. Some cultures are formal and cautious; others are energetic and risk-taking. You cannot see culture directly, so you read it from its expressions: the office layout, the dress code, how meetings are run, the stories staff tell about the firm's past, the way people speak to authority, and — most tellingly — who gets rewarded and promoted, because that reveals what the organization truly values rather than what it merely says it values.
Values: the core principles the firm treats as important — for example 'customer first', 'safety above all', 'move fast'.
Beliefs and assumptions: the convictions, often unconscious, that people take for granted about how the business and its world work.
Norms: the unwritten rules of expected behaviour — how to act in meetings, how formally to communicate, whether it is normal to stay late.
Artefacts: the visible signs of culture — office design, dress code, logos, rituals, ceremonies and stories — easy to observe but sometimes hard to interpret.
How culture is formed: the founder's vision, the firm's history and heroes, its national and industry context, its leadership and reward systems, and who it recruits and promotes.
Handy's four types of culture
Charles Handy's model classifies organizational cultures into four types, which gives us a shared vocabulary for analysing a business and predicting how it behaves. Two cautions before applying it. First, many organizations are a blend, or contain subcultures — a creative marketing team can run a task culture inside an otherwise bureaucratic role culture. Second, the type is judged by WHERE power and focus sit, not by surface impressions: fast decisions do not automatically mean a power culture, because a task culture can also move fast. Look for the source of authority.
Power culture: control radiates from a central figure or small group, like a spider's web. Decisions are fast because few people make them. Strengths: speed and clear direction. Weaknesses: can be autocratic and stressful, and depends dangerously on one person. Common in small or founder-led firms.
Role culture: built on defined roles inside a formal, bureaucratic hierarchy; rules and the job description matter more than the individual. Strengths: stability, consistency, predictability. Weaknesses: slow to adapt and stifles creativity. Common in large, established organizations and public bodies.
Task culture: power sits with project teams assembled to complete a specific job, and authority shifts to whoever has the relevant expertise. Strengths: flexible, collaborative, motivating. Weaknesses: weaker central control and possible conflicting priorities. Common in consultancies, agencies and tech firms.
Person culture: the individual expert is the focal point and the organization exists to support its members. Strengths: highly motivating for skilled professionals. Weaknesses: hard to coordinate around a shared strategy. Common in partnerships of lawyers, doctors or architects.
How culture influences behaviour and performance
Culture matters because it shapes what employees actually do. A culture sets expectations that guide behaviour far more powerfully than any rulebook: it influences how hard people work, how much they innovate, how they treat customers, how safely they operate and how loyal they feel. A strong, positive culture aligned to the firm's goals can lift motivation, cohesion and performance — a well-matched task culture, for instance, meets a creative employee's needs for autonomy and achievement and so acts as a motivator. A misaligned or toxic culture does the reverse: it becomes a source of dissatisfaction, raises staff turnover and absenteeism, damages the employer brand, and can even normalise unethical or unsafe conduct. Culture is therefore a genuine driver of business performance, not a soft extra — but its effect depends on the fit between the culture and the strategy the firm is trying to pursue.
Motivation and retention: a culture that fits employees' needs raises motivation and loyalty; a misaligned one drives dissatisfaction and turnover.
Innovation and speed: task and power cultures can move and adapt quickly; a rigid role culture can slow change and smother new ideas.
Customer experience and reputation: norms about how customers are treated flow straight to service quality and brand image.
Ethics and risk: culture sets what behaviour is quietly tolerated, so it shapes safety, compliance and ethical conduct.
Fit matters: there is no single 'best' culture — performance depends on how well the culture matches the firm's strategy and market.
How and why culture changes — and why it is so hard
Culture is not fixed. It changes when the forces that formed it change: a new leader with different values arrives, a crisis discredits the old way of working, the firm grows rapidly or goes global, new technology reshapes work, or a merger throws two cultures together. Businesses also try to change culture deliberately, to become more innovative, more customer-focused, safer or more ethical. But deliberate culture change is one of the hardest things a business can attempt. Culture lives in deeply held, often unconscious assumptions and habits, not just in written rules — so it cannot be switched by rewriting a mission statement or launching a rebrand. Employees resist losing what is familiar and fear what change means for their status; existing power structures defend the old way; and long-serving staff embody the old norms. Genuine change therefore demands consistent leadership modelling the new behaviour, aligned recruitment and reward systems, and sustained effort over years — with real costs in training, communication and sometimes staff turnover, and no guarantee of success.
Triggers of change: new leadership, a crisis or scandal, rapid growth or globalisation, new technology, or a merger/acquisition.
Why firms change culture: to lift innovation, improve customer focus, strengthen safety or ethics, or align a merged business.
Why it is hard — resistance: people fear losing the familiar and their status; existing power holders defend the status quo.
Why it is hard — depth and time: culture sits in unconscious assumptions and habits, so change is slow (often years), not instant.
Why it is hard — cost and uncertainty: training, communication and possible turnover cost money, and success is never guaranteed.
What genuine change needs: leaders who model the new behaviour, plus recruitment and reward systems aligned to the new values.
Culture clashes: mergers, acquisitions and multinationals
A culture clash is conflict between two or more incompatible organizational cultures. It is one of the most common reasons mergers and acquisitions fail. When a firm with a rigid, hierarchical role culture combines with a flexible, innovative task culture, differences in communication style, decision-making speed, values and attitudes to authority create friction, demotivate staff and can trigger a loss of key talent — destroying the very value the deal was meant to capture. Multinational firms face a related version of the problem: national cultures differ in their attitudes to hierarchy, teamwork, risk and directness, so a management approach that motivates staff in one country can confuse or demotivate them in another. In both cases the lesson is the same — the technical or financial logic of a deal or an expansion can be sound, yet the human reality of two cultures colliding is what determines whether it works.
Common mistakes examiners penalise
Confusing power and task culture — in a POWER culture authority sits with a central person regardless of expertise; in a TASK culture it shifts to whoever has the relevant expertise. Fast decisions alone do not make a culture a power culture — identify WHERE the power comes from.
Confusing culture with structure — structure is the formal chart of roles and reporting lines; culture is how people actually behave within it. Redrawing the chart does not change the culture, and treating the two as the same weakens the answer.
Assuming culture can be changed quickly — announcing new values, a rebrand or a fresh mission statement is not culture change. Real change means shifting ingrained habits and assumptions, which is slow, costly and resisted — say so explicitly.
Classifying a culture with no evidence — writing 'this is a role culture' with no case-study evidence earns AO1 at best; the AO2 application marks come from the evidence link (procedures, hierarchy, project teams, autonomy).
Treating a merger's failure as purely financial — culture clash is a leading cause of M&A failure; ignoring the human/cultural side misses the point of a 2.5 question.
Listing types or challenges without applying them — a bare list of Handy's four types or of 'why culture is hard to change' earns AO1 only; the marks climb when each point is tied to the specific business.
Evaluating without a supported judgement — an 'evaluate' or 'discuss' answer that gives both sides but never commits to a justified conclusion cannot reach the top band.
Where this leads
Organizational culture connects to much of the rest of the course. It sits alongside leadership and management styles (2.4) and motivation (2.6), because the culture a leader builds shapes how those styles land; it feeds into organizational structure (2.2), since structure and culture must fit each other; and it returns forcefully in the growth-and-evolution unit, where mergers, acquisitions and multinational expansion succeed or fail on cultural integration. Master the habit built here — identify the culture concept, apply it to the specific business, weigh both sides, then commit to a justified judgement — and you have the template that earns marks across every evaluation question in Business Management.
Worked examples
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An established law firm, 'Marlowe & Reed LLP', operates as a partnership. Each senior lawyer manages their own clients and cases with significant autonomy, and the central administration exists mainly to provide accounting and IT support. Using Handy's model, analyse the organizational culture at Marlowe & Reed and explain one advantage and one disadvantage of this culture. [6]
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Model answer. Marlowe & Reed most closely exhibits a person culture in Handy's model. The evidence is that the firm is organised to serve the individuals within it — the senior lawyers — who work with significant autonomy over their own clients and cases, while the central administration acts as a support structure rather than a controlling hierarchy. Authority rests on the professional expertise and status of the individual lawyers, not on a rigid chain of command or a single dominant figure.
Discuss the challenges a business may face when trying to change its organizational culture. [10]
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Model answer (applied to a worked context — a large, hierarchical insurance company, 'Harbourline', whose new CEO wants to shift its slow, rule-bound role culture toward a faster, more customer-focused and innovative culture).
'AutoStark', a traditional car manufacturer with a strong role culture, acquires 'VoltDrive', a dynamic electric-vehicle start-up with a task culture. Evaluate the likely consequences of this acquisition for the employees of VoltDrive. [10]
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Model answer. The acquisition brings together two very different cultures — AutoStark's rule-bound role culture and VoltDrive's fast-moving task culture — so a culture clash is likely, with significant consequences for VoltDrive's staff.
How it all connects
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Glossary
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Quick check
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Revision flashcards
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Organizational (corporate) culture
The shared values, attitudes, beliefs and norms that are accepted and enacted within an organization — often summed up as 'the way things are done around here'. It is the informal personality of a business, distinct from its formal structure.
Key takeaways
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Values: the core principles the firm treats as important — for example 'customer first', 'safety above all', 'move fast'.
- ✓
Beliefs and assumptions: the convictions, often unconscious, that people take for granted about how the business and its world work.
- ✓
Norms: the unwritten rules of expected behaviour — how to act in meetings, how formally to communicate, whether it is normal to stay late.
- ✓
Artefacts: the visible signs of culture — office design, dress code, logos, rituals, ceremonies and stories — easy to observe but sometimes hard to interpret.
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How culture is formed: the founder's vision, the firm's history and heroes, its national and industry context, its leadership and reward systems, and who it recruits and promotes.
Practice — then mark it
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Get a Paper 2 question marked: discuss the challenges a business faces in changing its organizational culture, applying the concepts and reaching a supported judgement
Get a Paper 2 question marked: discuss the challenges a business faces in changing its organizational culture, applying the concepts and reaching a supported judgement
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