Organizational Culture as a Predictor of Job Satisfaction: The Case of Development Bank of Ethiopia By: Biniyam Teka A Project Submitted to School Of Commerce in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for Masters of Art Degree in Human Resource Management (HRM) Advisor: Tilaye Kassahun (PhD) Addis Ababa University School of Commerce Graduate Program February, 2012 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Acknowledgment I would like to take the opportunity to sincerely thank those who helped me finish the research
Words: 22690 - Pages: 91
INTERNATIONAL AND COMPERATIVE HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT ASSIGNMENT 1 INDIVIDUAL REPORT Module Leader: MOIRA CALVELEY Content * Introduction……………………………………………………………………..3 * Hofstede culture thoery…………………………………..……………….4 * Labour Laws……………………………………………………………………..7 * Trade Unions……….…………………………………………………………..8 * Conclusion……….………………………………………………………………9 * Reflection….…………………………………………………………………..10 * Appendix………………………………………………………………………12
Words: 3861 - Pages: 16
Chapter 7 Cultural Diversity in Cross-Border Alliances Susan E . Jackson Randall S . Schuler Introduction Increasingly, firms are using cross-border alliances to strengthen and maintain their position in the market place . Although often seen as a relatively fast and efficient way to expand into new markets and incorporate new technologies, the success of cross-border alliances is by no means assured . To the contrary, such alliances often fall short of their stated goals and objectives
Words: 13871 - Pages: 56
ANRV296-PS58-19 ARI 17 November 2006 1:33 Annu. Rev. Psychol. 2007.58:479-514. Downloaded from arjournals.annualreviews.org by University Of Maryland on 12/11/06. For personal use only. Cross-Cultural Organizational Behavior Michele J. Gelfand,1 Miriam Erez,2 and Zeynep Aycan3 1 Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742; email: mgelfand@psyc.umd.edu 2 Technion, Israel Institute of Technology, Technion City, Haifa, Israel 32000; email:
Words: 22630 - Pages: 91
Journal of International Business Studies (2006) 37, 525–543 & 2006 Academy of International Business All rights reserved 0047-2506 $30.00 www.jibs.net Cross-cultural competence in international business: toward a definition and a model James P. Johnson1, Tomasz Lenartowicz2 and Salvador Apud3 Crummer Graduate School of Business, Rollins College, Winter Park, USA; 2Deparment of Management, International Business and Entrepreneurship, College of Business, Florida Atlantic University, Boca
Words: 13004 - Pages: 53
Essay The rate of changes in organizations has been increased by a diversity of external forces such as intensified global competition, the increases in technology, reduced revenues and customer dissatisfaction (Attaran, 2004). These changes have led to a rise in downsizing, restructuring, reorganization, mergers and acquisitions. Nevertheless, most entrepreneurs’ efforts in changing organizations have failed to achieve the expected outcomes in terms of revenue growth, cost reduction, productivity
Words: 3054 - Pages: 13
activities Possible legal forms Conditions for profit repatriation Conditions for sales (e.g. local production) Operations risks Society Political system Ethnic and religious groups Languages Demographic structure Cultural distance Political risks Market system Players Flows of products and services Flows of information Producers and traders Sub-markets National and international competitors Wholesalers and retailers Competitive intensity
Words: 1994 - Pages: 8
respectively. The audience of the report is the CEO of RTW. The poor people who live around the poverty line and the local retailers in Morocco would be target market of RTW. The report will be analysed from three perspectives, which are economical, social-cultural and political/legal environments and most relevant factors in each environment will present the favourable or unfavourable influences for RTW. The large target market, stable economy and cheap labour cost will show a moderate economical opportunity
Words: 3682 - Pages: 15
able to •• describe the basic characteristics of culture and explain how cultural dimensions can be used in global HRM, •• describe how the institutions of society can shape HRM policies and procedures, •• discuss the possibility of the convergence of HRM across countries, •• explain how the heritage of state socialism continues to influence the context of HRM in transition economies, and •• discuss the effects of cultural and institutional context on the HRM role and on employee expectations
Words: 9323 - Pages: 38
Running head: GLOBAL BUSINESS CULTURAL ANALYSIS: TURKEY Abstract A global business cultural analysis is a tool used in order for one to become more familiar with a culture, more attune to the implications that the culture has on the business conducted by the people group of the culture, and more aware of the attitudinal and behavioral implications a member of a different culture should expect when working with members of the people group. In exploring the varying cultural elements, one examines the
Words: 5536 - Pages: 23