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INTERNATIONAL ISSUES ROBERT E. MARKLAND, Feature Editor, College of Business Administration, University of South Carolina Global Cooperation: Using Metaphors to Communicate and Avoid Corporate Culture Clashesby Julie E. Kendall, School of Business, Rutgers University, USA
It happens everyday in every
major city around the world, often as a result of two companies
merging. To the corporations involved these changes represent
wise
economic decisions. To the individuals involved, it can translate
into a bloody culture clash that wounds or even kills a corporate
personality with which they have strongly identified.
In the United States, I have observed how bank mergers result in
cultures clashing. One problem occurs when banks are forced to
decide whether Bank A's or Bank B's information system will
survive. Since the information systems were developed using a
variety of metaphors, it is not surprising that the systems are
not
compatible with each other. A culture clash is inevitable.
It only seems natural to build on these findings and pose the
questions: Do countries, organizations, and corporate cultures
use
and share metaphors? If so, can the understanding and sharing of
metaphors assist us in accomplishing our common goals for the
Decision Sciences Institute (i.e., international understanding,
improving research into decision making in international
businesses, and helping to promote the growth of global
commerce?)
As you ponder these questions, permit me to summarize some of the
metaphors that I have found occurring in groups of information
systems users.
Is it possible that metaphors can enable us to see the world anew
when we design new international systems, merge multinational
businesses, or build internationally focused professional
organizations?
Over the past 7 years, I was fortunate enough to travel around
the
world, in part while spending a year's sabbatical at the Judge
Institute of Management Studies, at the Cambridge University in
England. I was actively researching, publishing, and lecturing on
the importance and meaning of metaphors in information systems
development. This work (in which I have often been joined by my
colleague and husband, Ken) has hit an unusually responsive chord
with our international student, academic, and practitioner
audiences. Now it is being taken up by other disciplines in the
decision sciences; and business people working in organizations
around the world acknowledge work on corporate metaphors as
influential in their decision making process, especially when two
or more corporate or national cultures are attempting to merge.
I found, much to my delight (and relief), that as I lectured and
gave seminars, research into metaphors and information systems
was
something that students, professors, and business people almost
intuitively understood. When possible, I asked questions of my
audience, but just as often they volunteered metaphors in common
use in their own department, organization, or society. Often they
speculated on the meanings of these metaphors and their
importance
to the projects being undertaken. Many other times they reassured
and encouraged me: they said that they had different metaphors
that
conveyed the same meaning.
Perhaps it is a sign of the nineties, but the metaphor that
generated the most conversation was the zoo metaphor. One masters
student from Southeast Asia told me that they did not have the
metaphor of a zoo representing chaos, but used a fish market
metaphor to denote chaos. Another student, this one from France,
candidly volunteered that characterizing a situation as a brothel
was a metaphorical comment on the situation's inherent chaos. A
German student commented that employing a circus metaphor
signified
the most chaotic situation imaginable.
In Cairo, we presented our research to the Decision Support
System
Group of the Egyptian Cabinet. When we mentioned that generally
in
our work the family metaphor was successful in fostering only
certain types of more traditional information systems, but that
other metaphors were more appropriate for development of
Executive
Information Systems and other more flexible systems, many people
in
the DSS Group were taken aback. They explained to us how critical
the family metaphor was to their society, and that it was
important
in commerce and management as well. Further, they said that the
status of the family metaphor was not likely to change soon.
The students and their professors with whom I shared my
metaphor's
research have continued working on an entire spectrum of
projects.
Researchers in Krakow are working with us on a joint project
comparing metaphors of English-speaking and Polish-speaking
system
users. A new information systems research center in England was
named to reflect our call for an organic metaphor to aid in
developing flexible information systems. A professor and his
students in Mexico are collecting metaphors and extending our
work
into the Spanish language.
There is hope to be found in creating and sharing metaphors with
our colleagues in all of our international arenas. As mentioned
earlier in connection with the zoo metaphor and other metaphors
used to depict chaos, different people from different countries
employ a variety of metaphors to explain the same phenomenon.
Corporate cultures need not clash. And we need not proscribe our
international activities by making an impoverished choice among
limited provincial metaphors. As Shakespeare's metaphor so aptly
reminds us, ``All the world's a stage<|>.<|>.<|>.<|>.''
Clancy, J. J. (1989) The invisible powers; the language of
business. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books.
Kendall, J. E. and Kendall, K. E. Metaphors and Methodologies:
Living Beyond the Systems Machine, MIS Quarterly, (17:2),
June 1993, pp. 149-171.
Kendall, J. E. and Kendall, K. E Metaphors and their Meaning for
Information Systems Development, European Journal of
Information
Systems, (3:1) 1994, pp. 37-47.
Morgan, G. (1986) Images of organization. Beverly Hills:
Sage Publications.
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