A CONCEPTUAL MODEL OF ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE AND ITS IMPLICATIONS IN THE SERVICE SECTOR
Author(s) -
Flor Morton,
Teresa Treviño,
Laura Zapata-Cantú
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
multidisciplinary business review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 0718-400X
pISSN - 0718-3992
DOI - 10.35692/07183992.12.1.3
Subject(s) - organizational culture , business , customer orientation , market orientation , customer satisfaction , conceptual model , tertiary sector of the economy , marketing , organizational performance , knowledge management , public relations , computer science , political science , database
The increasingly global competition in all productive sectors – including the service sector – has forced companies to adjust their organizational processes to incorporate a customer experience approach. This adjustment implies the need for modifications to certain internal organizational factors, such as organizational culture, values and beliefs, in order to survive. This research proposes that – besides other factors – organizational culture type and the level of customer orientation can account for a considerable portion of a company’s success or failure. Therefore, the objective of this conceptual paper is to propose a model that determines which type of organizational culture (clan, hierarchical, adhocracy, or market) facilitates a greater degree of customer orientation. Specifically, this research proposes that a market type of organizational culture will have greater customer orientation than the other classifications of organizational culture and that a higher degree of customer orientation fosters employee satisfaction, which can have a positive impact on customer satisfaction.
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