
Organizational Effectiveness in both Private and Publish Sectors in Iraqi Kurdistan, the role of Organization Culture and Leadership will be investigated
Author(s) -
Sardar Hassan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
türk bilgisayar ve matematik eğitimi dergisi
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.218
H-Index - 3
ISSN - 1309-4653
DOI - 10.17762/turcomat.v12i2.706
Subject(s) - leadership style , organizational culture , organizational effectiveness , test (biology) , public sector , private sector , organizational learning , organizational commitment , sample (material) , order (exchange) , publication , regression analysis , perception , relation (database) , psychology , organization development , public relations , business , knowledge management , political science , computer science , mathematics , statistics , data mining , paleontology , chemistry , finance , chromatography , neuroscience , law , biology , advertising
This study explores the organizational effectiveness in both private and public sector organizations in Iraqi Kurdistan and examines whether organizational culture types and leadership styles influence organizational effectiveness. For that reason, a deep literature review was developed on that past studies. By using Competing Values Model (CVM) data were collected and measured. In order to answer the research questions and test hypotheses independently a sample of 272 managers form distinct organizations in both sectors are chosen for this research and correlation coefficient test and regression analysis methods are used to test the relation. Moreover, organizational culture and leadership style were regressed on organizational effectiveness. Thus, the managers’ perception data indicate organizational effectiveness can be predicted by both organizational culture types and leadership style. Therefore, this author can conclude there is a positive relation between variables. The finding also shows that both independent variables can impact organizational effectiveness in public sector, while only leadership style can predict the dependent variable in private sector. At the end, some recommendations were proposed and further research in these areas was strongly advised