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How national cultural differences have an impact on matrix management

May 29th, 2008 · 2 Comments

As we have seen in previous posts on managing multiple bosses, one of the most fundamental skills of matrix management is the ability to manage “upwards” to reconcile and trade off between competing priorities from different matrix managers.

The ability to challenge people who are hierarchically more senior than you differs between cultures and this can cause problems in matrix management.

Various researchers have looked at how different national cultures have an impact on how hierarchy and status are managed at work. Hofstede talked about “power distance” (the difference in effective power between people at different levels and how easy this was to challenge) Trompenaars looked at ”achievement and ascription” (where does status come from and how is it exercised).

It is fairly well established from this research and also from our own work in our tools for cross-cultural success training that some cultures find it relatively easy to challenge upwards - Dutch, Nordic and Australian cultures encourage direct upward challenge and this is well accepted by matrix managers.

In other cultures where the hierarchy is steep it is less acceptable to question your boss. People in a matrix may find it much more difficult to challenge their boss openly - much of Asia, Arab and more traditional Latin organizations may experience this.

In an international matrix, where the structure conflicts with this cultural norm, the matrix structure becomes distorted. Whilst in principle an individual has multiple reporting lines of similar power and can trade off the different inputs, in practice the local matrix manager has substantially more power and control and will expect (and receive) greater priority.

Have you seen examples of this in your matrix structure?

Tags: Matrix Management · Matrix Organization Structure · Matrix skills · Working in a Matrix

2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Jonathan Kroner // May 29, 2008 at 4:55 pm

    Has there been any research that has updated Hofstede’s 28+ year old study? I would suspect the extremes in power-distance variations from country to country have narrowed among educated workforces, especially in the EC, but I have only anecdotal support for this.
    Jonathan Kroner, JD, MBA
    Miami, USA
    http://jonathankroner.com/

  • 2 Kevan Hall // May 29, 2008 at 5:12 pm

    I think the research continues but I have never seen any publically quoted updates.

    Fons Trompanaars’ data is more up to date and shows similar patterns

    I don’ t use Hofstede’s model or research much as it is quite old and I find many of his terms a bit pejorative these days i.e. “masculine - feminine” and “uncertainty avoidance”

    Nevertheless the reluctance to challenge authority is a marked difference we see in our cross-cultural consulting and training.

    In general my own experience is that the biggest changes in cultural behaviours at work would have been in the fast developing economies, particularly Eastern Europe where communism distorted some more “natural” cultural behaviours, and amongst young people in economies like China and India.

    Within the EU cultural change is slower though a lot of contact means that more and more people are learning how to bridge the differences.

    I think we also need to be careful in assuming that cultures are becoming more alike. For those of us in intenational busines this becomes the norm, for most people there is little contact with other cultures.

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