A Culture Chasm: Education and Business

Why is there such a chasm between academia and the business world to address the organizational culture phenomena? The following article covers 3 main points relative to organizational culture. First, organizational culture is defined and put into context for better reader perspective. Second, the contextual problem facing business schools along with the disconnect between internal organizational culture and what is actually taught to graduates. Third, the solution that focuses on internal dynamics at the business school, borrowing academia research and business world practice. Ultimately, once internal organizational strategy is bridged with the classroom strategy, graduates move on to incubate more prosperous entities and shunt the growing trend of health cost drivers.

Organizational culture: It's not a new idea in business schools or in enterprise. lowly but surely researchers and industry experts alike are putting together a mounting body of evidence on the importance of organizational culture. Organizational culture is not simply about managing a healthcare trend, productivity indicator, injury trend or insurance premium cost drivers or touchy feely things. Organizational culture refers to the overall leadership quality and impact on the workforce, surrounding community and connection between workforce job duties and company mission. Ask yourself: Is worksite wellness and organizational culture written (formally or informally) into the mission statement of the company? Are managers supporting workers appropriately? How does the workforce perceive the company culture and the support from the manager? How do you know the answer to any of these questions? In 2002 Accenture and Wirthlin Worldwide, found that 35% of the companies surveyed said the workforce neither knew the company strategy, nor knew how their day-to-day responsibilities aligned with the strategy. While businesses must address their own problems with people strategy and organizational culture, I'm convinced that one of the roots of the problem exists in colleges and universities.

A workforce that understands the organizational mission and perceives their company's culture to be largely supportive will be more productive than their peers at a competing company. A supported workforce will also demonstrate a stronger sense of connection to the company, the company mission, and how each individual job responsibility is tied into the company mission. According to a Gallup survey, at least 22 million American workers are extremely negative or "actively disengaged" - this loss of productivity is estimated to be worth $250-$300 billion annually. Are business schools insulated? Of course the answer is no.

Since the first MBA program started between 1900 and 1908 (depending on whether you give credit to Harvard University or Dartmouth College), business schools have likely not demonstrated the same environmental enterprise knowledge they teach their graduates about organizational culture, productivity and communications. Schools are naturally good at reacting to what the consumer wants. Good business move, but they don't graduate leaders adept at building organizational culture, nor are they themselves great examples of organizational culture. Just doing a quick search of US and International business schools' courses, I found a number of courses covering organizational culture and case studies dating back over 30 years. So why is the news of a curriculum change at Haas School of Business at the University of California-Berkeley (Haas) so revolutionary?

The problem: Business schools aren't practicing what they preach, or maybe they're preaching the wrong strategy. According to Robert Kaplan and David Norton, developers of the Balanced Scorecard, 95% of a company's employees are unaware of, or do not understand, its strategy. If the course work is in place and case studies available to provide evidence that organizational culture is a foundation to build a lasting business, why have business schools not acted similarly? Why have so many business leaders treated organizational culture as a line item of employee benefits? This leads me to believe that either the world of Business School education is flat or the navigational instruments need calibrating for the 21st century. Either way the proverbial ship that incubates leadership and innovation is traveling aimlessly at sea. The single most important foundational point to correct course is to learn, teach, live and support organizational culture.

Again, while business schools are accommodating consumer's requests for shorter, intensive programs in order to return to work quicker and offering seminar driven learning and even specialty degrees in executive management, few are looking at their own philosophy of organizational culture and how it translates into developing leaders and thinkers who will then cultivate their own organizational culture. However, a couple of institutions seem to be trending along the paradigm shift of course correction. Haas School of Business recently announced a new curriculum that focuses the business school's attention on organizational culture and the Columbia Business School (CBS) which utilizes lecturers with Indian background and philosophy to teach some of its courses. In general, Indian philosophy stresses controllable actions and processes instead of focusing solely on outcomes that are not within our control. Interesting side note: these two institutions also have a joint Executive MBA programs (EMBA). Since they both have similar outlooks and mission, it's no wonder they've partnered.

In contrast to business schools on the whole, large businesses like General Electric, Proctor & Gamble and Southwest have started scratching the surface of organizational culture and producing tremendous case studies to learn from. If the business world can address organizational culture by borrowing the research from universities and colleges that indicate its importance, why is there such a chasm between academia and the business world to address the culture phenomena? The answer may lie somewhere in the vast sea of humility.

I recognize that academic institutions and businesses don't operate in a vacuum, nor is every business leader doing better than their counterpart at every Business School. That said, innovators in the business world tend to recognize when they are not the smartest person in the room, need help leading and consequently remove themselves as obstacles to the process of progression. Look no further than General Motors or Ford Motor Company when both top executives stepped aside, in favor of new leadership to drive a new business model. Historically, Business Schools tend to get tunnel vision on solely producing graduates and not evaluating internal culture. Leaders have held themselves out to be the smartest person in the room and lead via authoritative means. In a working paper, Jean-Pierre BenoƮt and Juan Dubra cited, "...Dozens of studies show that people...are generally overconfident about their relative skills."

The solution: Remind your workers and team daily why their work is important. Woody Johnson (owner of the New York Jets football organization), borrowed the example his family used to build Johnson & Johnson. When building their new facility, the team owners designed nearly every office to look out onto the practice fields, to remind everyone, everyday, that they were in the football business. Business schools may not have their own literal practice field, but within their own design models, business schools can utilize a set of three solutions in 2011 to change course and affect organizational culture at the root as learned from my experience in worksite wellness solutions and organizational culture analysis.

#1: Lose the job description and think amalgamated business model. Every person in America, who holds a job, knows they do more than is in their job description. Job descriptions isolate groups of workers and fail to allow for effective communication flow. Whether you're working with new hires or existing employees, the process of shifting from a job description business model to one that more closely resembles an amalgamated model leans on communication.

#2: Produce an organizational audit. Audits take on many different forms. However, they don't have to be complex or lengthy. Simple employee surveys, for example, can provide necessary black and white commentary about a litany of issues including: workforce morale, teamwork, worker perceptions of the company, worker understanding of their own job responsibilities as well as workforce strategy and business strategy.

#3: Emphasize the organizational culture within the school and the classroom. Organizations with a lengthy business history often mistake reputation for culture. Colleges and Universities are certainly no exception. A business school with a great reputation for graduating innovative business leaders may not have a great internal culture that incubates good communication flow, worker understanding of the greater mission, etc. This reinforces the need to perform some type of audit (see #2). The future of organizations lies in the ability not only to innovate, but for decision makers to understand the worksite culture and to over communicate the business strategy to its workforce. To be certain that each individual worker understands the affect their responsibilities have on the success of the company. The time to chart a better course is now. For if not now, when?

Why It Is Necessary to Keep Your Business Bank Account Separate From Your Personal Bank Account

Now a day there is a debatable issue regarding the bank accounts. When we talk about the finance and cash flow of our affairs, it comes to hear that we should maintain a separate bank account for our business instead of using our personal account for our business purposes. The points that I would like to discuss here is that why we need a separate business bank account for our work, commerce or related affairs? Is it prohibited to use your personal bank account or your business purposes? What are the draw backs for using the personal account for your business purposes? Here below we shall discuss these entire questions in detail but in short.

First of all I would like to clarify that this is not an essential to maintain a different business account for your work corporation. You can use your personal bank account for your business matters only if you are running a small scale business and you feel it convenient to use your personal bank account for your work matter.

When we start a business we utilize a specific amount that is of course provided by the owner, although the owner is the only person to whom all the finance of a business belongs to. But if we use the personal account of the owner for his racket affairs there will be a very confusing situation when we would be in need to reach the business revenues and expenses. We shall never be able to reach the exact figures of the business. It shall be very hard to identify the business expenses among the personal expenses of the owner. We shall never be able to reach out that either the entreprise or commerce is doing good figures, better or bad figures. But if it comes to partnership or corporate level business entities, it is a requirement by the IRS to maintain the separate business bank account for your business affairs so that the exact figures can be extracted for taxation purposes.

One more reason behind maintaining your best business bank account separated from personal account is the accounting concept which is known as "separate entity concept" which explains that the business and the business owner are two different bodies. This concept separates the responsibilities of a business from the responsibilities of the business owner. In this way if the business entity ever goes solvent only the business assets will be taken into consideration. So in such a situation the personal account of the owner will never be looked for raising the funds of a solvent business.

When we use to be in a business environment we use to practice specific circulation of funds. It is not necessary always to utilize the funds that only belong to the business. Sometimes the business goes out of funds. In such cases what should be done? Should the business go to the silent phase and wait for funds that the owner will generate in unexpected time limit? Can it be possible to stay out of market for a while jus for waiting for necessary funds? No, definitely this can't be happened. May be we shall never have a second chance to step in the business market. In such situation we take credit figures from banks and many other financial institutions to keep the business running smoothly. So the banks and financial intuitions provide loans to the business entities. For getting this facility it is highly recommended to have a business bank account.

Looking for a Real Christian Internet Business Opportunity

Recently I was searching on the Internet for an online Christian home based business. Needless to say, the search was somewhat disappointing simply because of the huge number of websites all claiming to offer the perfect solution to my home based business needs. Unfortunately, very few of the companies I researched were actually founded by Christians. Fewer still were built around Christian business standards and ethics. The majority of companies offering home based business opportunities were simply Christian home business owners looking for Christian customers. Sorry, that's not what I was looking for. Anyone can claim to be a Christian, just as easily as anyone can claim to be a true Christian business owner. I didn't want to become part of an online business opportunity unless it was truly a Christian-based business, founded by Christians, operating on Christian biblical principles, and an online business that would allow me to be my own boss.

If you search Google for "christian home based business" most of the top websites are not Christian businesses at all. Most are Christian business directories. That's fine if I were searching for a typical job working for a traditional business, or wanted to start a typical "bricks and mortar" business. But I was searching for a true home based business where I could work from home on a part-time or full-time basis. I like the idea of working from the comfort of my own home, around my own schedule, and without making a huge investment and all the risk that goes into operating a typical "bricks and mortar" business

So, if you're like me and wanting to start your own Christian home based business, let me share with you some things I've learned. There are a few ways you can start this kind of business, but only one is truly a home based business.

You can always find a particular product or service that would have a wide appeal to Christians, and then market your business through traditional marketing methods such as print or media advertising. Of course the most effective marketing tool is the Internet. But unless you really know how to tap into the power of the Internet, you're basically at a loss. Even if you build a website, it will quickly become lost among the millions of similar sites on the worldwide web. It's sort of like planting a tree in a rainforest. You need to learn all the unique ways of driving Internet traffic to your website.

The most effective online Christian business opportunity is one that not only offers products or services that appeal to everyone - including Christians - but which also provides you with a complete turn-key operation, and will then teach you everything you need to know about Internet marketing. It should also be affordable. It shouldn't cost you a small fortune to get started. The up-front costs of getting into a good Internet business can range from several hundred to upwards of two-thousand dollars or more. Usually, the more you pay, the more you get. Just make sure there are no additional hidden costs for services you must purchase at a later time. Any additional costs, if there are any, should be purely optional and should not have a negative impact on your businesses ability to attract customers if you chose to opt out of those additional services. Plus, a credible online business should allow you to generate a fairly steady income stream within a reasonable amount of time. No Internet business opportunity, Christian or otherwise, can promise immediate profits. If they do, there is usually a catch. But you should be able to start generating real profits within 4 to 6 months after you start - assuming you are putting in the time, and following through on all the training you need to be a success.

But what if you're not "computer literate?" What if you barely know how to log onto your computer and surf the Internet? Can you still have a successful Christian home based business online? It all depends if the business opportunity you choose offers a truly comprehensive training program. Of course, some online businesses provide services where they do all the work of marketing and talking to potential clients. But those services cost, and will very quickly eat into your profits.

If you really want to be successful in business, especially online, you need to be patient, and take the time to learn how to do it all yourself. That doesn't means you must always do it all by yourself. You just need to know how to effectively market your business and talk with potential clients. Once you've learned those skills then you can decide how much of your own time you want to spend doing those tasks yourself, and how many you may want to outsource to others. But the bottom line is you need to have a team of real professionals backing you up, and offering you the best and most up-to-date Internet marketing strategies as part of a comprehensive training program. You not only need to learn marketing methods and strategies that will require an investment of your own money, but also effective marketing methods and strategies that are absolutely free. Also, that training should be available to you 24/7. Beside scheduled online training seminars, you should have access to a complete library of online training courses offering expertise in all areas of Internet recruiting and marketing. And perhaps most important, make sure you also have customer support 24/7. You should be able to get issues resolved within 24 to 48 hours of the time you submit a request. You should also have access to a comprehensive knowledge base or question and answer library where you can find solutions to issues on your own.

The bottom line is simply this. To find the right online Christian business opportunity will require a lot of due diligence. You need to approach the whole process objectively. That means look past all the fluff and all the glitz and glamour of claims, and thoroughly examine the basics of the business. Does it offer products and services that have a wide appeal to people searching for an online business? Does it offer a turn-key setup that will put you into business right away? Does it allow you to get into business without a huge expense? Does it provide you with a comprehensive training program so you can truly learn all the ins and outs of Internet marketing? Does it offer a 24/7 customer support and a thorough knowledge base or Q&A library? And perhaps most important of all, is it really a Christian business? Was it founded by Christians, and does it operate on sound biblical Christian principles of truth, honesty, fairness, and the Golden Rule of doing unto others as you would have others do unto you?