Examples of core in the following topics:
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- Core and observable culture are two facets of the same organizational culture, with core culture being inward-facing and intrinsic and observable culture being more external and tangible (outward-facing).
- The next level is values, which bridges the gap between observable and core culture.
- This is where observable culture begins to transform into core culture.
- In many ways, one could equate core culture with an individual's subconscious.
- Core culture has the same relationship with observable culture: core culture is created first, and ultimately drives the visible cultural aspects of the organization.
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- The theory states that there are five core job characteristics:
- The core characteristics affect three critical psychological states of the workers doing the job:
- The combination of core characteristics with psychological states influences work outcomes such as:
- The Job Characteristics Theory uses this equation to estimate the overall motivation inherent in a job design based upon the five core characteristics.
- Analyze the core characteristics, psychological states, and work outcomes in the Job Characteristics Theory, as identified by Hackman and Oldham
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- Alderfer's ERG theory, based on Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, outlines three core needs: existence, relatedness, and growth.
- ERG Theory posits that there are three groups of core needs: existence (E), relatedness (R), and growth (G)—hence the acronym "ERG."
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- A network organization sounds complex, but it is at its core a simple concept.
- While the core company focuses mainly on designing products and tracking finances, this network of partnerships enables it to be much more than just a design operation.
- These potentially unpredictable variables essentially reduce the core company's control over its operational success.
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- A core function of human resource management is development—training efforts to improve personal, group, or organizational effectiveness.
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- The mission statement is generated to retain consistency in overall strategy and to communicate core organizational goals to all stakeholders.
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- Ethics is at the core of corporate governance, and management must reflect accountability for their actions on a global community scale.
- At their core, these regulations approach the fundamental dissonance alluded to above: profit-maximizing behavior as it contrasts with non-economic concerns.
- Though this is only a simplified and small analysis of a complicated issue, it succinctly describes how corporate management saw each echelon of leadership ignore the core responsibility of ensuring ethical standards in lieu of capital gains.
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- The classic example of a company that completely transformed itself as a result of lateral thinking is the Finnish company Nokia, whose original core business was wood pulp and logging.
- When the collapse of communism opened the Russian market to the west, Nokia's core business was seriously threatened by cheaper imports from Russia's seemingly limitless forests.
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- Human resources departments must identify the core culture of the organization and create incentives that match it.
- This means performance incentives and metrics may be relatively useless (and most likely damaging) to executing the core organizational goals.
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- The core concept of equity theory amounts to each party's inputs and outcomes equating.
- Distinguish the core components of equity theory that seek to measure equity accurately and restore equity when appropriate