Workplace Culture The Sears Store I Am Term Paper

PAGES
3
WORDS
978
Cite

Workplace Culture The Sears store I am familiar with has some cultural strengths and weaknesses. Communication flows in a top-down way, because few employees in the store have any real authority. The store has assistant managers and managers for each department, and the managers report to people above them, but real control is highly centralized. New policies are communicated via memos put in each employee's mail slot. For complicated new procedures, such as the use of a new cash register, is done in formal classes.

The store represents a broad range of people including males and females of all ages, gay and straight, including Caucasians, African-American, Hispanic, Caucasian, and Asian. In the lunchroom, the same people eat together each day, with ethnic divisions obvious. Certain groups join certain others, but particular groups rarely intermingle. Conversation is rarely about work, possibly because most people have jobs with limited responsibility.

The store has minimum dress requirements. No blue jeans or sneakers are allowed. Midriffs cannot show. Extreme makeup, hairstyles and jewelry aren't allowed. All people speak standard English with customers, but when on breaks, people typically use more slang, idioms that reflect their cultural heritage, etc.

Technology plays an important role in the jobs of sales floor personnel. Today's cash registers are complex computers. The printout of key codes, laminated in plastic and kept at the computer for reference, is long and extensive. Even with that cue card,...

...

Technology involves the merchandise itself as well. Higher-priced clothing sometimes has a magnetic tag sewn into a seam as a theft-deterrent device. Pricing requires programming into the main computer so registers automatically compute discounts during sales. When that isn't done properly, it's a real mess.
The biggest cultural problem this company has relates to the lack of influence most people feel, along with poor conflict management. Perhaps because many employees have no real authority, a lot of people tend to jockey for position in negative ways, and it seems to be tolerated by the lower level management. Higher levels may not be aware of it, but as many as 30% of the sales floor people show a fair amount of indifference and resentment when immediate supervisors give them instructions (Dwan, 2003). Every once in a while, a new person seems to be targeted for a kind of hazing. These people typically don't stay very long. There doesn't seem to be anything wrong with their personality or skills. It's almost like a game.

Employees seem uninvolved with how well the store does because emphasis is all on total amount of sales each day. In addition, while immediate supervisors don't have much authority except to do things like straighten out cash register problems, it seems that they often are promoted based on who they are friend with rather than what skills they have (Namie, 2003).…

Sources Used in Documents:

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Clark, Margaret M. 2004. "A jury of their peers: giving employees a say in resolving each other's workplace disputes can pay big cultural dividends." HR Magazine, Jan. 23.

Dwan, Sue. 2003. "Weapons of self-destruction: if someone in the workplace has a large chip on their shoulder they will damage much more than just themselves." NZ Business, April.

Meisinger, Susan. 2004. "HR Leadership Is Key To Creating Better Workplaces." HR Magazine, Aug. 12.

Namie, Gary. 2003. "Workplace bullying: escalated incivility." Ivey Business Journal Online, Nov. 2.


Cite this Document:

"Workplace Culture The Sears Store I Am" (2005, January 16) Retrieved April 19, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/workplace-culture-the-sears-store-i-am-61086

"Workplace Culture The Sears Store I Am" 16 January 2005. Web.19 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/workplace-culture-the-sears-store-i-am-61086>

"Workplace Culture The Sears Store I Am", 16 January 2005, Accessed.19 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/workplace-culture-the-sears-store-i-am-61086

Related Documents
Change Management
PAGES 13 WORDS 3839

Introduction A change management plan to implement a new process in the workforce to allow for a business to provide more personalized service is needed in the retail industry (Aloysius, Hoehle, Goodarzi & Venkatesh, 2018). Brick and mortar stores must do something to differentiate themselves from e-commerce businesses, which can provide more convenience to shoppers who prefer not to have to leave their homes. In other words, brick and mortar retailers

Market Driven Management
PAGES 75 WORDS 25695

Pharmaceutical industries have to operate in an environment that is highly competitive and subject to a wide variety of internal and external constraints. In recent times, there has been an increasing trend to reduce the cost of operation while competing with other companies that manufacture products that treat similar afflictions and ailments. The complexities in drug research and development and regulations have created an industry that is subject to intense

Marketing Strategy of Wal-Mart Retail Chain: An Analysis Wal-Mart's history is an example of innovation, leadership and success in a company. It began as a single store in Rogers, Arkansas in 1962 and has become the world's largest retailer (Slater, 2003). Wal-Mart is often looked to as the industry trendsetter. The company enjoys annual revenues of over $100 billion, 3,200 stores and nearly one million employees around the world. Wal-Mart operates each

Aaker 1991, P13 It Is
PAGES 25 WORDS 8932

It is argued that teacher are exposed to role conflict, role ambiguity, lack of autonomy, social isolation and lack of self-fulfillment resulting from the special position in the schools bureaucratic system. Coupled with this is the general tendency for the teaching profession to be the least rewarded in the hierarchy of jobs. The physical education teacher and burnout intersect at two different but related points. Firstly the notion that the

Human Resources Management - Maintaining a Competitive Edge in the Corporate Marketplace Change continues to reshape the workplace. Today's HR professional is called upon to help the organization retain its competitive edge in the marketplace. Along with representing the best interests of employees, HR professionals assume the role of strategic partner, administrative expert, and change agent. HR assumes a critical role in promoting the vision and shaping the focus of the

Social Business and Retailer
PAGES 50 WORDS 12746

business2community.com/social-media/2012s-ten-worst-social-media-Disaster-0370309 Using contemporary illustrative examples from academic literature and reputable business publications, discuss the concept of "Social Business" and the resultant opportunity and challenges that are currently being faced by the retail industry globally. Concept of Social Business Concept of Social Business with Retailers Social Media and Retailing Best Practices in Administering Social Media There is a growing body of research that confirms that companies of all sizes and types can realize a wide array