Ten
Key Cross-Cultural Management Skills
By Dr. Karine Schomer, President, CMCT
Unlike
technical knowledge, intercultural awareness and skill are not something
you can achieve just by reading a "how-to" manual or learning
a simple formula.
How
people's cultural backgrounds play themselves out is obvious in some
ways and quite subtle in others. Appearance, names, language, accents,
artifacts and shared worlds of reference are visible at once. Intangibles,
however - attitudes towards time, commitments, success, status, authority,
accountability, planning, negotiation, rewards, teamwork, personal boundaries
and social interactions - are not immediately apparent.
To
be effective as a global IT manager, you need to be aware of the major
underlying cultural values that have implications for business relations
and organizational functioning. The skills you need are those "soft"
skills, which are, in fact, considerably harder to acquire than the
"hard" technical skills.
Some
managers are fortunate to have innate strength in these areas, most
need education and training, a few are so inept that it would be better
to keep them out of crucial global management responsibilities.
Do
you want to assess your ability to succeed in global management? Are
you are looking to appoint someone to a key position? Are you seeking
to make your multicultural teams more effective? Are you trying to define
an appropriate management style for your global company?
If
so, pay close attention to developing the ten winning skills for managing
in a culturally diverse environment:
- Self-knowledge:
understanding your own cultural values and how they affect your attitudes
and behaviors.
- Global
thinking: staying informed on global trends and events.
- Cultural
curiosity: observing cultural behaviors in a non-judgmental way.
- Flexibility:
adapting gracefully to a wide spectrum of operational practices, business
styles, and social environments.
- Inclusivity:
making people of different backgrounds feel at ease, understood, and
valued for their perspectives.
- Managing
diversity: getting people who are from different backgrounds to
work together effectively as unified teams.
- Interpersonal
communication: expressing yourself persuasively while genuinely
hearing what others are communicating to you.
- Motivational
leadership: leading in ways that inspire employees to take responsibility
and initiative, collaborate, and contribute the creativity of their
differences.
- Credibility:
exercising integrity, openness, trustworthy behavior, and candor in
all your interpersonal dealings.
- Patience:
working with other people's needs and timetables, keeping your focus
on long-term goals, and not wasting your goodwill capital on getting
immediate results.
©2000
Karine Schomer. All Rights Reserved. Originally published in Siliconindia,
January 2000.
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229 Carmel Avenue . El Cerrito, CA
94530, USA . Tel: 510/525-9222
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