Dollinger index

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Creating the Organization 371

customer, the manager serves the worker. Table 9.2 compares the organizational culture
of the traditional firm with that of the entrepreneurial organization.

Entrepreneurial Ethics
An important part of a new venture’s culture is its ethical climate. The ethics of the
organization are never clear enough and are frequently ambiguous and shifting.
Stereotypically, entrepreneurs are seen as having low ethical standards. The great robber
barons of the American industrial revolution—the Rockefellers, Fords, Mellons, and
Carnegies—were all seen in their time as ruthless and unethical. In today’s Chinese eco-
nomic revolution, the use of public office for private gain, the lack of a rule of law, and
the endemic use of bribery contribute to the belief that the entrepreneur is an unethical,
selfish economic animal. In fact, entrepreneurs and small business owners are neither
more nor less ethical than other people, but they have different tolerances for different
types of unethical behavior. Table 9.3 reports the results of a large study of the ethical
differences between managers of small and large businesses.
Entrepreneurs repeatedly face ethical dilemmas, all involving the meaning of honesty.
At times the entrepreneur may feel that to be “completely honest” does a disservice to
the new venture and his or her efforts to create it. Yet to be less than completely honest
puts the credibility and reputation of both the entrepreneur and the new venture in ques-
tion. These are the dilemmas of the promoter, the innovator, and the transactor.

Promoter Dilemma. When entrepreneurs are in the early stages of promoting their
businesses to financial supporters, customers, potential partners, and employees, a cer-

Efficiency


TABLE 9.2 Organizational Culture: A Comparison


Dimension

Strategy
Productivity
Risk
Opportunity
Leadership
Power
Failure
Decision making
Communication
Structure
Creativity

Traditional Organization

Status quo, conservative
Short-term focus, profitability
Averse, punished
Absent
Top-down, autocratic
Hoarded
Costly
Centralized
By the book, chain of command
Hierarchical
Tolerated
Valued: accountants are heroes

Entrepreneurial Organization

Evolving, futuristic
Short-long term, multiple criteria
Emphasized and rewarded
Integral
Culture of empowerment
Given away
OK; teaches a lesson
Decentralized
Flexible, facilitates innovation
Organic
Prized and worshiped
Valued if it helps realize overall goals

SOURCE: Adapted from J. Cornwall and B. Perlman, Organizational Entrepreneurship (Homewood, IL: Irwin, 1990).
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