Organisation climate

Organisational climate (sometimes known as corporate climate) is a concept that has academic meaning in the fields of organisational behaviour and I/O psychology as well as practical meaning in the business world[1] There is continued scholarly debate about the exact definition of organisational climate for the purposes of scientific study. The definition developed by Lawrence R. James (1943-2014) and his colleagues makes a distinction between psychological and organisational climate.

"Psychological climate is defined as the individual employee’s perception of the psychological impact of the work environment on his or her own well-being (James & James, 1989). When employees in a particular work unit agree on their perceptions of the impact of their work environment, their shared perceptions can be aggregated to describe their organisational climate (Jones & James, 1979; Joyce & Slocum, 1984)."[2]

Employees' collective appraisal of the organisational work environment takes into account many dimensions of the situation as well as the psychological impact of the environment. For instance, job-specific properties such as role clarity, workload and other aspects unique to a person's specific job have a psychological impact that can be agreed upon by members of the organisation. Work group or team cooperation and effectiveness as well as leadership and organisational support are other dimensions of shared experience that factor into organisational climate. Surveys are the most common way of quantifying organisational climate. Aspects of climate that influence performance of specific sets of behaviours and outcomes can be measured, such as the climate for safety and the climate for innovation. Many instruments have been developed to assess numerous aspects of climate.[3]

The shared perception approach emphasises the importance of shared perceptions as underpinning the notion of climate.[4] Organisational climate has also been defined as "the shared perception of the way things are around here".[5] There is great deal of overlap in the two approaches.

  1. ^ Glisson, Charles; James, Lawrence R. (2002). "The cross-level effects of culture and climate in human service teams". Journal of Organizational Behavior. 23 (6): 767–794. doi:10.1002/job.162.
  2. ^ Glisson, Charles; James, Lawrence R. (2002). "The cross-level effects of culture and climate in human service teams". Journal of Organizational Behavior. 23 (6): 767–794. doi:10.1002/job.162. ISSN 0894-3796.
  3. ^ Thumin, F. J., & Thumin, L. J. (2011). The measurement and interpretation of organizational climate. The Journal of Psychology, 145(2), 93–109. doi:10.1080/00223980.2010.538754
  4. ^ *Anderson, N.R., & West, M.A. (1996). "The team climate inventory: Development of the TCI and its applications in teambuilding for innovativeness." European Journal of Work and Organizational Behavior, 19, p. 235-258.
  5. ^ *Reichers, A.E. and Schneider, B. (1990). "Climate and culture: An evolution of constructs." In Schneider B. (Ed.) Organizational Climate and Culture, Jossey-Bass, San Francisco. (p. 22)