The influence of dimensions of organisational culture on supply chain performance in selected state-owned enterprises in Zimbabwe

Journal of Transport and Supply Chain Management

 
 
Field Value
 
Title The influence of dimensions of organisational culture on supply chain performance in selected state-owned enterprises in Zimbabwe
 
Creator Musanzikwa, Michael Ramchander, Manduth
 
Subject — organisational culture; supply chain performance; delivery; flexibility
Description Background: Despite being strategic, state-owned enterprises (SOEs) have failed to fulfil their mandate. Supply chain performance is ineffective largely because of weak organisational culture.Objectives: To explore the extent to which organisational cultural factors have influenced the supply chain performance of SOEs, review the literature; effectiveness of attaining financial targets, customer satisfaction, internal business processes, learning and growth; time orientation on the supply chain metric of delivery. The supply chain metric of flexibility; profitability on cost reduction; ‘no ownership’ culture on decision-making; and the level of customer satisfaction.Method: A mixed-method was used. The population comprised managers, employees and clients of eight selected SOEs. Judgmental, random and convenience sampling were employed. Questionnaires and interviews were the research instruments and quantitative and qualitative analyses were conducted. Findings are presented thematically, in line with the research questions.Results: SOEs were not meeting financial targets, not satisfying customers, poor internal business processes not attaining learning and growth targets. Organisational cultural variables were weak; affecting flexibility, no timely delivery of goods and services. Also influenced the behaviour of human resources and an indirect effect on customer satisfaction, cost-saving and profitability in the SOEs.Conclusion: The SOEs failed to meet financial, customer, learning and growth targets. The internal business processes were not effective. The culture did not promote efficiency. The study recommends that commitment of leadership on human behaviour is necessary for effective supply chain performance and strategy implementation. Constant environmental scanning, strategic alliances, rationalisation of remuneration and sound corporate governance are essential.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor
Date 2018-09-13
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — —
Format text/html application/epub+zip application/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/jtscm.v12i0.392
 
Source Journal of Transport and Supply Chain Management; Vol 12 (2018); 12 pages 1995-5235 2310-8789
 
Language eng
 
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https://jtscm.co.za/index.php/jtscm/article/view/392/721 https://jtscm.co.za/index.php/jtscm/article/view/392/720 https://jtscm.co.za/index.php/jtscm/article/view/392/722 https://jtscm.co.za/index.php/jtscm/article/view/392/717
 
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Rights Copyright (c) 2018 manduth ramchander https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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