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[Commlist] New publication: "Organisational Culture of Public Service Media: People, Values and Processes"
Tue Nov 26 15:23:16 GMT 2019
*“ORGANISATIONAL CULTURE OF PUBLIC SERVICE MEDIA: PEOPLE, VALUES AND
PROCESSES"*
PROJECT REPORT BY MICHAL GLOWACKI AND LIZZIE JACKSON
ONLINE PUBLICATION: www.creativemediaclusters.com/findings
<http://www.creativemediaclusters.com/findings>
From 2015–2019 Dr Michał Głowacki and Professor Lizzie Jackson have
been investigating the internal organisational cultures of ten
successful high technology clusters in North America and Europe. The
project aimed to identify the strategies and organisational culture of
firms operating within such clusters to inform the evolution of public
service media worldwide. The researchers also included the nearest
public service media outlet to each cluster in the investigation.
“Organisational Culture of Public Service Media: People, Values and
Processes” examined four high technology clusters in North America:
Austin (Texas), Boston/Cambridge (Massachusetts), Detroit (Michigan) and
Toronto (Canada), and six in Europe; London (UK), Warsaw (Poland),
Copenhagen (Denmark), Brussels (Belgium), Tallinn (Estonia), and Vienna
(Austria). The project was funded by the National Science Centre of
Poland (Narodowe Centrum Nauki,
NCN). It was also supported by
the
University of Warsaw (Poland)
and London South Bank University (UK).
The question was to identify what people, values and processes should
Public Service Media (PSM) develop in order to complete with commercial
media firms within a highly volatile media market. It was clear there is
an urgent need for the holistic adaptation of the organisational culture
of Public Service Media. Without adaptation there is likely to be a
decline in the ability of PSM to survive within this fast-evolving
contemporary media and communications production and distribution landscape.
150 semi-structured interviews, 500+ photographs of observational
neighbourhood and office ‘walkabouts’ were augmented with grey
literature (such as City Hall strategies and news reports). To introduce
the findings presented here in a report tailored for industry: six
highly linked and inter-woven organisational-cultural characteristics
were evident in High Technology clusters. These contrast, sometimes
significantly, with the organisational culture of Public Service Media:
1) High Technology clusters are aggregations of large, medium and small
firms with associated university departments in proximity. Small firms
are often aggregated in co-working spaces that may also offer
acceleration and incubation facilities. All firms and facilities promote
intense knowledge-sharing in contrast to PSM firms that are largely
internally-focused.
2) There was a lack of entrepreneurialism in PSM in comparison to the
successful high technology firms. Finding ways of partnering with small
to medium-sized businesses situated within co-working spaces could
assist the growth of an entrepreneurial culture within PSM.
3) The formal structure of a Corporation as found in most PSM is counter
to the agile working necessary for services delivered via data-driven
platforms.
4) The more successful co-working spaces are beginning to use a social
science approach to the workplace. Each area on each floor has been
specifically designed to support different kinds of activity whether it
be a café or bar (networking), reconfigurable desk and project spaces
(agile teams), communication booths, roof gardens and ‘chill-out’ spaces
(for relaxation), and bicycle parks (for wellbeing).
5) One of the most significant new roles, found universally within the
co-working spaces of high technology clusters is the Community Manager.
They run networking evenings, working breakfasts and lunches, and
schedule training in order to create a fundamentally pro-social work
culture. The reason for this is the criticality of supporting the trust
relationships necessary for small project working where different
creative and technologists work quickly to develop and test minimum
viable product or services. Project work also blends face to face and
online remote working, which requires deeper, cross-cultural, understanding.
6) Successful high technology clusters are likely to have access to
cheap transport, fast internet, and characterful industrial-age
warehouse buildings. Developed relationships with in-proximity
university research departments amplifies the knowledge-exchange
necessary to adapt to continually changing market conditions. Pro-active
stimulation by City Hall, for example, through the creation of Creative
Corridors, Creative Districts, and Media Cities where PSM could
flourish, if the organisational-cultural aspects can be adapted, could
also assist PSM growth.
The Project Report is available for free download in the Findings
section of the project website: www.creativemediaclusters.com/findings
<http://www.creativemediaclusters.com/findings>. The website also offers
insights on project methodology, and ongoing and future research
initiatives and publications.
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