The relationship between Creativity, Innovation and Organisational Culture: Achieving external adaptation by leveraging an innovative enabling culture
Abstract
In the face of intense global competition and economic instability, the extant reality for
organisations in developing economies is to either adapt, innovate, or die! The purpose of this
project was to empirically test the relationship between organisational culture; innovation and
creativity and organisational adaptation; and test whether innovation and creativity has an
impact on the relationship between organisational culture and organisational adaptation. The
study also sought to explore and advance practical recommendations on how an
organisation’s innovative and creative potential can be leveraged through culture to ensure
organisational adaptation. The study proposed that the decline of the organisation under study
was due to its failure to adapt or navigate the environment. Descriptive statistics, Pearson
correlation and Regression analysis were used to address research questions and test the
hypotheses.
Survey results of ART Corporation sample showed that the dominant culture type at ART
Corporation is the Hierarchy culture with a mean score of 3.65, sd 0.43. Overall ART
Corporation has a lower organisational adaptation index with a mean score of 2.50. sd 0.92
Significant relationships were found between Organisational Culture and Innovation culture
(r = 0.56, p<0.00), Organisational culture and creativity and innovation (r=.32 p<0.01); the
Innovation culture construct and innovation and creativity index (r = 0.67; p < 0.00,) however
an inverse relationship was found between innovation and creativity and organisational
adaptation (r = -0.43, p <0.001). A low significant relationship was found between
organisational adaptation and organisational culture r =0.20, p<0.11. After controlling for
mediation the variance explained by organisational culture changed from 4.2% to 14.44%
that is the link with organisational adaptation increased significantly (β=.38, p<0.01) thus
failing to satisfy the conditions necessary to determine mediation. Secondary analysis with
specific organisational culture dimensions produced significant correlations with the
strongest being dominant characteristics r=0.52, p<0.00. The results indicate that ART
Corporation need to focus on its organisational culture to leverage organisational adaptation.
Future research should focus on exploring other intervening variable that may be possibly
mediating the relationship between organisational adaptation and organisational culture.