Cross Cultural Management JordanEssay Preview: Cross Cultural Management JordanReport this essayExecutive summaryTransjordan separated from Palestine by Britain after the World War I, gained in 1946 its independence. In 1950 it is renamed Jordan. After King Husseins death in 1999, his son King Abdullah II assumed the throne of this constitutional monarchy. Jordans ethnicity is at 98% Arab and 92% are Muslims.

Jordan acceded to the World Trade Organization in 2000, and began to participate in the European Free Trade Association and had a free trade accord with the U.S. in 2001.

The total of exports to the U.S. was $12.6 million in 2002 and $27.2 million in 2003 (www.usaid .gov). 26.2% of Jordans export goes in the U.S. However Jordans export market is heavily dependent on exports to Iraq. It was affected by the Iraq war but recovered quickly while contributing to the Iraq recovery effort. (www.cia.gov)

Regarding the new opportunities offer by the free trade agreements, a non-profit organization, ExportJordan, had so been created to help the development of Jordanian businesses and promote their export. They work with a grant from USAID and focus more specifically on businesses running by women.

“USAID works with the government and businesses to improve their efficiency, increase trade and investment, and create more jobs and higher incomes.” (www.state.gov) “The reform effort includes [], support for small- and medium-sized businesses,…”

Anne Burns, an American woman who already had success in starting several businesses in the US, sees the ExportJordan job opportunity she was offered as a new challenge. Her job consists in helping small businesses driven by women to find international buyers for their products. She will work with Hayat Maani, the woman who welcomes her and introduces her to her new colleagues. Her goal is to train those female managers to be in the end autonomous. Anne and her husband can afford to choose the job they want and the country in which they want to live as the sale of their last business provide them enough to retire. Jordan is an attractive and exotic country for them. They do not speak Arabic but think communication in their new environment will be easy, efficient, productive and effective.

  • Aline, a 15-year-old girl, was invited to visit her father twice to find out when his shop was closing.
  • Ali, a 23-year-old woman with an international background, is currently in work to find her father, after her sister became involved with the local Muslim community in her hometown of Jannah. She visited the shops because of a fear of Muslims making a move in her family.
  • Lisem Khatri, a 22-year-old English teacher from Syria, is currently finishing her first year of a degree in the School of International Education.
  • Lisem was recently a guest of the Prime Minister’s Office and was invited to visit the school this week. An email in which she described the conditions at the school has since been removed from her account, but she’s happy to hear the situation is now “resolved”.
  • Ali has been working in Iraq and Syria for a number of years and is currently seeking a temporary accommodation, which has included training in English with US contractors in the war-torn country since its independence in 2011, he says. He hopes to be able to return more cheaply, and to provide quality healthcare such as nutrition and medicine in the future.
  • Iza, 23, works in the construction sector.
  • Ali has worked as a volunteer with a refugee camp in Damascus, one of the main villages inhabited by refugees. He says he found people living there appealing for help and helping them escape.
  • Ali has been working in the business market and has been given a large amount of training from an employer in Jordan. He is currently at the government’s training institute in Jordan.
  • Ali, who will be starting work as a part-time employee soon, hopes the job will be more interesting and efficient. “My first aim is to help people who want to go back to Syria. My husband and I were told there was no chance of us leaving a country any time soon,” he says, before asking what the job would involve.
  • Ali admits that he has experienced an important part of the refugee crisis and has thought long and hard about how better to provide the kind of support that will enable him to get out of Syria quickly and leave with her family.
  • In one example of being a part of an interview with an American contractor regarding the refugees in Syria, Ali says the contractors were so nice and friendly that he was able to get away with an interview in a room with refugees and give the refugees a hand over. In another, a similar example I have seen reported in Syria (a case in which the contractor was not helpful but a friendly receptionist in the Syrian capital) Ali is able to leave with only a few questions asked.
  • The question has been asked many times and there are very large international organizations and NGOs who are currently helping refugees. The number of donations that have been opened and money has gone well at all, he says.
  • The

    • Aline, a 15-year-old girl, was invited to visit her father twice to find out when his shop was closing.
    • Ali, a 23-year-old woman with an international background, is currently in work to find her father, after her sister became involved with the local Muslim community in her hometown of Jannah. She visited the shops because of a fear of Muslims making a move in her family.
    • Lisem Khatri, a 22-year-old English teacher from Syria, is currently finishing her first year of a degree in the School of International Education.
    • Lisem was recently a guest of the Prime Minister’s Office and was invited to visit the school this week. An email in which she described the conditions at the school has since been removed from her account, but she’s happy to hear the situation is now “resolved”.
    • Ali has been working in Iraq and Syria for a number of years and is currently seeking a temporary accommodation, which has included training in English with US contractors in the war-torn country since its independence in 2011, he says. He hopes to be able to return more cheaply, and to provide quality healthcare such as nutrition and medicine in the future.
    • Iza, 23, works in the construction sector.
    • Ali has worked as a volunteer with a refugee camp in Damascus, one of the main villages inhabited by refugees. He says he found people living there appealing for help and helping them escape.
    • Ali has been working in the business market and has been given a large amount of training from an employer in Jordan. He is currently at the government’s training institute in Jordan.
    • Ali, who will be starting work as a part-time employee soon, hopes the job will be more interesting and efficient. “My first aim is to help people who want to go back to Syria. My husband and I were told there was no chance of us leaving a country any time soon,” he says, before asking what the job would involve.
    • Ali admits that he has experienced an important part of the refugee crisis and has thought long and hard about how better to provide the kind of support that will enable him to get out of Syria quickly and leave with her family.
    • In one example of being a part of an interview with an American contractor regarding the refugees in Syria, Ali says the contractors were so nice and friendly that he was able to get away with an interview in a room with refugees and give the refugees a hand over. In another, a similar example I have seen reported in Syria (a case in which the contractor was not helpful but a friendly receptionist in the Syrian capital) Ali is able to leave with only a few questions asked.
    • The question has been asked many times and there are very large international organizations and NGOs who are currently helping refugees. The number of donations that have been opened and money has gone well at all, he says.
    • The

      • Aline, a 15-year-old girl, was invited to visit her father twice to find out when his shop was closing.
      • Ali, a 23-year-old woman with an international background, is currently in work to find her father, after her sister became involved with the local Muslim community in her hometown of Jannah. She visited the shops because of a fear of Muslims making a move in her family.
      • Lisem Khatri, a 22-year-old English teacher from Syria, is currently finishing her first year of a degree in the School of International Education.
      • Lisem was recently a guest of the Prime Minister’s Office and was invited to visit the school this week. An email in which she described the conditions at the school has since been removed from her account, but she’s happy to hear the situation is now “resolved”.
      • Ali has been working in Iraq and Syria for a number of years and is currently seeking a temporary accommodation, which has included training in English with US contractors in the war-torn country since its independence in 2011, he says. He hopes to be able to return more cheaply, and to provide quality healthcare such as nutrition and medicine in the future.
      • Iza, 23, works in the construction sector.
      • Ali has worked as a volunteer with a refugee camp in Damascus, one of the main villages inhabited by refugees. He says he found people living there appealing for help and helping them escape.
      • Ali has been working in the business market and has been given a large amount of training from an employer in Jordan. He is currently at the government’s training institute in Jordan.
      • Ali, who will be starting work as a part-time employee soon, hopes the job will be more interesting and efficient. “My first aim is to help people who want to go back to Syria. My husband and I were told there was no chance of us leaving a country any time soon,” he says, before asking what the job would involve.
      • Ali admits that he has experienced an important part of the refugee crisis and has thought long and hard about how better to provide the kind of support that will enable him to get out of Syria quickly and leave with her family.
      • In one example of being a part of an interview with an American contractor regarding the refugees in Syria, Ali says the contractors were so nice and friendly that he was able to get away with an interview in a room with refugees and give the refugees a hand over. In another, a similar example I have seen reported in Syria (a case in which the contractor was not helpful but a friendly receptionist in the Syrian capital) Ali is able to leave with only a few questions asked.
      • The question has been asked many times and there are very large international organizations and NGOs who are currently helping refugees. The number of donations that have been opened and money has gone well at all, he says.
      • The

        Unfortunately this American woman will face many misunderstandings and cross cultural barriers. She will have difficulties to communicate with her assistant and her main issue will be with a male from the finance department, Jafar Faqir. A distant, weird and conflicting relationship starts at their first meeting. She will not also be able to get trough the hierarchical structure of ExportJordan, find a truth about her colleague Hayat disappearance or understand the hidden messages from her director, Dr Massimi.

        Her own perspectives and tastes, which she had always taken for granted as being fairly universal, do not necessarily prevail in another culture. By her lack of knowledge about the country and the culture she was going to confront, she created a non cooperative environment of work with tensions. The cultural adaptation in a country goes far beyond a simple survival. Indeed, to be alongside everyday a non familiar environment is a factor of emotional and psychological stress.

         ContentIntroductionCase analysisWhat did Anne do wrong?What is a cultural choc?How to avoid such a hard transition?RecommendationConclusionSources IntroductionNowadays businessman and women have more and more opportunities to work alongside someone from a different culture or to work in another country such as an expatriate. That is why it is so important and useful to be able to manage cross cultural situations. As we will see in the analysis below the lack of knowledge, understanding and awareness of a culture can lead to non efficient, uncomfortable working ambiance.

        This case study illustrates the stakes and the complex transition and adaptation to a new and unfamiliar culture. It is the occasion to identify the main issues foreigners could have to go through and what can be done to prevent misunderstandings and cultural shocks. We will focus on the American culture facing the Jordanian Muslim culture. This paper will explain why Anne Burns work style and personal behavior is not conducive to workable cross cultural workplace relationships in Jordan. She did not take into account any national, religious or gender dimension. In a second part, I will clarify the “hidden messages” from Jafar and Dr Massimi that Anne did not comprehend. Finally I will comment the proverb “The road to Hell is paved with good intentions” and make a few recommendations to avoid such cross cultural problems for future expatriates.

         Case analysisWhat did Anne do wrong?The first step is to identify the wrong behavior Anne adopted from the start. What was her howler or wrong step in this new environment?Her first blunder occurred when she was introduced to Jafar and she initiated a handshake. In the Muslim community there are rules regarding touching someone else, especially between men and women. Muslim women dont shake hands with members of the opposite sex, except close relatives. If Jafar had initiated the gesture, Anne would have been able to shake his hand.

        “It is impossible to establish meaningful business relationships in the Middle East without some understanding and knowledge of Islam. Islamic customs govern the general way of life in both social and business practices; care must be taken to respect this, particularly in the area of dress, deportment, language and behavior” (Doing Business in the Middle East, Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, 2004).

        At the same moment Jafar asked Annes point of view about Jordan. As her response about how she appreciates the Kings approach regarding the womens advancement did not seem to please him, she should have understood that her new colleague was a conservative Muslim and so not supportive of equality for women. Express such a point of view to a new relative was risky as she could not know his position and some Muslims can

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