Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to investigate the connection between different perceived organizational cultures and information security policy compliance among white-collar workers.Design/methodology/approachThe survey using the Organizational Culture Assessment Instrument was sent to white-collar workers in Sweden (n = 674), asking about compliance with information security policies. The survey instrument is an operationalization of the Competing Values Framework that distinguishes between four different types of organizational culture: clan, adhocracy, market and bureaucracy.FindingsThe results indicate that organizational cultures with an internal focus are positively related to employees’ information security policy compliance. Differences in organizational culture with regards to control and flexibility seem to have less effect. The analysis shows that a bureaucratic form of organizational culture is most fruitful for fostering employees’ information security policy compliance.Research limitations/implicationsThe results suggest that differences in organizational culture are important for employees’ information security policy compliance. This justifies further investigating the mechanisms linking organizational culture to information security compliance.Practical implicationsPractitioners should be aware that the different organizational cultures do matter for employees’ information security compliance. In businesses and the public sector, the authors see a development toward customer orientation and marketization, i.e. the opposite an internal focus, that may have negative ramifications for the information security of organizations.Originality/valueFew information security policy compliance studies exist on the consequences of different organizational/information cultures.

Highlights

  • Cloud services, virtualization, mobile phones and blurred boundaries between working life and private life are all examples of changes that impact organizations’ ways of using information

  • We find a strong association between the bureaucratic culture index and employees’ information security policy compliance (Pearson’s r: 0.358, p < 0.001) and a moderately strong association between the clan culture index and employees’ information security policy compliance (Pearson’s r: 0.232, p < 0.001)

  • We have investigated the connection between different perceived organizational cultures and information security policy compliance among a representative selection of Swedish white-collar workers

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Summary

Introduction

Virtualization, mobile phones and blurred boundaries between working life and private life are all examples of changes that impact organizations’ ways of using information. Information is expected to be accessible, possible to share with colleagues in different geographical locations and automatically synchronized These requirements, which would have been impossible to satisfy not that many years ago, can be fulfilled today and can open new business opportunities. In this context, the organizational role of information has changed as well, and information is both a strategic and operative issue in organizations. Many organizations make large investments in information security management systems and advanced technology to counter current and future threats (Aithen, 2018; Morgan, 2015). Employees’ non-compliance with information security policies has been stressed as a perennial problem for many organizations (Ernst and Young, 2008, 2010; PwC, 2014, 2018)

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