Table of Contents
Abstract
The Organizational Culture Profile (OCP) is a widely recognized psychometric instrument developed primarily by O’Reilly, Chatman, and Caldwell (1991) to diagnose and quantify organizational culture. It serves as a critical tool for assessing Person-Organization Fit (P-O Fit) by comparing an individual’s preferred cultural values against the perceived cultural values of an organization. The OCP operationalizes organizational culture through a set of distinct descriptive values and behavioral norms, facilitating both intra- and inter-organizational comparisons.
Keywords
Organizational Culture Profile, OCP, Organizational Culture, Person-Organization Fit, P-O Fit, Q-sort methodology, Organizational Assessment, Corporate Values, Organizational Psychology.
Authors
Charles A. O’Reilly, Jennifer A. Chatman, Deborah F. Caldwell, David M. Cable, Timothy A. Judge.
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Purpose
The primary purpose of the OCP is twofold: first, to provide a systematic and quantitative measure of the core values that define an organization’s culture; and second, to assess the congruence, or fit, between an individual’s preferences for these cultural attributes and the degree to which they are present in their current or prospective workplace. This assessment of P-O Fit is crucial for predicting outcomes such as job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and employee turnover.
The methodology employed, specifically the Q-sort, forces respondents to make trade-offs between desirable characteristics, yielding a rich profile of priorities rather than simple endorsements of all positive traits. This allows researchers and practitioners to define the unique profile of an organization’s culture or an individual’s ideal culture.
Construct
The OCP measures the construct of organizational culture, defined as a system of shared values and beliefs that guide member behavior. The items used in the OCP reflect potential values and norms found in organizations, which are then grouped into several underlying dimensions.
The scale typically yields seven core cultural dimensions derived from factor analysis of the item pool. These dimensions capture broad aspects of organizational life and priorities:
- Innovation: Emphasis on creativity, experimentation, and risk-taking.
- Stability: Focus on predictability, security, and being rule-oriented.
- People Orientation: Valuing fairness, tolerance, and supportiveness towards employees.
- Outcome Orientation: High expectations for performance, achievement, and results focus.
- Easygoing/Aggressiveness: (Often split into two opposing poles) Measuring the intensity and ease of interaction within the workplace.
- Detail Orientation: Attention to precision, analysis, and quality.
- Team Orientation: Emphasis on collaboration, sharing information, and working in teams.
Validity
The initial development of the OCP utilized rigorous statistical methods to establish construct validity. The 1991 study utilized confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to validate the underlying seven-factor structure across different samples, demonstrating that the items reliably group into the intended dimensions.
Extensive research has supported the OCP’s predictive validity, showing that P-O Fit, as measured by the congruence between an individual’s profile and the organization’s profile, significantly predicts important organizational outcomes. Specifically, a high degree of P-O Fit correlates positively with increased job satisfaction, greater organizational commitment, and lower voluntary turnover rates. The unique Q-sort methodology further enhances validity by minimizing response biases common in traditional Likert scales.
Reliability
Reliability of the OCP is generally assessed through internal consistency measures (e.g., Cronbach’s alpha) for the seven resulting factor dimensions, which typically demonstrate acceptable to high levels of reliability across various studies. Furthermore, the reliability of the Q-sort technique itself is critical; the forced-distribution sorting procedure ensures that scores reflect relative importance rather than absolute agreement, contributing to the stability of the generated profiles.
Test-retest reliability has been established for the OCP, particularly demonstrating that organizational culture profiles, when measured over time, remain stable unless a significant organizational change intervention has occurred, confirming the enduring nature of the cultural construct being measured.
Factor Analysis
The Organizational Culture Profile was developed using advanced factor analytic techniques. The initial process involved gathering a broad list of cultural characteristics, which were then subjected to empirical testing across multiple organizational samples. The seminal research used Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) to confirm the existence of seven distinct and meaningful cultural factors. These factors—Innovation, Stability, People Orientation, Outcome Orientation, Easygoing, Detail Orientation, and Team Orientation—provide a parsimonious framework for understanding the complex nature of organizational culture. Subsequent factor analyses have generally supported this seven-factor structure, although minor variations in item loading or labeling may occur depending on the specific sample and context.
Instrument
Test Type: Psychometric Scale / Value Assessment Tool
Format: Q-sort Methodology (Forced-Choice Rank Ordering)
Language Available: Primarily English; translated versions are used in international organizational research.
Population Group: Employees, managers, and organizational researchers.
Age Group: Adults (typically working professionals).
Population Details: Applicable across various industries and organizational sizes, used both for assessing current employees and for candidate selection processes regarding P-O Fit.
Test Methodology: Respondents are presented with a list of cultural characteristics (typically 40 or 54 items) and are required to sort them into a fixed number of categories (usually 9), ranging from “most characteristic” to “least characteristic” of the organization (or their ideal organization). This forced-distribution sorting procedure ensures that each item receives a relative rank within the respondent’s value hierarchy, preventing all items from being rated equally high or low.
Keywords
Organizational Culture, Organizational Behavior, P-O Fit, Q-Sort, Human Resources, Selection, Employee Commitment, Organizational Values, Person-Organization Fit, Innovation, Stability.
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Authors
Author ORCID Identifier: Not provided in source content.
Affiliation Email addresses: Not provided in source content.
Correspondence Address: Not provided in source content.
Permissions & Fee and Test Year
The OCP is a widely used academic instrument. It is generally available for non-commercial research purposes without fee, though permissions for specific applications or commercial use should be sought from the primary authors. The original scale was published in 1991. The instrument is often found online for academic use, for example, at: http://www.timothy-judge.com/OCP.htm. The original PDF describing the methodology and results can be downloaded here: https://faculty.haas.berkeley.edu/chatman/papers/36_peopleorgculture.pdf.
Test Year: 1991 (Original Publication)
Reference’s
- O’Reilly, C. A., Chatman, J. A., & Caldwell, D. F. (1991). People and organizational culture: A profile comparison approach to person-organization fit. Academy of Management Journal, 34(3), 487-516.
- Cable, D. M., & Judge, T. A. (1997). Interviewers’ perceptions of person-organization fit and organizational selection decisions. Journal of Applied Psychology, 82, 546-581.
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Items of the Organizational Culture Profile (OCP)
IMPORTANT: The following scale items must be preserved in their original language and must not be changed in any way. The OCP has been utilized in several forms, including 40-item and 54-item versions. The underlying dimensions identified in the factor analysis are:
- innovation
- stability
- people orientation
- outcome orientation
- easygoing
- detail orientation
- team orientation
The items below represent the comprehensive item pools associated with the OCP:
1. Adaptability | 21. Decisiveness |
2. Stability | 22. Being competitive |
3. Being reflective | 23. Being highly organized |
4. Being innovative | 24. Achievement orientation |
5. Being quick to take advantage of opportunities | 25. having a clear guiding philosophy |
6. Taking individual responsibility | 26. Being results oriented |
7. Risk taking | 27. having high performance expectations |
8. Opportunities for professional growth | 28. Being aggressive |
9. Autonomy | 29. High pay for good performance |
10. Being rule oriented | 30. Security of employment |
11. Being analytical | 31. Offers praise for good performance |
12. Paying attention to detail | 32. Being supportive |
13. Confronting conflict directly | 33. Being calm |
14. Being team oriented | 34. Developing friends at work |
15. Sharing information freely | 35. Being socially responsible |
16. Being people oriented | 36. Enthusiasm for the job |
17. Fairness | 37. Working long hours |
18. Not being constrained by many rules | 38. having a good reputation |
19. Tolerance | 39. An emphasis on quality |
20. Informality | 40. Being distinctive / different from others |
1. Flexibility | 28. Action orientation |
2. Adaptability | 29. Taking initiative |
3. Stability | 30. Being reflective |
4. Predictability | 31. Achievement orientation |
5. Being innovative | 32. Being demanding |
6. Being quick to take advantage of opportunities | 33. Taking individual responsibility |
7. A willingness to experiment | 34. having high expectations for performance |
8. Risk taking | 35. Opportunities for professional growth |
9. Being careful | 36. High pay for good performance |
10. Autonomy | 37. Security of employment |
11. Being rule oriented | 38. Offers praise for good performance |
12. Being analytical | 39. Low level of conflict |
13. Paying attention to detail | 40. Confronting conflict directly |
14. Being precise [quads id=5] | 41. Developing friends at work |
15. Being team oriented | 42. Fitting in |
16. Sharing information freely | 43. Working in collaboration with others |
17. Emphasizing a single culture throughout the organization | 44. Enthusiasm for the job |
18. Being people oriented | 45. Working long hours |
19. Fairness | 46. Not being constrained by many rules |
20. Respect for the individual’s right | 47. An emphasis on quality |
21. Tolerance | 48. Being distinctive-different from others |
22. Informality | 49. having a good reputation |
23. Being easy going | 50. Being socially responsible |
24. Being calm | 51. Being results oriented |
25. Being supportive | 52. having a clear guiding philosophy |
26. Being aggressive | 53. Being competitive |
27. Decisiveness | 54. Being highly organized |
Most characteristic | Neither characteristic Nor Uncharacteristic | Least characteristic | |||||||
Cite this article
Mohammed looti (2025). Organizational Culture Profile (OCP). Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Retrieved from https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/organizational-culture-profile-ocp/
Mohammed looti. "Organizational Culture Profile (OCP)." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 9 Oct. 2025, https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/organizational-culture-profile-ocp/.
Mohammed looti. "Organizational Culture Profile (OCP)." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 2025. https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/organizational-culture-profile-ocp/.
Mohammed looti (2025) 'Organizational Culture Profile (OCP)', Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Available at: https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/organizational-culture-profile-ocp/.
[1] Mohammed looti, "Organizational Culture Profile (OCP)," Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, vol. X, no. Y, ص Z-Z, October, 2025.
Mohammed looti. Organizational Culture Profile (OCP). Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. 2025;vol(issue):pages.