Fons Trompenaars
Global organisations keep treating cultural difference as a communication problem to be smoothed over. The harder reality is that values themselves collide: short-term results against long-term loyalty, individual accountability against collective harmony, rules against relationships. Leaders who try to pick a side lose half the organisation; leaders who learn to reconcile both sides build companies that work across borders.
Fons Trompenaars is a Dutch organisational theorist whose Seven Dimensions of Culture and dilemma reconciliation method help multinational leaders resolve competing cultural values inside global teams, mergers, and change programmes.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Fons Trompenaars
- His Seven Dimensions of Culture model gives boards and integration teams a shared vocabulary for diagnosing where global strategies break down, drawn from research across more than a hundred thousand managers.
- Dilemma reconciliation moves leaders past the false choice between universal standards and local adaptation, which is the recurring failure mode in M&A integration, joint ventures, and global rollouts.
- Thinkers50 Hall of Fame status places him in the same tier as Drucker, Porter, and Peters, useful credibility when the audience is a sceptical executive committee.
- Three decades of advisory work with Shell, BP, Heineken, Philips, Nike, General Motors, IBM, Johnson and Johnson, and Pfizer mean the case material is operational, not academic.
- He is one of the few cultural theorists whose framework is built around action: every dimension comes with a method for resolving the tension, not just naming it.
Biography highlights
- PhD in social systems sciences, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, 1983.
- Co-founder of Trompenaars Hampden-Turner with Charles Hampden-Turner in 1989; acquired by KPMG in 1998.
- Author of “Riding the Waves of Culture,” named a Thinkers50 Management Classic and translated into more than twenty languages.
- Co-author of “Nine Visions of Capitalism,” “21 Leaders for the 21st Century,” “Building Cross-Cultural Competence,” and “Servant Leadership Across Cultures.”
- Inducted into the Thinkers50 Hall of Fame in 2017; ranked among the most influential management thinkers in 2011, 2013, and 2015.
- Recipient of the ASTD International Professional Practice Area Research Award (1991) and the WFPMA George Petitpas Award (2023).
Biography
Most cross-cultural frameworks describe difference. They tell leaders that the Dutch are direct and the Japanese are deferential, then leave the leader to work out what to do about it. Trompenaars’ contribution is the next step: a method for reconciling competing cultural values rather than choosing between them.
The Seven Dimensions of Culture, developed with Charles Hampden-Turner over a decade of empirical research, identifies the underlying tensions that surface when global organisations try to operate as one. Universal rules against particular relationships. Individual achievement against collective ascription. Sequential time against synchronous time. The model is built on data from over a hundred thousand managers and has anchored consulting engagements at Shell, BP, Heineken, Philips, Nike, IBM, Johnson and Johnson, and Pfizer.
The intellectual foundation runs deep. A doctorate from Wharton, nine years inside Shell across nine countries, and the 1989 founding of the consultancy that became Trompenaars Hampden-Turner, later acquired by KPMG. “Riding the Waves of Culture” is a Thinkers50 Management Classic. The Hall of Fame induction in 2017 placed him alongside Drucker, Porter, and Peters.
What makes the work commercially useful is dilemma reconciliation. The premise is that competing values, results and relationships, standards and local fit, individual and collective, are not trade-offs to be balanced but tensions to be integrated. For boards working through merger integration, global expansion, or post-acquisition culture programmes, that shift in framing is what turns cultural awareness into operational performance.
Key speaking topics
- Cross-cultural leadership and global team effectiveness
- Dilemma reconciliation as a leadership method
- Cultural due diligence in mergers and acquisitions
- The Seven Dimensions of Culture
- Leading change across multinational organisations
- Servant leadership across cultures
- AI and the cultural dimensions of global business
Ideal for
- Executive committees and boards leading multinational integration, joint ventures, or post-acquisition culture work
- CHROs and global HR leaders responsible for leadership development across multiple regions
- Transformation leads running global change programmes where local resistance is the recurring blocker
- Leadership development programmes for newly international senior leaders
Audience outcomes
- A working vocabulary for the seven cultural tensions that surface inside global teams
- A method for reconciling competing values rather than defaulting to head office standards
- Diagnostic clarity on why specific global initiatives have stalled or fragmented
- Case material from Shell, Heineken, Philips, and other multinationals that can be applied to the audience’s own integration challenges
Talks
A working session on how the Seven Dimensions of Culture surface inside boardrooms, integration teams, and global rollouts.
Key takeaways:
- Where global strategies typically break down at the values layer, not the communication layer
- How to read cultural signals that quantitative due diligence misses
- A shared vocabulary for senior teams to discuss cultural friction without defaulting to stereotypes
The dilemma reconciliation method applied to the competing pressures senior leaders face inside multinational organisations.
Key takeaways:
- Why the choice between global standards and local adaptation is usually the wrong frame
- A practical sequence for moving from either-or to both-and on contested executive decisions
- Examples from M&A integration, joint ventures, and global change programmes
Why most cross-border deals fail on culture and what integration teams can do about it before signing.
Key takeaways:
- The cultural questions that should sit alongside financial and legal due diligence
- How to map value collisions between acquirer and target before integration begins
- Common reconciliation patterns in deals that have worked and the failure modes in those that have not
Videos
Testimonials
Fees
| EUR | GBP | USD | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home Country | €12000 to €40000 | £10,001 - £35,000 | $15000 - $50000 |
| Asia Pacific | €12000 to €40000 | £10,001 - £35,000 | $15000 - $50000 |
| Europe | €12000 to €40000 | £10,001 - £35,000 | $15000 - $50000 |
| Middle East & Africa | €12000 to €40000 | £10,001 - £35,000 | $15000 - $50000 |
| South America | €12000 to €40000 | £10,001 - £35,000 | $15000 - $50000 |
| United Kingdom | €12000 to €40000 | £10,001 - £35,000 | $15000 - $50000 |
| US East Coast | €12000 to €40000 | £10,001 - £35,000 | $15000 - $50000 |
| US West Coast | €12000 to €40000 | £10,001 - £35,000 | $15000 - $50000 |
| Virtual | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |