Five Simple Steps to
Build a Winning Corporate Culture
By Gary Bradt
If I asked your employees, “What’s
it like to work at your company? What kind of place is it?” their answers would
largely describe your company culture. How would your employees answer? Would
you like what you heard? If not, a leader’s responsibility is to change it.
Some leadership teams attempt to
create culture by acting as wordsmiths, spending untold hours carefully
crafting vision, mission and values statements. That’s unfortunate, because in
the end culture is not created by words plastered on the wall or carried around
on laminated cards, but rather culture is defined by actions on the ground.
It’s what leaders do: what they
inspect, what they reject and what they reward that ultimately shapes company
culture.
It’s not that words don’t have a
place in creating culture; they most certainly do. But a winning culture is
defined by words so simple and basic a child can grasp them easily, and an
executive can explain them quickly.
And, in a winning culture, a
leader’s words and actions are aligned. What leaders say accurately reflects
the way things are. In a losing culture, words and actions are misaligned.
“Happy talk’ masks dysfunctional behavior.
A winning company culture is simple
and emphasizes three areas: serving the customer, growing the business, and
developing employees. A losing culture is confusing and complex, places
customer needs behind those of the company, and emphasizes personal gain over
team achievement.
Culture can be consciously created
by company leadership, and should be. Below are five steps that will help you
consciously create or redefine your company culture. Remember, complexity
equals confusion. If your culture is easy to describe, it will be easy to
create.
- Define 3-4 guiding principles that
define who you are as an organization. It’s the job of senior
leadership to define in simple terms what your organization is all about.
One of my clients, a consulting group, had a culture marked by mistrust
and destructive internal competition. New leadership came in and
succinctly defined what the new culture would be and termed it something
like this: We are one national
practice; we consider our customers in everything we do; we grow our
people; and we are committed to each other’s success. Rather than
worrying about printing these words everywhere, leadership set about
making them a reality.
- Use the principles to guide every
business discussion and decision going forward. Words are meaningless
unless they spur new behavior. Once you have defined your guiding
principles, use them to guide all of your business discussions and
decisions. I constantly heard my client above refer to their guiding
principles in all their gatherings, large and small. I heard them say
things like: “Since we are one national practice, it makes sense to do
“x.” Or, “Will this course of action serve our customer, or will it only
serve us?” And, “Since we are committed to each other’s success and
growing our people, maybe we should let this individual or that group take
the lead on this sales call,” etc. They used their words and good
intentions to drive positive behavior shifts, which in the end drove a
positive culture shift, which led to better business results.
- Build the principles into all your
people performance and management systems. The old saw is true: people
tend to do what is inspected versus what’s expected. Simple words and good
intentions are not enough. You need to make sure that your people and
performance management systems measure and reward behaviors consistent
with your guiding principles, and discourage if not punish the opposite.
Leadership actions here are key. If employees see company leaders act in
accordance with the principles and yet go unrewarded, or worse, see
leaders defying the principles and getting perks and promotions
regardless, you’re done. There has to be consistency between what you say
and what you do, and alignment between your words and your actions. Also,
begin screening for and hiring people who share your values and who
naturally adhere to the principles. And, for existing employees, create
processes to indoctrinate and immerse them in the new ways of thinking and
behaving. As John Kotter has shown us, constantly repeating the simple
change message via all available means and venues is key to ingraining it
in the culture.
- Create a 2-3 day leadership
development experience that reinforces the behaviors and values consistent
with the principles, and insist all senior leaders attend. Once again,
words alone are not enough to drive lasting behavior change. You have to
constantly reinforce your words with action. One way to do this is to
create an experience based leadership development program that reinforces
the values and behaviors consistent with the guiding principles. For
example, my client developed a leadership development experience focused
on self-awareness and personal responsibility. Over the next two years,
all 250 senior leaders came through, and then a similar experience was
created for the next level of management down. Don’t try to get everyone
through at once. In fact, it’s best to spread attendance and participation
out over an extended period of time. Each new class then becomes a
renewable source of energy and focus around the guiding principles.
Attendees return to their respective offices and help re-energize and
refocus everyone else. In this way, rather than becoming programs of the
month, these leadership experiences became an enduring tool to reinforce
the fundamental message and desired behaviors behind the guiding
principles.
- Expect resistance, but stay the course
with passion and patience. Changing culture means changing people, and
that takes time. Expect some cynicism, skepticism and resistance at first.
For example, when people first attended the leadership program described
above, many came in with a jaundiced eye. They had seen this sort of thing
come and go before. But over time, as more and more people came through,
including senior leaders who came back to help facilitate later sessions,
more and more bought in. This became especially true when attendees saw
the leadership principles and values that were discussed in the classroom
being lived out on a daily basis in the field. In fact, the program became
so popular over time that complaints went from “Why do I have to attend
this stupid course?” to “Why did I have to wait so long to get in?” More
importantly, the culture in the organization at large changed, and with
it, the business did too.
A Final Word: If
I have made creating a winning culture sound simple, that’s because it is.
Don’t muck it up by making it more complex than it needs to be. Largely as a
result of following all five of the simple steps I’ve outlined here, the
organization I’ve described enjoyed unprecedented business success over the
next several years. You can do the same. Take the ideas I have shared here,
bend them to your will, disposition and specific circumstance, and you’ll be
well on your way to creating a winning culture marked by new behavior and
better business results.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Gary Bradt is one of today’s most popular
speakers on the leadership circuit, addressing corporate audiences around the
world on the issue of change and success. His clients include IBM, General
Motors, American Express, General Electric, eBay, FedEx and NASA. Dr. Bradt's
new book, "The Ring In the Rubble: Dig Through Change and Find Your Next
Golden Opportunity," is available in bookstores everywhere. For
information on his book or speaking, contact: www.TheRingintheRubble.com.
|
|