organizational culture: a distinctive pattern of thought and behavior shared by members of the same organization and reflected in their language, values, attitudes, beliefs, and customs. The culture of an organization is in many ways analogous to the personality of an individual.
Stop reading. Stand up and walk around your office. Ask the first five people you see to define “organizational culture.”
I am curious what you heard. Did they mention beer on tap? Nice team-members? Flexible work schedule? Did they spend time providing examples of “things” within an organization as oppose to clarifying what “culture” is?
Now, here is a second exercise. Either by phone or email, contact five organizational leaders, and ask them what they do on a regular basis to build a healthy culture.
What did you hear? Did they talk about providing a safe work environment? Did they talk about the benefit offerings? Did they mention going out for drinks with the team?
Most people I encounter recognize that organizational culture is important, and they want to work within a “healthy culture.” Furthermore, positive cultures are at the top of most job interviewers lists of what they want in their next job. This is fantastic!
However, most people have a difficult time defining culture. They can “feel” it when they are in a good or bad culture. They can identify toxic characteristics of a bad culture. For organizations to thrive, it is important that leaders know how to build, nurture, and protect healthy culture.
Building, nurturing, and protecting healthy cultures requires leaders to be “Cultural Architects.” “Cultural Architects” are leaders who know what it takes to create and maintain a great culture. Like any architect, a “blueprint” or framework is needed. One cultural framework to consider is what I call “The Organizational Culture Ecosystem.” To understand this “Ecosystem,” please see the graphic (right) and explanation (below).
1. Purpose - Great cultures start with compelling purposes. Their mission, vision, and values paint an intriguing adventure. These are not just statements developed at some off-site leadership retreat. No, they are anchors holding an organization to its past, present, and future. They are decision-making tools to say “yes” to some opportunities and “no” to other ones. They guide growth strategies, hiring decisions, and infrastructure investments. If they do not help an organization, they are weak and useless. Purpose statements should let people know that they are part of something big and provide a sense of belonging. They should signal to people that joining the organization means going on a meaningful journey.
2. Strategic Plans - Great cultures have strategic aims to get where the organization wants to go. This is the point of strategic planning. Strategic planning is the process of aligning organizational objectives to actions that maximize resources resulting in a competitive advantage in the marketplace. This is a roadmap. Such planning ensures that the organizational purposes align to actionable objectives, goals, strategies, and measurements. A good plan is not a haphazard list of “to-dos.” It requires a thoughtful process of exploring the terrain, unifying the team, and developing the plan. Once in hand, the plan becomes a roadmap. Like any roadmap, though, it needs movement and consulting to arrive at the destination.
3. Connectors—Purposes and Plans are simply ideas, documents, and decorations without specific ways to connect them to outcomes. This connection occurs when an organization has the right people, doing the right things, in the right ways, with the right tools, within the right necessary guidelines.
4. Outcomes
Leading Indicators
Lagging Indicators
Both types of indicators provide value. It is good to predict what may happen and change course as needed. It is also good to see what did happen. Both allow organizations to gauge whether their outcomes may or did align with purposes and plans.
Great cultures are difference makers! The create environments where potential is unleashed, innovation is the norm, and productivity sky rockets. Great leaders will be intentional about how they nurture their culture to ensure “cultural killers” do not create unnecessary distractions. To these leaders, building, nurturing, and protecting the culture is as important as any other organizational aspect.
Great cultures will not happen on their own. It requires intentional work that perseveres through many difficulties. You never arrive when building a culture…you just keep getting better.
Need assistance with addressing short and long term HR needs for your business? Contact me at steve.black@brixeyandmeyer.com, and we will address them proactively.
Disclaimer: This blog is not legal advice, but merely informed opinion or general information meant for no particular purpose. Issues addressed in this blog often implicate federal, state, and local labor and employment laws. This blog is not intended as a substitute for legal advice. Readers should consult labor and employment counsel to determine whether their particular policies, procedures, decisions, or courses of action comply with such laws.