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Build a Company Culture That Serves, Sizzles & Succeeds
A
strong organizational culture drives challenge, performance, and
positive behavior.
An organization is only as good as its people. But bright people
have more options today than ever before. And good pay is no longer
enough to hold the best.
Are good people clamoring to join your organization, or are
resignations climbing? Do your people come in early and voluntarily
stay late, or is absenteeism on the rise? Are your staff upbeat and
enthusiastic, or do they gripe and moan?
Does your organization inspire loyalty, dedication, creativity
and motivation? Does your "company culture" challenge staff to
learn, improve and grow? As a good manager, you must ask yourself
these questions. And you need to find positive answers.
To grow, even to survive, you must develop a company culture that
attracts, inspires and retains good staff. Take this seriously, or
your organization could become a collecting point for old ideas and
old thinking..."dead wood".
Every organization has a distinctive culture. A good culture
reinforces the values and behaviors that you want, and weakens the
attitudes and actions that you don't. A weak culture, of course,
gives little guidance or direction, to the team, allowing all sorts
of inappropriate actions and behaviors.
Make sure your company's culture works overtime for you. Use the
following ideas to build a stronger and more attractive culture
inside your organization.
Vision, Mission and Values:
Are your vision, mission and core values clearly written down in
black and white? Have they been framed and hung upon the wall? If
so, great! But then what happened? All too often these important
statements become part of the woodwork, ignored by old-timers and
quickly forgotten by new hires. Don't let this happen to you.
Integrate these key statements of purpose and philosophy into your
recruitment and orientation programs, internal company
communications, training and development schemes, methods of
appraisal, recognition and reward.
Ask yourself this question: "Can every member of your staff explain
the company vision, mission and values in their own words, and give
practical illustrations in the course of their daily work?" If so,
you have harnessed the power of their alignment and understanding.
If not, your team may be adrift without a clear course, or rowing
hard... but in divergent or conflicting directions.
New Staff Recruitment:
Do you invest enough energy selecting staff who are really aligned
with your vision and values? Do you give candidates sufficient time
to get to know you and your organization - before they sign on as
members of the team? Do you screen prospective employees with the
powerful profiling tools available in the market today? Or do you
complain about a tight labor market and find yourself content with
hiring enough "warm bodies"? If so, you may not know the full cost,
in money and morale, of the turnover that follows such hasty
recruitment.
New Staff Orientation:
Do you actively help new staff settle in and get comfortable for
long and productive careers? Or do you push the personnel department
to get new hires on-line and operational in the shortest possible
time?
Studies show that employees who get thorough and thoughtful
orientations will stay longer and contribute more throughout their
careers. Are you investing enough time and energy to help your new
staff start right?
Training & Development Programs:
Investing in training and staff development programs is good. But
many companies engage a wide assortment of trainers and programs,
making little effort to ensure a smooth and beneficial integration.
Here's a simple test: Can each of your outside and in-house trainers
clearly explain your organization's vision, mission and values? Can
they describe the issues and major challenges facing your company
today? Are you convinced their training will help address issues,
solve problems and strengthen people's careers? If not, why not? You
pay these professionals to help your people face the future.
Shouldn't they understand the future your people will be facing?
Annual Appraisals:
If you say you want a service driven organization, is quality
service in your appraisal? If you want a creative mindset, are you
assessing staff on the range, depth and volume of their ideas? If
you want an open corporate culture, are your appraisals done in an
open format? If you want cross-functional and non-hierarchical
communication, do you employ a 360-degree appraisal process?
No amount of broadcasting company values will matter if people are
measured by other standards.
Take a hard look at your current appraisal system. Is it up to date?
Does it reward, recognize and reinforce what you want your company
to become?
Rewards & Recognition Programs:
The old adage is true: what gets rewarded gets done. But not all
rewards are monetary. They may be public, private, formal, informal,
planned, unexpected, elegant, simple, unique.
The most motivating rewards may be public celebrations of the
people and actions that exemplify your organization's highest
values.
At Singapore Airlines for example, the Managing Director's Award is
the most prestigious tribute an employee can receive. The award is
given each year to those staff members whose action demonstrate the
airline's commitment to total quality service. Winners are
celebrated, photographed, interviewed, published, wined, dined and
praised, yet receive no special monetary award. These people become
the legends, heroes and role models of the organization. Their deeds
are told and retold for years to come. Their actions -- and the
public recognition they receive -- keep the airline's values flying
high.
How inspiring are your practices of rewards and recognition? How
frequently and consistently are they applied? People thrive on
appreciation, recognition and reward. Does your company culture
provide enough?
Company Social Events:
Too many social gatherings are expensive undertakings that provide
an outlet for stress but do little to enhance communication or
commitment to the business. It doesn't have to be this way.
Memorable social events can deliver enjoyment for the staff and
build enthusiasm for your company's goals, achievements and values.
Put a cross-functional team in charge of design and delivery for
your next social event. Give them time and budget. Provide them with
professional and management support. Set parameters and guidelines
for linkage to the business and the organization. Then monitor their
progress, but let the show be their own.
Lavish praise for an event well done, and you will build a tradition
of interaction that deepens and strengthens as it grows.
Staff Suggestion Schemes:
Managers want feedback and suggestions for improvement from staff.
But how many companies can point with pride to widely respected and
frequently used suggestion schemes?
Making your program more than just a box on the wall requires rapid
response from management, immediate implementation of good ideas,
and generous recognition for contributions.
Try this: give away $100 (or a dinner for two) every month for the
best new suggestion. Even if the first month has only a meagre
selection of ideas, pick one and give the prize away. Once people
realize there is a prize given out every month, you'll find the
suggestion box brimming with input by the month's end.
Management and Staff Interaction:
Management and staff will work better together if they have abundant
opportunities to interact. Schedule frequent team meetings. Provide
secure opportunities for staff to speak up without fear of reprisal
or retribution. Create panel discussions where all sides can ask
questions and receive candid -- not defensive -- replies. Host
social functions, team games, or a telematch. Organize a fishing
trip, nature walk, overnight retreat. More is truly merrier when
mingling the members of your team.
Rites and Rituals:
Companies with strong cultures evolve rites or rituals that are
memorable and unique. At one multinational, significant sales are
honored by the key salesperson ringing a huge Chinese gong at the
beginning of the monthly sales meeting. The message rings loud and
clear: Successful sales are good reason for public celebrations.
An American R&D laboratory fires a loud outdoor cannon each time one
of the research teams concedes a major or costly mistake. People
worry when the cannon is quiet for too long! The cultural message is
understood: Invention requires making mistakes. We are here to take
those risks.
At the Service Quality Training Centre, new trainers are thrown
fully clothed into the water at their first company retreat. The
message: "We're all in this together. Welcome aboard."
Internal Communications:
How does word get around from your head office? Do your memos look
dry, boring and official? Is that the kind of place you want your
office to be? Are your bulletin boards covered with old
announcements, faded backgrounds and ancient pieces of tape? Or are
they current, colorful and information-rich?
Which message do you want to send? Does your newsletter focus on
current customers, real issues and difficult but significant
achievements? Is it seen as an open forum, or sanitized propaganda
from Head Office?
How much dialogue do you really want? If you have moved to an e-mail
environment, is access open and response encouraged? Or do staff
read your latest comments on-screen and then discuss implications in
the washroom?
External Communications:
How you communicate with the outside world reflects back upon your
internal staff.
Do your employees take pride in the advertising and public relations
your company sponsors? Is your corporate image fresh or outdated? Is
your organization seen as a public spirited contributor to the
community, or just another money making enterprise?
Management Role Modeling:
The most powerful action for building company "culture" is
management members leading by their own example.
A senior Japanese executive was visiting one of the company's
overseas manufacturing plants. As he walked along the carefully
prepared factory floor, he saw a small scrap of paper just below one
of the machines.
To his subordinates shock and amazement, he detoured from the
carefully prepared route and stooped to pick up the paper. Placing
it quietly into his pocket, he returned to the designated path.
That one gesture did more to reinforce the company's commitment to
house-keeping than countless booklets and banners. The challenge for
all of us is clear: We must walk the talk!
Make your culture nourishing.
Your company culture is like water. It can flow strongly and
steadily, refreshing your team and carrying people forward. Or it
can sit festering and stagnant, gradually poisoning those around it.
It can be fertile and rich, irrigating growth and stimulating new
ideas. Or it can be destructive and narrow, crashing down upon any
signs of change.
Resignations, absenteeism and destructive gossip are bad news. But
they are only symptoms. The source is weak morale, low motivation
and a suffering company culture.
Your prescription for better health? Take action now. Build your
organization to nourish people, stimulate ideas and motivate
everyone towards giving their very best.
Courtesy of Ron Kaufman |