Powerful Corporate Culture: A Foundation for Accelerating Performance

Powerful Corporate Culture: A Foundation for Accelerating Performance
Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn

A Powerful Corporate Culture Can Propel a Strategy Forward
A powerful corporate culture is difficult to build and even harder to replicate.  If you want to boost business and people performance, shifting your corporate culture may be just what you need to do.  Corporate culture has been misconstrued recently to mean everything from being a “happy” or “fun” work environment to a great place to work.

We define a corporate culture differently.

A Powerful Corporate Culture Defined
We believe culture drives the majority of behavior at an organization. Your workplace culture symbolizes the heartbeat of your company. It represents the set of team norms, corporate values, underlying assumptions, and key business practices that guide workforce thoughts and actions.  Culture is unique to every company.

More simply, culture is the way business truly gets done on a day-to-day basis.

A Powerful Corporate Culture Accounts for 40% of the Difference
Our organizational alignment research found that culture accounts for 40% of the difference between high and low performance in terms of revenues, profits, customers, leadership effectiveness, and employee engagement.

Can a Workplace Culture Be Too Powerful?
The short answer is Yes!  The longer answer is it depends.  We measure culture on three levels.  For two of the three levels it is difficult to make the culture too powerful. For the other level, too strong of a workplace culture can spell disaster.

  • The Little C: Cultural Health
    Think of organizational health as the corporate values and behaviors that are consistently lived across an organization.  In general, organizations strive to be healthy, and people want to work in a healthy environment.While it is difficult for an organization to be too healthy, a company must be healthy enough to set the stage for a strong corporate culture that drives high performance.
  • The Middle C: Cultural Performance
    The next ingredient of a strong corporate culture is your performance environment.  We believe that people change when their environment changes.  We also believe it is a leader’s job to create the circumstances to consistently get the most out of their people in a way that is aligned with the organization’s core values, behaviors and strategies.At this level of culture, it is certainly possible for the culture to be “too powerful.”  In fact if you push for greater levels of performance without having commensurate levels of clarity, meaning, and accountability, your performance pressure will most likely create decreased performance.

    A leader applying the wrong amount of pressure in the wrong ways can render an entire organization ineffective.  Great leaders know when and where to apply performance pressure to get the most out of their people.

  • Big C: Cultural Alignment
    The third, and often the least effectively used, cultural level is the alignment of your culture with your strategy.  The goal is to design a purposeful culture that is 100% in line with moving your business forward.  Similar to cultural health, it is difficult to make this level too strong in terms of cultural alignment.

The Four Steps to Create a Powerful Corporate Culture that Is Aligned with Your Strategy

1.  Define the Desired Culture

  • Create a common and organization-specific definition of culture
  • Agree upon the current culture
  • Identify and most critical cultural beliefs needed to accomplish the strategy
  • Establish a set of communication tools that address how to think about doing the work, not just what work needs to be completed

2.  Assess the Current Culture

3.  Create a Plan to Close the Key Culture Gaps

  • Prepare people leaders to become culture champions
  • Cascade and translate strategic goals and their level of cultural alignment
  • Address organizational health issues which may create road blocks
  • Create action plans to create alignment

4.  Close the Key Culture Gaps

  • Identify and prepare change agents
  • Establish accountability and alignment targets
  • Establish monthly tracking rate of change, people, operational, customer, and financial metrics
  • Create recognition and rewards for key work groups

If you want to learn more about the different levels of a powerful corporate culture, download 3 Research-Backed Levels of Culture that Leaders Must Pay Attention To

Evaluate your Performance

Toolkits

Get key strategy, culture, and talent tools from industry experts that work

More

Health Checks

Assess how you stack up against leading organizations in areas matter most

More

Whitepapers

Download published articles from experts to stay ahead of the competition

More

Methodologies

Review proven research-backed approaches to get aligned

More

Blogs

Stay up to do date on the latest best practices that drive higher performance

More

Client Case Studies

Explore real world results for clients like you striving to create higher performance

More