How often have you heard somebody — a new CEO, a
journalist, a management consultant, a leadership guru, a fellow employee —
talk about the urgent need to change the culture? They want to make it
world-class. To dispense with all the nonsense and negativity that annoys
employees and stops good intentions from growing into progress. To bring about
an entirely different approach, starting immediately.
These culture critiques are as common as complaints
about the weather — and about as effective. How frequently have you seen
high-minded aspirations to “change the culture” actually manage to modify the
way that people behave and the way in which they work? And how often have you
seen noticeable long-term improvements?
What Is Corporate Culture?
At its worst,
culture can be a drag on productivity. At its best, it is an emotional
energizer. Here's how companies can use it to gain a competitive advantage.
If the answer to these last two questions is
“rarely,” it wouldn’t surprise us. We don’t believe that swift, wholesale
culture change is possible — or even desirable. After all, a company’s culture
is its basic personality, the essence of how its people interact and work.
However, it is an elusively complex entity that survives and evolves mostly
through gradual shifts in leadership, strategy, and other circumstances. We
find the most useful definition is also the simplest: Culture is the
self-sustaining pattern of behavior that determines how things are done.
Made of instinctive, repetitive habits and
emotional responses, culture can’t be copied or easily pinned down. Corporate
cultures are constantly self-renewing and slowly evolving: What people feel,
think, and believe is reflected and shaped by the way they go about their
business. Formal efforts to change a culture (to replace it with something
entirely new and different) seldom manage to get to the heart of what motivates
people, what makes them tick. Strongly worded memos from on high are deleted
within hours. You can plaster the walls with large banners proclaiming new
values, but people will go about their days, right beneath those signs,
continuing with the habits that are familiar and comfortable.
But this inherent complexity shouldn’t deter
leaders from trying to use culture as a lever. If you cannot simply replace the
entire machine, work on realigning some of the more useful cogs. The name of
the game is making use of what you cannot change by using some of the emotional
forces within your current culture differently.
Source: The Katzenbach Center
For further insights: See strategy-business.com/10PrinciplesCulture
Infographic: Opto Design/Peter Stemmler
For further insights: See strategy-business.com/10PrinciplesCulture
Infographic: Opto Design/Peter Stemmler
Three dimensions of corporate culture affect its
alignment: symbolic reminders (artifacts that are entirely visible), keystone
behaviors (recurring acts that trigger other behaviors and that are both
visible and invisible), and mind-sets (attitudes and beliefs that are widely
shared but exclusively invisible). Of these, behaviors are the most powerful
determinant of real change. What people actually do matters more than what they
say or believe. And so to obtain more positive influences from your cultural
situation, you should start working on changing the most critical behaviors —
the mind-sets will follow. Over time, altered behavior patterns and habits can
produce better results.
You may be asking: If it is so hard to change
culture, why should we even bother to try? Because an organization’s current
culture contains several reservoirs of emotional energy and influence.
Executives who work with them can greatly accelerate strategic and operating
imperatives. When positive culture forces and strategic priorities are in sync,
companies can draw energy from the way people feel. This accelerates a
company’s movement to gain competitive advantage, or regain advantages that
have been lost.
Research shows that
companies that use a few specific cultural catalysts — that is to say, those
that use informal emotional approaches to influencing behavior — are
significantly more likely to experience change that lasts. Of the companies
that reported consciously using elements of their culture in Strategy&’s
2013 Global Culture &
Change Management Survey, 70 percent said their firms achieved sustainable
improvement in organizational pride and emotional commitment. That compares
with 35 percent for firms that didn’t use culture as a lever. Although there is
no magic formula, no brilliant algorithm, no numerical equation that will
guarantee results, we have gleaned some valuable insights through decades of
research and observation at dozens of enterprises, including some of the most
successful companies in the world. By adopting the following principles, your
organization can learn to deploy and improve its culture in a manner that will
increase the odds of financial and operational success.
1. Work with and
within your current cultural situations. Deeply embedded
cultures cannot be replaced with simple upgrades, or even with major overhaul
efforts. Nor can your culture be swapped out for a new one as though it were an
operating system or a CPU. To a degree, your current cultural situation just is
what it is — and it contains components that provide natural advantages to
companies as well as components that may act as brakes. We’ve never seen a
culture that is all bad, or one that is all good. To work with your culture
effectively, therefore, you must understand it, recognize which traits are
preeminent and consistent, and discern under what types of conditions these
traits are likely to be a help or a hindrance. Put another way, there’s both a
yin and a yang to cultural traits.
For example, a European pharmaceutical company with
a solid product development pipeline had a tendency to be inward-looking. It
had great execution capabilities and an excellent record of compliance with
regulators around the world. However, when new products were ready to be launched,
the company had a hard time marketing them to physicians and healthcare
providers. Rather than bemoaning the company’s ingrained insularity — for
example, its collective tendency to value the opinions of internal colleagues
more than those of outside experts — the leaders decided to use this feature of
its culture to its advantage. They set up a program through which employees
were acknowledged and rewarded by colleagues for “going the extra mile” to
support customers. By recognizing a new kind of internal authoritativeness, the
company tapped a powerful emotional trigger already in place, and engendered a
new (and strategically important) behavior in its sales force.
2. Change behaviors,
and mind-sets will follow. It is a commonly held view that behavioral
change follows mental shifts, as surely as night follows day. This is why
organizations often try to change mind-sets (and ultimately behavior) by
communicating values and putting them in glossy brochures. This technique
didn’t work well for Enron, where accounting fraud and scandal were part of
everyday practice, even as the company’s espoused values of excellence,
respect, integrity, and communication were carved into the marble floor of the
atrium of its global headquarters in Houston. In reality, culture is much more
a matter of doing than of saying. Trying to change a culture purely through
top-down messaging, training and development programs, and identifiable cues
seldom changes people’s beliefs or behaviors. In fact, neuroscience research suggests
that people act their way into believing rather than thinking their way into
acting. Changes to key behaviors — changes that are tangible, actionable,
repeatable, observable, and measurable — are thus a good place to start. Some
good examples of behavior change, which we’ve observed at a number of
companies, relate to empowerment (reducing the number of approvals needed for
decisions), collaboration (setting up easy ways to convene joint projects), and
interpersonal relations (devising mutually respectful practices for raising
contentious issues or grievances).
Neuroscience research
suggests that people act their way into believing rather than thinking their
way into acting.A telecommunications company was seeking to improve its
customer service. Rather than trying to influence mind-sets by, for example,
posting signs urging employees to be polite to disgruntled customers, or having
employees undergo empathy training, the company focused on what psychologists
call a “precursor behavior” — a seemingly innocuous behavior that reliably
precedes the occurrence of problem behavior. Leaders had noticed that poor
teaming led to poor customer service, so the company rolled out a plan to
encourage better and more effective teaming within call centers. To accomplish
this, they set up regular design sessions for improving practices. When employees
felt they were part of a happy team, and sensed a greater level of support from
colleagues, they began treating their customers better.
In another example, a resources company in the
Middle East was seeking to make its workplace safer. Rather than erect placards
threatening workers with consequences, the company focused on a relatively
basic precursor behavior: housekeeping. It organized a litter drive. Picking up
trash as a team helped employees take greater pride in the workplace, which
engendered a greater sense of care for fellow employees and made them more
likely to speak up when they noticed an unsafe situation. Changed behavior,
changed mind-set.
3. Focus on a critical
few behaviors. Conventional wisdom advocates a comprehensive approach — everybody
should change everything that’s not perfect! But companies must be rigorously
selective when it comes to picking behaviors. The key is to focus on what we
call “the critical few,” a small number of important behaviors that would have
great impact if put into practice by a significant number of people. Discern a
few things people do throughout the company that positively affect business
performance — for example, ways of starting meetings or talking with customers.
Make sure those are aligned with the company’s overall strategy. Also check
that people feel good about doing these things, so that you tap into emotional
commitment. Then codify them: Translate those critical behaviors into simple,
practical steps that people can take every day. Next, select groups of
employees who are primed for these few behaviors, those who will respond
strongly to the new behaviors and who are likely to implement and spread them.
At an Asian banking company, rapid inorganic growth
had led to diverse ways of working across different units and geographies. To
focus on improving teaming, customer outcomes, and the ability to realize
synergies, the CEO and leadership embarked on a culture-led evolution program.
They targeted just three critical behaviors: taking extra steps to delight
customers, valuing performance over seniority, and backing up and supporting
one another. They then converted these three general behaviors into specifics
for each part of the company. Delighting customers, for instance, was
translated into frontline staff collaborating with other colleagues to solve
client problems and prioritizing the implementation of process improvements
that affected customer outcomes. For all three behaviors, leadership recognized
and celebrated examples in which people made an extraordinary effort. Senior
leaders acted as role models, explicitly modeling these three new behaviors.
The company also identified influential frontline, client-facing employees who
could demonstrate these new behaviors in action.
4. Deploy your authentic
informal leaders. Authority, which is conferred by a formal
position, should not be confused with leadership. Leadership is a natural
attribute, exercised and displayed informally without regard to title or
position in the organizational chart. Because authentic informal leaders, who
are found in every organization, are often not recognized as such, they are
frequently overlooked and underused when it comes to driving culture. It is
possible to identify such leaders through interviews, surveys, and tools such
as organizational network analysis, which allow companies to construct maps of
complex internal social relations by analyzing email statistics and meeting
records. Once identified, these leaders can become powerful allies who can
influence behavior through “showing by doing.” In fact, when companies map out
their organizations, they can identify leaders who exhibit different core
leadership strengths (see “Four Types of Authentic Informal Leaders”).
Four Types
of Authentic Informal Leaders
Every organization has people who influence and
energize others without relying on their title or formal position in the
hierarchy to do so. We call them “authentic informal leaders.” They are a
powerful resource in spreading a critical few behaviors from the bottom up.
Among the many types of informal leaders present in organizations, the
following are seen most frequently.
Pride builders are
master motivators of other people, and catalysts for improvement around them.
Often found in the role of line manager, they understand the motivations of
those with whom they work. They know how to foster a sense of excellence among
others. They can be found at every level of a hierarchy; some of the most
effective pride builders are close to the front line, where they can interact
directly with customers as well as employees. Pride builders often have
powerful insights about the culture and about what behaviors are likely to lead
to improvement.
Exemplars are
role models. They bring vital behaviors or skills to life, and others pay
attention to them. They are well respected and are effective peer influencers
in the middle and senior management cohorts.
Networkers are
hubs of personal communication within the organization. They know many people,
and communicate freely and openly with them. They serve as links among people
who might not otherwise share information or ideas. If you want to see an idea
travel virally through an enterprise, enlist your networkers.
Early adopters enthusiastically
latch onto and experiment with new technologies, processes, and ways of
working. Involve them in your performance pilots, or whenever you are trying to
demonstrate impact quickly.
At one major oil company, an informal leader named
Osama became known as the “turbo-collaborator.” His role gave him very little
formal influence. But when he began working at the refinery, he walked the
plant with the engineers, maintenance technicians, and operators, and took
copious notes. As a result, he knew everyone and developed relationships across
disciplines. Whenever somebody wanted to know how the place really worked, they
would speak to Osama — who would either have the answer in his notebook or know
precisely the right person to ask. When the company formed a buddy program
between operations and maintenance aimed at using greater collaboration to
improve plant reliability, it knew it needed Osama at the heart of it. He
connected people, defined templates to encourage collaboration, and captured
success stories. Identifying, engaging, and nurturing such informal leaders
allows companies to harness their talents and further the company’s
transformation efforts.
5. Don’t let your
formal leaders off the hook. Most organizations tend to shunt culture into
the silo of human resources professionals. But leaders in all parts of the
company are critical in safeguarding and championing desired behaviors,
energizing personal feelings, and reinforcing cultural alignment. The signaling
of emotional commitment sets the tone for others to follow. If staff members see
a disconnect between the culture an organization promulgates and the one its
formal leadership follows, they’ll disengage quickly from the advertised
culture and simply mimic their seniors’ behavior. The people at the top have to
demonstrate the change they want to see. Here, too, the critical few come into
play. A handful of the right kind of leaders have to be on board to start the
process.
When Jim Rogers was CEO of
GE Motors in Fort Wayne, Ind., he became frustrated because his senior
leadership group of more than 15 leaders seldom functioned together as a “real
team.” As described by Jon Katzenbach and Douglas K. Smith in The Wisdom of Teams: Creating the High-Performance Organization (Harvard
Business School Press, 1993), a real team is one with a high level of emotional
commitment; the leadership role shifts easily among the members depending on
their skills and experience and the challenges of the moment, rather than on
any hierarchical positions. Team members hold one another accountable for the quality
of their collective work. Interestingly, at GE Motors the senior leadership
group members often demonstrated real team capabilities in running their
individual business units and functions. So Rogers decided to find ways to
break them into subteams of three or four members to address specific
cross-organizational issues facing the larger group. Over time, he mixed the
subgroupings to match emerging issues. By working in different subgroup
settings, the executives developed camaraderie, which in turn improved the
effectiveness of the group as a whole.
6. Link behaviors to
business objectives. When people talk about feelings, motivations,
and values — all of which are vital elements of strong cultures — the
conversation can often veer into abstractions. It may then range far afield of
what it takes to succeed in the market. Too many employees walk away from
culture-focused town halls or values discussions wondering how the advice on
how to be a better person actually translates into the work they do. To avoid
this disconnect, offer tangible, well-defined examples of how cultural
interventions lead to improved performance and financial outcomes. Select
behaviors that are aimed specifically at improving business performance and can
be measured over time.
An oil company’s drive to reduce maintenance costs
at an industrial installation highlights the importance of such an approach.
The critical few behaviors included empowerment and good decision making. One
of the company’s exemplars (employees who lead by example) decided it would be
a smart move to make costs visible to workers. So he placed price tags on various
pieces of machinery. These cues inspired behavioral changes related to
decisions about whether to repair or replace equipment. Workers and managers
began to recommend fixing expensive equipment rather than replacing it. The
company celebrated and publicized cost savings identified by employees. The
behaviors led to a change in focus and mind-set. When an employee noticed that
fans were cooling the machinery during the winter, he felt empowered to call it
out, and ask whether it was necessary to do so. It turned out that it wasn’t —
and the company saved US$750,000 annually in power costs as a result.
7. Demonstrate impact
quickly. We
live in an age of notoriously short attention spans. That applies as much
to organizational culture as it does to people’s media consumption habits. When
people hear about new high-profile initiatives and efforts, and then don’t see
any activity related to them for several months, they’ll disengage and grow
cynical. That’s why it is extremely important to showcase the impact of
cultural efforts on business results as quickly as possible. One effective
method of doing so is to stage performance pilots — that is, high-profile
demonstration projects. Pilots are relatively low-risk efforts that introduce
specific behaviors that can then be evaluated and assessed. They often rely on
a dashboard that defines desired impacts, the tactics used, and the specific
metrics to be employed.
When Bell Canada first explored using new behaviors
at the front line to improve its customer service and profitability, there were
many more skeptics than believers within the leadership ranks. There simply
wasn’t any numerical proof that the tactics would work. So CEO Michael Sabia
decided to set up a pilot test in a sales unit near Toronto. The sponsors of
the test blocked out a tight time frame of eight months, and developed
realistic ways of measuring behavior change, customer reactions, and actual
sales and margin performance. Armed with positive results in these areas — a 29
percent increase in customer satisfaction in retail stores, a 31 percent
increase in revenue per call at call centers — the company went on to
accelerate the expansion of these efforts across the front line in different
geographies, functions, and businesses.
8. Use cross-organizational
methods to go viral. Ideas can spread virally across
organizational departments and functions, as well as from the top down and from
the bottom up. One powerful way to spread ideas is through social media: blogs,
Facebook or LinkedIn posts, and tweets — not from senior management, but from
some of the authentic informal leaders mentioned in Principle 4.
By now it is well established that social media can
be more effective at spreading information, news, and music than traditional
modes of distribution. The same holds with critical behaviors. People are often
more receptive to changes in “the way we do things around here” when those
changes are recommended or shared by friends, colleagues, and other associates.
This kind of credible social proof is more compelling than similar testimonials
from someone whose job it is to sell something.Just as there is an art to
making content go viral, there’s a craft to making behavior go viral. For
example, in a model that we have tested successfully in several situations, a
company starts with a few carefully chosen groups of 12 to 15 informal leaders
in three or four different parts of the business. After several weeks, an
additional 10 to 15 groups of informal leaders are set up in every business
unit. After about three months, the existing groups are encouraged to expand
and bring in new people. After another three to six months have passed, the
groups become more autonomous, allowed to control their own expansion.
Meanwhile, the company facilitates connections among groups to share learning
and insights. As behavior spreads, company leaders see increased performance as
well as peer and leadership recognition.
9. Align programmatic
efforts with behaviors. We’ve emphasized the role that informal
leaders can play in helping ideas go viral. But it’s also important to match
the new cultural direction with existing ways of doing business. Informal
mechanisms and cultural interventions must complement and integrate with the
more common formal organization components, not work at cross-purposes. By
providing the structure in which people work — through disciplines such as
organization design, analytics, human resources, and lean process improvement —
the formal organization provides a rational motivation for employee actions,
while the informal organization enables the emotional commitment that
characterizes peak performance.
The U.S. Marine Corps provides a classic example of
integrating formal and informal leadership efforts. The “rule of three”
dictates how the Marines design their organizations and projects and how they
execute in a hierarchy. (Three squads form into one of three divisions, which
form one of three battalions.) The formal leaders of those units are expected
to know the intent of the officer two levels above them — and to call out any
order or situation they perceive to be incoherent or in conflict with that
intent. But there are also informal leaders: Each of the four members of a
frontline rifle team is prepared (and expected) to take the lead whenever the
formal leader is disabled or loses the high-ground position. This means that
the informal leaders also need to know the intent of that officer two levels
above. Integrating informal norms with the formal structures helps enable the
timely battlefield adjustments that have served the Marine Corps well for more
than 200 years.
10. Actively manage
your cultural situation over time. Companies that have had great success
working with culture — we call them “culture superstars” — actively
monitor, manage, care for, and update their cultural forces. Why? As we noted
at the outset, when aligned with strategic and operating priorities, culture
can provide hidden sources of energy and motivation that can accelerate changes
faster than formal processes and programs. Even if you have a highly
effective culture today, it may not be good enough for tomorrow.
Southwest Airlines stands as an example of a
battle-tested company in which culture has been managed over time. Famous for
its long-term success in an industry where even the largest players routinely
fail, Southwest for 40 years has been energized by a deep sense of pride among
all employees. Southwest has found that constructing an environment that puts
its employees first — above customers and owners — fosters a sense of emotional
commitment and pride that delivers excellent customer service. But at
Southwest, the work on culture is never completed. Just as the airline’s
strategy, tactics, and technologies have evolved to cope with a changing
external environment, specific HR practices, including informal behaviors, have
shifted over time.
Living in Your Culture
Although challenging, multidimensional, and often
difficult to deal with, a company’s cultural situation constitutes a powerful
set of emotional resources. As is the case with other resources — human,
technological, financial — it is incumbent upon leaders to strive to get the
most value out of it.
To a degree, culture can be compared to natural
forces such as winds and tides. These elements are there in the background,
sometimes unnoticed, sometimes obvious. Endowed with immense power, they can
waylay plans and inhibit progress. They can’t really be tamed or fundamentally
altered. But if you respect them and understand how to make the most of them,
if you work with them and tap into their hidden power, they can become a source
of energy and provide powerful assistance.
The best way to start is to ask yourself a series
of questions. What are the most important emotional forces that determine what
your people do? What few behavior changes would matter most in meeting
strategic and operational imperatives? Who are the authentic informal leaders
you can enlist? And what can you and your fellow senior leaders do differently
to signal and reinforce those critical behaviors?
Of course, you shouldn’t plan for dramatic results
overnight. Expect an evolution, not a revolution. One of the challenges of
working with culture is that, as we’ve noted, it changes gradually — often too
slowly for leaders facing fast-moving competitors. That’s the bad news. The
good news? If you approach culture with respect and intelligence, as a milieu
in which you and your enterprise live, you can use it to accelerate your
competitive momentum. There’s no better time than the present to start.
·
Jon Katzenbach is an acclaimed
advisor to executives for Strategy&, PwC’s strategy consulting group. He is
a managing director with PwC US, based in New York, and founder of the
Katzenbach Center, Strategy&’s global institute on organizational culture
and leadership. He is a best-selling author on organizational culture,
leadership, and teaming; his books include The Wisdom of Teams (with
Douglas K. Smith; Harvard Business School Press, 1993) and Leading Outside the Lines (with Zia Khan;
Jossey-Bass, 2010).
·
Carolin Oelschlegel is a
director of the Katzenbach Center for Strategy&. She leads the global
operations of the center and advises clients around the world on culture and
leadership topics. Based in San Francisco, she is a director with PwC US.
·
James Thomas is a
thought leader in organizational culture with Strategy&. He is the Middle
East lead of the Katzenbach Center and an expert in culture and
organizational topics. Based in Dubai, he is a partner with PwC Middle East.
·
Also contributing to this article were
Strategy& specialists Varya Davidson (partner with PwC Australia),
Kenji Mitsui (partner with PwC Japan), Henning Hagen and Rutger von Post
(principals with PwC US), and Shona Especkerman (senior manager with PwC
Malaysia).
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