BOOK SUMMARY 296
Change the Culture,
Change the Game
·
Summary written by: Jane Bushby
"When you build a Culture of
Accountability, you create an organisation filled with people who can and will
get game-changing results."
- Change the Culture, Change the Game, Kindle
Edition, location 176
Roger Connors and Tom Smith, authors of The Oz Principle, have
written a book all about organizational culture and how to achieve successful
culture change. To do this they emphasize the importance of accountability in
achieving the desired changes, as a means to achieve a sustainable competitive
advantage. I think they have made a sometimes complex and intangible topic
quite simple and extremely results focused. I will be trying out some of their
checklists and suggestions in the workplace in the very near future.
The Golden Egg
Attention to your Organizational Culture is Critical
"Optimizing the culture should command your
attention every bit as much as your effort to achieve performance improvements
in manufacturing, R&D, sales, and every other organizational
discipline…Neglect it at your peril."- Change the Culture Change the Game,
Kindle Edition, location 215
This is absolutely key, and Connors and Smith take the
reader through some real-life case studies which demonstrate the importance of
organizational culture as it relates to performance. Their key focus is the
Results Pyramid which incorporates Results, Actions, Beliefs, and Experiences,
with Results in at the apex and Experiences at the base. This is a key model
which the authors frequently return to as a foundation for more complex
concepts and tools. Essentially this model (pyramid) highlights that the
results a company delivers is a direct result of its culture. The process
requires team leaders and the organization’s senior management teams to
identify the results they want, and then break this down into what they need to
do to create the right actions, beliefs and experiences.
Effectively, the outputs and/or outcomes of an
organization’s efforts reflect its culture, and if outputs need improving,
Connors and Smith suggest that the first step requires changing the
organization’s culture. What is refreshing about this book is that it sets out
what individual managers/leaders must do to turn the culture around, and enable
the organization to achieve the desired results. The authors also note that a
shift in culture is not necessarily a once and once only activity, but that
continuous efforts and adjustments may be needed to ensure the organization is
successful in the long term. It was great to read the view that the current culture
isn’t necessarily a bad or poor culture, it is simply not the culture to help
the organization achieve its desired results.
Gem #1
Managers Make the Culture
"Whether managers realise it or not, they are
creating experiences every day that help shape their organisational culture...
these experiences foster beliefs about ‘how we do things around here’, and
those beliefs, in turn drive the actions people take."- Change the Culture
Change the Game, Kindle Edition, location 290
The message here is that, an organization’s culture is
influenced by its managers and leaders. A takeaway for me is that
unsatisfactory cultures (in relation to the organizational outputs) are largely
attributable to the organization’s managers. Connors and Smith provide this
model and other actions to support managers in reviewing their practices to
shift the culture to achieve the desired results. The authors also note that a
key component in shifting culture is to encourage individuals to think and act
differently. The leadership team must take the responsibility for creating the
cultural change, and it must involve all leaders.
I loved the Steps to Accountability: these identify above
and below the line activities. Those above the line build on the previous one
and involve best practices, they are:
·
See it – obtain others’ perspectives,
communicate openly and honestly, seek and provide feedback, hear the hard
things that help outline reality.
·
Own it – align with the organization’s
mission and priorities, and adopt them as your own.
·
Solve it – consistently ask ‘what else can I
do?’ to help overcome obstacles and achieve progress.
·
Do it – walk the talk, maintain a trusting
environment, focus on top priorities and not blaming others.
Below the line involves blaming others or taking the
perspective of a victim. The authors note that this isn’t wrong as everyone
occasionally benefits from sharing their frustrations about events or
obstacles. They emphasize that if we get stuck below the line, we lose our
opportunity to focus on what we can do to get past the obstacles and achieve
the outcomes we want. Changing how people think helps obtain their commitment
for the desired results, and can dramatically accelerate culture change. This
doesn’t mean brainwashing them: it is still important that individuals
understand the ‘why’ behind the changes It just means that managers need to
change their own behavior to help shift employees beliefs: about them, the
organization, and the results it wants to achieve.
Gem #2
Confusion Equals Chaos
"Confusion licenses people to maintain the status
quo and to dismiss their accountability to internalize the need for change.
Confusion kills the momentum of any culture change effort because no one feels
confident about which direction to move."- Change the Culture Change the
Game, Kindle Edition, location 575
This highlights the need for clear, concise, consistent,
and constant communication about the results the organization needs to deliver.
The authors note that 90% of management teams cannot identify with complete
alignment the results their company wants to deliver. I can think of many
organizations where the leaders state the results they want, but their actions
and day to day decisions do not support these high-level goals. The result is
confusion among middle managers. The authors provide several case studies where
this has happened, with staff failing to deliver the appropriate results
because they are uncertain of where to place their focus.
The authors also note that it is important for managers
to be clear about results, as this assists them in communicating objectives so
that all employees share the same understanding.
It’s important to note that clarifying objectives will
help to identify whether cultural change is required. If the identified results
will take more effort to achieve than past results, the organization probably
requires significant shifts in some (if not all) aspects of the culture.
The best parts of the book for me were: Part 1, which
worked through the pyramid in detail and provided lots of practical takeaways
to implement in my workplace; and Part 2, which was very informative, and
provided guidance for managers to integrate these practices at an individual
level, including seeking feedback, storytelling, and recognition of good
efforts towards achieving the change. It is definitely a must-read for managers
interested in understanding how to improve their organization’s results and
their own role in creating organizational culture.
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