Culture: 4 keys to why it matters
What separates the
highest performing organizations from the rest? Clever strategy? Superior
products? Better people?
Perhaps they do – for a
while – but any advantage fades if it is not built atop something more
fundamental. Something that enables a competitive advantage to sustain and grow
over time. That something is culture.
What is culture?
Culture starts
with what people do and how they do it. In
any industry, what people do may not differ dramatically, but
high-performing organizations distinguish themselves in how they
do it. This cumulative effect of what is done and how it
is done ultimately determines an organization’s performance.
Culture also
encompasses why people do what they do. As the Titanic’s
captain grasped a little too late on that fateful night in 1912, 90 percent of
an iceberg’s mass lies beneath the surface. Culture is similar as it includes
observable behaviors (the what and how above
the surface) as well as everything underneath – the shared mindsets and beliefs
that influence how people in an organization behave. Just like a captain
navigating frigid waters, anyone trying to understand an organization’s culture
must recognize that most of what matters cannot be readily seen.
Thus, culture is the
common set of behaviors and underlying mindsets and beliefs that shape how
people work and interact day to day.
Four reasons why
culture matters
1. Culture correlates with performance. Based on our research of over 1,000 organizations
that encompass more than three million individuals, those with top quartile
cultures (as measured by our Organizational
Health Index) post a return to shareholders 60 percent
higher than median companies and 200 percent higher than those in the bottom
quartile.
2. Culture is inherently difficult to copy. The quickening pace of innovation means that
products and business models face the constant threat of being replicated. In
this environment, the ultimate competitive advantage is a healthy culture that
adapts automatically to changing conditions to find new ways to succeed.
3. Healthy cultures enable organizations to adapt. In a world where the one constant is change,
culture becomes even more important because organizations with high-performing
cultures thrive on change. The converse also holds true: Unhealthy cultures do
not respond well to change. Our research shows that 70 percent of
transformations fail, and 70 percent of those failures are due to
culture-related issues.
4. Unhealthy cultures lead to underperformance…or worse. Over time, not only do unhealthy cultures foster
lackluster performance, but they can be your undoing. Daily headlines attest,
culture can bring corporate giants to their knees
March 27,
2018 – by Carolyn Dewar and
Reed Doucette
https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/organization/our-insights/the-organization-blog/culture-4-keys-to-why-it-matters?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1804&hlkid=e7fdbc09c11d4660a2c64e39300cb9ff&hctky=1627601&hdpid=99cb12f4-139e-4997-8020-a6b489420c59
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