Where organizational culture is
headed
Views from 2,000 leaders and employees worldwide.
People
think culture needs to evolve. Here’s how to make it happen.
Now more than ever, workplace culture can’t
go undervalued. In our 2018 survey of more than 2,000 people in 50 countries,
one finding stands out: employees
feel less positive about their workplace culture than their employers.
It’s an issue that’s urgent and undeniable. A
whopping 80% of our respondents say their organization’s culture must evolve in
the next five years for their company to succeed, grow, and retain the best
people. Backed by decades of research from our global Katzenbach Center, here are five ideas for leaders now.
1. Address where your culture and your strategy clash
A growing number of C-suite and board members
view culture as a critical strategic topic: in fact, 71% say culture is an
important topic on their agenda, a notable jump from 64% in 2013. But for the
influence of culture to translate into real business results, culture, strategy
and operations must be aligned.
Achieving this alignment demands a deep
understanding of where your culture is today, and then envisioning its ideal
state. Ask yourself: how is the current culture supporting our intentions? What
needs to change?
“No culture is all good or all bad. Every
culture has emotional energy within it that can be leveraged.”
Jon Katzenbach
Founder of the Katzenbach Center and author of The Critical Few
Founder of the Katzenbach Center and author of The Critical Few
2. Change your listening tours
There’s a notable difference between how leaders
view their culture, and how their people see it. This gap speaks to the
perpetual challenge facing
every leadership team: translating high aspirations for culture into day-to-day actions, and bringing others on board.
every leadership team: translating high aspirations for culture into day-to-day actions, and bringing others on board.
It takes more than ordinary listening to get
a true understanding of the culture at your organization. Instead, challenge
and foster healthy debate and real feedback from people across departments and
across levels. Connect with people who are emotionally astute and who have
insight into what people care about most. These “informal
leaders” — employees who may not hold an
official leadership role, but who have a ground-level view of the
organization’s
cultural reality — can be a powerful force in accelerating behavior changes.
cultural reality — can be a powerful force in accelerating behavior changes.
3. Identify the “critical few” behaviors that will shift
your culture
Focus first on adopting the few critical
behaviors that matter most — tangible actions that, if practiced more often at
every level, can help shift the culture. Cultures don’t change quickly, but a
disciplined focus on these “critical few” can accelerate and catalyze a
purposeful evolution.
As people begin to adopt the behaviors, take
time to recognize and reward those people for focusing on those behaviors, too.
4. Step into the "show me" age
Show your people that you’re committed to
evolving your organization’s culture by demonstrating the critical few
behaviors yourself. This will help make sure the message about culture is
received — and believed — by employees. Right now, it isn’t.
Right away, do something that’s visible and
concrete. If it succeeds and sends a positive message, repeat it–early and
often. Then, encourage others to do the same. When your people see you leading
by example, they’re more likely to follow suit.
5. Commit to culture as a continual, collaborative effort
Changing culture is tough, and most efforts
fail. Our survey found that 42% of respondents believe that their
organization’s culture has remained static for the last five years. That’s not
due to lack of effort: 23% of employees report that leaders of their
organizations have tried culture change or evolution of some form, but
acknowledge that the efforts resulted in no discernible improvements.
Influencing culture is hard, and most leaders
declare victory too soon. It can’t be a “one-off” project, nor can it be
implemented top-down. Prepare to persevere through obstacles if you want
long-term, sustainable change. The more ambitious the effort, the more time and
more input from people at all levels it will demand. ach Center
Move culture from “Like” to “Love”
“Collaborative.” “Inclusive.” “Open.”
Universally, people are far more likely to describe their organization’s
culture as positive than negative, even as they see room for improvement.
That positive outlook bodes well for
long-term change. People want a culture they can be proud of: our survey found
that 72% of C-suite and board members say culture is a strong reason people
join their organization. When leaders illustrate a commitment to further
evolving their cultures, employees will be more likely to take notice,
appreciate the effort, and contribute.
https://www.strategyand.pwc.com/global-culture-survey
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