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If you ask 10 people to define "organizational culture,
"you will get 11 different answers! Fortunately, from my
consulting and writing on leadership and organizational change,
I created my definition of organizational culture: (Read)
"Corporate culture is how every employee knows she or he
must act - even if no one is watching." Knowing your company's
culture proves crucial for multiple reasons, including:
- Only organizational changes that fit into your company's culture
will succeed.
- Changes not fitting into the culture will fail and not achieve
desired results.
- Hire employees who fit into the corporate culture. That is,
"Do not try to fit a square peg into a round hole!"
Fastest Way to Uncover Your Organization's
Culture
From my consulting experience, I devised a super-quick way to
uncover an organization's culture: Discover the story all employees
know and tell other employees. In fact, hearing the company's
signature story is a right-of-passage for new employees. Hearing
the story implicitly tells a new employee the actions and values
the organization expects.
Here are two examples taken from my book entitled, Absolutely
Fabulous Organizational Change™: Strategies for Success
from America's Best-Run Companies.
1st Story: Ritz-Carlton-Hotel Company
Leonardo Inghilleri, senior vice president of The Ritz-Carlton-Hotel
Company, told me this story often is repeated among his company's
employees.
"Ladies & Gentlemen Serving Ladies & Gentlemen"
When he was 14 years old, Horst Schulze -- currently president
of The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company -- worked in as an apprentice
waiter in a very fine restaurant in his native Germany. Initially,
he saw himself as a "servant."
Then, he realized the fine restaurant was staffed by highly skilled
professionals. For example, he looked in awe as he repeatedly
saw the maître d' chat with and entertain the diners. In
fact, the maître d' spoke many languages. So, he spoke German
to the German diners, French to the French guests, and English
to the English customers. He also expertly helped diners with
their food and wine choices.
From this experience, it dawned on Horst Schulze that a luxury
establishment is composed of ladies and gentlemen serving ladies
and gentlemen. He instilled this insight into The Ritz-Carlton
Hotel Company where he now is president.
Ritz-Carlton's Culture
Company president Horst Schulze's experience gives rise to The
Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company's customer care motto which precisely
expresses its corporate culture: "We Are Ladies and Gentlemen
Serving Ladies and Gentlemen." Note: The company's culture
perfectly dovetails with Ritz-Carlton's big, exciting, compelling
vision: "Our key goal is to be the premier worldwide provider
of luxury travel and hospitality products and services."
2nd Story: Intuit
Brooks Fisher, vice president and general manager of Intuit's
consumer internet business, told me Intuit's signature story is
the following:
"Follow Me Home"
Scott Cook, founder of Intuit, was so focused on understanding
and fulfilling the customers' needs that he invented "Follow
Me Home." He would go to a store where Intuit's software
was being sold. Then, while a customer was buying Intuit software,
he would ask if he could follow the customer home. At the home,
he would watch how the customer installed and used the software.
Intuit's Culture
Given Intuit's story, what is the company's culture -- or main
focus? Fisher says the story conveys Intuit's culture which is
"The customer always is first." And, as Fisher puts
it, "That's how you win." Note: The story also precisely
meshes with Intuit's big, compelling vision: "Our key goal
is to revolutionize how people do financial work."
Hire Applicants Who 'Fit Into' Your Company's Culture
You know it proves difficult to "fit a square peg into a
round hole." Likewise, companies need to hire applicants
who 'fit into' their organizational culture.
For instance, one company I consult to is ultra-customer service
oriented with super-friendly employees. When we did benchmarking
studies for this company with the Abilities & Behavior Forecaster™
Test - to customize the Forecaster™ Test to help hire the
best - we discovered successful employees in every job scored
high on two of the test's scales:
+ Helping People Motivation, i.e., customer service-orientation
+ Friendliness
Such customer service-focused and super-friendly employees 'fit
into' the company's culture, and prove most likely to succeed.
Message = Don't bet against your organizational culture when
you aim to hire the best. Fortunately, you can do by:
1. benchmarking your "superstar" employees in each
job - by having them fill-out a validated pre-employment test
to discover their "benchmark" test scores
2. focus on hiring applicants whose test scores are similar to
your company's "superstar" employees' test scores
Now, You Can Uncover Your Organization's
Culture
To discover your corporate culture, you simply need to uncover
the story that
1. employees hear in their first week on-the-job and repeat to
new employees
2. perfectly conveys how all employees must act - even when no
one is watching!
Usually, the story is about the company's founder. It typically
conveys insights and actions that lead to remarkable, profitable
success.
Michael Mercer - 847-382-0690
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