A Good Strategy to
Change the Corporate Culture
by Peter Bregman
“I’d like to talk to you about a big project,”
the woman told me on the phone. “We need to change our culture.”
She was a senior leader in a professional
services firm, where people really are their most important asset.
Only it
turns out the people weren’t so happy. Theirs was a very successful firm with
high revenues, great clients, and hard working employees. But employee
satisfaction was abysmally low and turnover rates were staggeringly high.
Employees were performing, they just weren’t staying.
This firm had developed a reputation for being a
terrible place to work. When I met with the head of the firm, he illustrated
the problem with a personal example. Just recently, he told me, a client
meeting had been scheduled on the day one of his employees was getting married.
“I told her she needed to be there. That the meeting was early enough and she
could still get to her wedding on time.”
He paused and then continued, “I’m not proud of
that story, but it’s how we’ve always operated the firm.”
Then he looked at
me, “So, Peter, how do you change the culture of a company?”
Such a simple
question. I wanted to give him a simple answer.
But a culture is
a complex system with a multitude of interrelated processes and mechanisms that
keep it humming along.
Performance reviews and training programs define
the firm’s expectations. Financial reward systems reinforce them. Memos and
communications highlight what’s important. And senior leadership actions —
promotions for people who toe the line and a dead end career for those who
don’t — emphasize the firm’s priorities.
In most organizations these elements develop
unconsciously and organically to create a system that, while not always ideal,
works. To change the culture is awkward, self-conscious, and complex. It’s
better to avoid it if possible.
“Why do you want to change the culture?” I asked
him. “The firm seems successful. Highly profitable. The culture seems to be
working to support those goals. Why not keep it?”
He had to think for a few moments. “It’s not
sustainable. Eventually we’ll lose our best people. No one will want to work
here.” And then he paused. “I won’t want to work here.”
That was good enough for me. But maybe not for
everyone else. They’d spent years playing the game by a certain set of rules
and they were playing to win. Now the head of the firm wanted to change the
rules mid-game. Not easy to do. And not particularly subtle. We’d have to
consciously change all the elements that have developed over decades to make up
the system.
Or would we? In the late 1970s, University of
Illinois researcher Leann Lipps Birch conducted a series of experiments on
children to see what would get them to eat vegetables they disliked. This is a
high bar. We’re not talking about simply eating more vegetables. We’re talking
about eating specific vegetables, the ones they didn’t like.
You could tell the children you expect them to
eat their vegetables. And reward them with ice cream if they did. You could
explain all the reasons why eating their vegetables is good for them. And you
could eat your own vegetables as a good role model. Those things might help.
But Birch found one thing that worked
predictably. She put a child who didn’t like peas at a table with several other
children who did. Within a meal or two, the pea-hater was eating peas like the
pea-lovers.
Peer pressure.
We tend to conform to the behavior of the people
around us. Which is what makes culture change particularly challenging because
everyone is conforming to the current culture. Sometimes though, the problem
contains the solution.
“Stories.” I said to the head of the firm.
“Excuse me?” he responded.
“You change a culture with stories. Right now
your stories are about how hard you work people. Like the woman you forced to
work on her wedding day. You may not be proud of it, but it’s the story you
tell. That story conveys your culture simply and reliably. And I’m certain you’re
not the only one who tells it. You can be sure the bride tells it. And all her
friends. If you want to change the culture, you have to change the stories.”
I told him not to change the performance review
system, the rewards packages, the training programs. Don’t change anything. Not
yet anyway. For now, just change the stories. For a while there will be a
disconnect between the new stories and the entrenched systems promoting the old
culture. And that disconnect will create tension. Tension that can be harnessed
to create mechanisms to support the new stories.
To start a
culture change all we need to do is two simple things:
- Do dramatic story-worthy things that represent the culture we want to create. Then let other people tell stories about it.
- Find other people who do story-worthy things that represent the culture we want to create. Then tell stories about them.
Or if you want managers and employees to
communicate more effectively, stop checking your computer in the middle of a
conversation every time the new message sound beeps. Instead, put your computer
to sleep when they walk in your office.
Or if you’re trying to create a more
employee-focused culture, instead of making the bride work on her wedding day,
give her the week off.
We live by stories. We tell them, repeat them,
listen to them carefully, and act in accordance with them.
We can change our stories and be changed by
them.
Source: Harvard Business Review
Haciendo click en cada uno de los links siguientes, Contenidos de nuestros
TALLERES DE CAPACITACIÓN IN COMPANY, "A MEDIDA"
de las necesidades de su Organización:
- Curso Taller ¿Cómo incorporar y aplicar Modelos de PENSAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO en la Organización? 2016-2017:
- http://medinacasabella.blogspot.com.ar/2016/04/pensamiento-estrategico-curso-taller-in.html
- Curso Taller de PLANEAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO - Recetas Eficientes para Escenarios Turbulentos 2016-2017:
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- Curso Taller ¿Cómo Gerenciar Eficientemente a partir del MANAGEMENT ESTRATÉGICO? 2016-2017:
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- Curso Taller ¿Cómo GERENCIAR PROCESOS DE CAMBIO y no sufrir en el intento? 2016-2017:
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- Curso Taller de LIDERAZGO TRANSFORMACIONAL para la Toma de Decisiones 2016-2017:
- http://medinacasabella.blogspot.com.ar/2016/04/liderazgo-transformacional-2016-2017.html
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.·. Miguel Ángel MEDINA CASABELLA, MSM, MBA, SMHS .·.
Especialista en Management Estratégico, Gestión del Cambio e Inversiones
Representante de The George Washington University en Foros y Ferias de LatAm desde 2001
Representante de The George Washington University Medical Center para los Países de LatAm desde 1996
Ex Director Académico y Profesor de Gestión del Cambio del HSML Program para LatAm en GWU School of Medicine & Health Sciences (Washington DC)
CEO, MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS GROUP LatAm
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