CEOs Role in shaping an Organization’s
Culture
by Brigadier General George Forsythe, Karen Kuhla
and Daniel Rice
This is the third
article focusing on how CEOs adjust to their disruptive
business environments and what they learned from their efforts that might be
helpful to other CEOs. Here, we turn to the CEO’s role in creating and
sustaining an organizational culture that leads to adaptation and
responsiveness. Our interviews revealed several ways CEOs can influence the
culture within their organizations: articulating and embedding values, hiring
and growing talent, and aligning organizational systems.
The leaders we
interviewed (Joe DePinto, CEO, 7-Eleven; Mike Fucci, Chairman, Deloitte; Tony
Guzzi, CEO, EMCOR; Margaret Keane, President and CEO, Synchrony Financial; Bob
Leduc, President, Pratt & Whitney; and Bob Weidner, President and CEO,
MSCI) all agreed the most important thing they do is shape and reinforce the
organization’s culture. Bob Leduc expressed it clearly: “I am a firm believer
that my job is to define the culture we want, model the culture we want and
nourish the culture we want.” Tony Guzzi agreed. “In the end, the biggest thing
you can try to shape is the culture in the organization.” Joe DePinto said the
executive’s role is “getting the right culture, setting the right tone,
demonstrating that is the way we want to do things, but it’s picking the right
folks and then allowing them the leeway…give their folks room to run and room
to grow.” Margaret Keane, who was named among Fortune’s most powerful women
CEOs in the Fortune 500 in 2017, talked about establishing the organization’s culture
following its spin-off from General Electric:
“When we spun off
from GE, it was very important that we quickly established our own culture and
values—taking what was great from GE, and also becoming our own, bold,
visionary company. It’s something we drive every day and I must own as the CEO.
The spinoff gave us a great opportunity to reshape who we were and who we
wanted to become and that is all based on our values.
Articulating and
Embedding Values. Recognizing the need to develop flexibility, initiative and
adaptability in their organizations to respond to the disruptions in their
business environments, these CEOs worked to articulate and embed values that
promoted these characteristics. Among other values, Bob Leduc stressed
empowerment, integrity and employee development at all levels within the
company. He also recognized he could not shape the culture alone. “I can
certainly set the tone but then I need senior leaders to do that exact same
thing. They need accurate senses to find it, they need to model it, and they
need to embrace it and nourish it.” Margaret Keane emphasized being bold and
responsible, while driving continuous improvement and leader development. For
Joe DePinto, customer and store-focused servant leadership is essential. As the
CEO of a large and diverse engineering company with 33,000 employees, Tony
Guzzi values decision-making and accountability throughout the organization.
These CEOs did more
than formally communicate the company’s values. They were present throughout
the organization to encourage and reinforce the values. Joe DePinto captured
this theme: “You’ve got to be around. You’ve got to be visible; it’s important
in all businesses, and certainly in our franchise business. Franchisees have to
know that the leadership is available. So, we are very open, very available,
very accessible.” Tony Guzzi personally attends and participates in every
leader development program the company conducts for its senior executives. They
also reinforced the values by how they responded when things didn’t go as
planned. One of our CEOs shared a poignant story about an expensive failure on
a systems test. Despite the cost, he saw it as an opportunity to reinforce
empowerment and foster trust, so he and the relevant managers initiated an
after-action review (AAR) to determine the cause and fix the problems and the
process.
At Pratt &
Whitney, Bob Leduc reinforces the company’s culture, vision and values through
periodic conversations at all levels within the organization. He continuously
champions the concept of “going beyond,” not just in service to the customer
but also in how employees treat and work with each other. Bob acknowledged that
it took a few iterations before his messages were fully understood and
embraced. After setting the vision and mission for the company, he has relied
on a framework of frequent reinforcement throughout the organization.
“I view my most
important responsibility to be setting the vision, longer-term mission and
near-term objectives of the enterprise,” he said. “I also need to set
expectations about the company culture that’s needed to achieve our goals. It’s
then the job of the broader leadership team to cascade these concepts through
their organizations to ensure alignment from top to bottom. And I make a point
of reinforcing them constantly in large forums like global employee town hall
meetings and executive conferences and in smaller settings like individual
performance conversations. I ask my direct reports to tell me what,
specifically, they are doing to advance the company’s mission and to foster our
desired culture. I expect them to ask the same questions of their teams. I
really believe that it’s not enough to set these expectations once and move on.
A constant drumbeat is needed to maintain focus and is especially important
during times of change or challenge.
Hiring and Growing
Talent. Getting the right people in the right positions within the organization
is not a new concept, but the leaders interviewed reinforced the importance of
hiring talented people and nurturing their growth, all with an eye to
reinforcing the organization’s culture and responsiveness to the environment.
As Bob Leduc put it, “I should be spending time on people development and
strategy—that is where the vast majority of my time should be…One of the most
important things I can do is shape how this company is led at multiple levels.
And if you do that, and you shape the culture the right way, then you increase
your chance of being successful.” While all the CEOs relied on different
strategies, they shared that the business demands they faced required attention
to values and leadership abilities as well as technical skills in hiring and
advancement decisions.
CEOs paid specific
attention to growing the bench for executive leadership. Mike Fucci indicated,
“I’m a big supporter of succession planning, and I believe learning and
succession are inexplicably linked.” Bob Leduc put it directly when he said, “I
believe that my successor is sitting around my table today and this will become
the modus operandi.”
Leader development
strategies take many forms. At 7-Eleven, for example, Joe DePinto meets with
his senior leaders every 6 months to review all directors and above to assess
their performance and leadership. This review is done in a cross-functional
setting giving all senior executives an enterprise view of the bench. Tony
Guzzi at EMCOR supplements formal training and development programs with
peer-to-peer learning to develop his bench. Other firms combine in-house
training with external leadership development programs and on-the-job “stretch”
assignments to grow their leadership bench. At Deloitte, for example, leaders
are encouraged to take an overseas project to grow their global experience. The
important takeaway is all these efforts are directed at reinforcing the
organizational leadership culture to respond effectively to the external
environment.
Aligning Systems.
Finally, the CEOs reinforced the importance of ensuring that organizational
systems are aligned in ways that reinforce the culture and values. The examples
they shared illustrate how operations, marketing, customer support, human
resources, financial, legal systems and attendant policies and procedures must
all be integrated with the organization’s culture and values. The CEOs
acknowledged this is not easy to do, especially if the firm is undergoing
substantial culture change; however, it’s the CEO’s job to make sure systems
are aligned with cultural expectations.
Special emphasis was
given to human resource functions—selection, onboarding, performance
management, promotion, leader development and compensation must all be in sync
with company values and cultural expectations. The CEOs are responsible for
ensuring that the organization’s systems are congruent with the culture they
are trying to foster. For example, at 7-Eleven, the performance appraisal and
succession planning systems are explicitly aligned with the articulated values
and characteristics of effective leadership in their complex business
environment. Pratt & Whitney is doing the same thing. Tony Guzzi at EMCOR
has synchronized performance metrics and incentives with organizational values.
Executive leadership
is cultural leadership. Our CEOs clearly understand their responsibility to
shape and reinforce the organization’s culture to ensure the business thrives
in a dynamic marketplace. They pay attention to articulating and embedding
values that promote the adaptation and flexibility. They also realize they
cannot do it by themselves, so they ensure they recruit, hire and grow the
right talent. Then they align systems and procedures to reflect the company’s
values and take advantage of talented employees.
In the next two
articles, we will take a closer look at how CEOs can respond to their dynamic
environments by creating agile organizations and developing nimble employees.
We will examine how the CEOs transformed their companies into learning
organizations and review their specific approaches to individual employee
development.
Fuente: Chief Executive
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? 2018:
- http://medinacasabella.blogspot.com.ar/2016/04/PENSAMIENTO-ESTRATEGICO-2017.html
- Curso Taller de PLANEAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO - Recetas Eficientes para Escenarios Turbulentos 2018:
- http://medinacasabella.blogspot.com.ar/2016/04/PLANEAMIENTO-ESTRATEGICO-2017.html
- Curso Taller ¿Cómo Gerenciar Eficientemente a partir del MANAGEMENT ESTRATÉGICO? 2018:
- http://medinacasabella.blogspot.com.ar/2016/04/MANAGEMENT-ESTRATEGICO-2017.html
- Curso Taller ¿Cómo GERENCIAR PROCESOS DE CAMBIO y no sufrir en el intento? 2018:
- http://medinacasabella.blogspot.com.ar/2016/04/GESTION-DEL-CAMBIO-2017.html
- Curso Taller de LIDERAZGO TRANSFORMACIONAL para la Toma de Decisiones 2018:
- http://medinacasabella.blogspot.com.ar/2016/04/LIDERAZGO-TRANSFORMACIONAL-2017.html
Consultas al email: mamc.latam@gmail.com
.·. Dr. Miguel Ángel MEDINA CASABELLA, MSM, MBA, MHSA .·.
Especialista Multicultural Global en Management Estratégico, Conducta Organizacional, Gestión del Cambio e Inversiones, graduado en University of California at Berkeley y The Wharton School (University of Pennsylvania)
Consultor en Dirección General de Cultura y Educación de la Provincia de Buenos Aires
Miembro del Comité EEUU del Consejo Argentino para las Relaciones Internacionales
Representante de The George Washington University para LatAm desde 1996
Ex Director Académico y Profesor de Gestión del Cambio del HSML Program para LatAm en
The George Washington University (Washington DC)
The George Washington University (Washington DC)
CEO, MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS GROUP LatAm
Skype: medinacasabella
Twitter: https://twitter.com/medinacasabella
MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS GROUP LatAm ©
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