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Home Leadership “Culture” Is Everything

“Culture” Is Everything

An Organization's Success Or Failure Is Almost Entirely Dependent Upon The Culture That's Created By Its Leaders

September 29, 2020

Organizational Culture

The success or failure of an enterprise is almost entirely dictated by how well the senior leadership of the organization creates a healthy culture. That’s a bold statement, I know, but it’s painfully true.

Read on …

A while back I wrote a series of posts on the topic of Leadership Fundamentals. I took much of what I’ve come to know about leadership and put it into a series of posts. They are …

  1. Don’t Play The Blame Game
  2. Be Optimistic
  3. Building Infrastructure Is Critical
  4. Eliminate Fear From The Organization
  5. “They” Is We
  6. Lead From The Front
  7. Accessibility
  8. Consistency

Culture is what happens when the senior leaders in the organization do or don’t practice the leadership fundamentals. Let me say this differently. If the leaders are good (i.e., practice the fundamentals at least most of the time) the result will be a healthy culture. If not, the result will be an unhealthy culture. It’s that simple! If the culture is healthy, the enterprise will succeed. If not, it will struggle and maybe even fail.

So what is culture? The Encarta World English Dictionary defines culture as “The shared beliefs, customs, practices, and social behavior of a particular group.” Here’s another one, “A particular set of attitudes that characterizes a group of people.” In a sentence, “We have tried hard to avoid creating a blame culture.”

You get the idea.

Culture is something that’s very hard to define but easy to see. It doesn’t take long to conclude that an organization’s culture is “good” or “bad.” The key, though, is that you can’t create a good culture by talking about how important it is to have a good culture. Culture is something that happens as a result of the behavior of the senior leaders in any organization. If there was ever an area where it’s important to “walk the talk,” this is it.

I’ll use the example of the not so skilled dog trainer to illustrate my point. The trainer is attempting to teach a dog to come when instructed. You know, the trainer stands at a distance from the dog, says “come” and when the dog comes, the trainer “rewards” the behavior with a treat. Pretty simple … right? What happens when the dog doesn’t come as instructed? The not so skilled dog trainer stands at a distance, says “come” and the dog continues to go about its business. So, the trainer yells louder while walking closer to the dog. After several attempts, the trainer has closed the distance between themselves and the dog and in frustration kicks the dog for not coming as commanded.

So, what did the dog learn? I’ll tell you. The dog learned, “don’t go to that person … they’re going to kick me!” Compare this to the mixed message of beating on your team to “get out of the box” or “try something new and different” or otherwise take a risk, only to be “rewarded” with criticism and “what were you thinking!?!” when they fail. What does the team member learn? They learn not to “stick their neck out” and take a risk because they might get their head chopped off. It’s one thing to “say” to your team that you want them to try new things and take a few risks, but it’s a far different thing to create an environment (culture) that makes it “safe” for them to do so.

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