10 Reasons Your Culture is Failing and New Insights on How to Fix It

10 Reasons Your Culture is Failing and New Insights on How to Fix It

After studying customer experience, digital transformation and innovation for so many years, I've found that the next big thing in business (r)evolution is culture. The other most interesting thing I've learned is that while businesses are readying or investing in change, the definition of meaningful culture is elusive or inconsequential. Yet, company culture is either the number one catalyst or inhibitor to progress. Culture needs a champion. As Peter Drucker once famously said, “Culture eats strategy for breakfast…”

Like most aspects in business, management perspectives, processes and systems are dated. How employees want to work, how they work and the solutions that are being introduced to change work are oftentimes unaligned. At the same time, how employees feel and think about work, their skill sets, values, ambitions and aspirations, are also evolving away from traditional management and human resource philosophies and supporting processes. What's routinely missed is people, which prevents a human-centered approach to improving culture, employee engagement, and overall competitiveness.

When I speak to executives about culture, many pay it lip service, making sweeping assumptions about how corporate culture is paving the way to success. When I peel the layers back and start getting deeper into understanding and perception of what culture is and isn’t, it becomes clear that company culture is not a byproduct of strategic vision or employee engagement, but instead a manifestation of how companies work to achieve business objectives.

In work, I needed to find common ground for a workable definition of culture to convince executives to prioritize leadership and cultures of innovation, digital transformation and operational excellence.

Culture is shaped by the collective experiences of your employees, what they believe, what they value and how they survive. It’s also defined by vision and leadership, how you bring that to life, what you reward and also what you tolerate or overlook.

Culture has never been more important. And the same time, culture has never been more ignored.

According to an eye-opening Gallup poll, 70% of American employees are "not engaged" or "actively disengaged." It's estimated that actively disengaged employees cost companies $450-to-$550 billion in lost productivity.

At the same time. Executives and HR underestimate the importance of, or misunderstand the practice of, employee engagement and what’s needed to foster “engagement” that's valued by employees. In 2016, I conducted a study with Jostle to understand the divide between executive perspective and employee sentiment. We uncovered what we call “the engagement gap” and there’s no way to close it without understanding what employees value, why and how to align them with business objectives.

For example, executives ranked the priority of employee engagement at 8.3 out of 10. But, employees only rated engagement at 5.5. The employee engagement gap also spills over into culture. About 1/2 of employees are actually neutral on their company culture and more than 1/4 felt culture is dysfunctional. That is not only disengaged and unproductive, it also boasts the threat of toxicity.

What’s at the heart of disengagement and uninspired cultures? Many things ranging from the lack of leadership, vision and investment. It’s also a mindset that carries over from traditional business experience. In a recent interview with a Fortune 500 company, I asked why the engagement gap was so significant within their organization.

The answer was as logical as it is emblematic of the deeper problem that requires immediate attention, “We have serious headwinds with demographics. We are not replacing or re-training older executives and employees and their way of working is in the way of progress. The industry needs to embrace an innovation mindset.” 

Old ways won’t open new doors. A culture of empowerment, innovation, and reward is the only way to help companies compete for the future. You can’t get there with disengaged employees who don’t have an articulated purpose to rally together around.

Executives need to focus efforts on ensuring that they have a mission that matters and that people can see how their work impacts that mission.

The culture struggle is real and needs champions to raise awareness, identify problems and to work toward productive solutions. To help, I partnered with GapingVoid, a Miami-based consultancy that helps companies increase employee engagement and connect people more deeply to mission, values and purpose. Together, we released a new, free ebook, “10 reasons your culture is failing and new insights on how to fix it.” It was written for thought leaders and movement makers and is designed to share insights, provoke new thinking, and start a conversation around culture in your organization.

The future of culture and employee experience starts with you.

Please download, read and share!

Brian Solis is a world renowned digital analyst at Altimeter, a Prophet company, keynote speaker, and author. His latest book, X: Where Business Meets Designexplores the future of brand and customer engagement through experience design. Follow him on Twitter and LinkedIn. Invite him to speak at your next event. 

Interesting tips..!! Will surely help many marketers.

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Jaime Alexander Cuéllar Segura

Developer Frontend | UX/UI | React+Node | .Net+MongoDB | MySQL | Sociologist

7 年

Elegant and to the point. Culture is Social. Business is Social. Social is made of real persons, and persons disengage sooner or later if they feel that "empathy" is a just a buzzword for managers and investors.

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Papitha Mohan

RevOps Leader | Marketing & Brand Strategy | Gen AI Evangelist | Visiting Faculty

7 年

Brilliant write up! Summed up the reasons behind where organizations aspire to be and why not all of them are there today

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