Bluster Buster: How to Bring Your Values to Life and Strengthen Your Culture
Jim Clemmer
Leadership/culture development keynote speaker, workshop/retreat facilitator, team builder, executive coach, and author
Years ago, we helped an international mining company transform its safety culture from good to outstanding. Their 65% reduction in injuries over a three-year period vaulted them to become a benchmark company in their industry. A delegation of senior leaders and safety professionals from another mining company visited a few of their mine sites to understand how they achieved such dramatic safety improvement. One of the delegates asked the first person they saw on-site, "who's in charge of safety?" "I am," was the reply. "Oh, you're the safety supervisor here?" "No," he replied. "I am a miner on the night shift. We're all in charge of safety."
When we're hired to start a culture development process with an organization, we'll often assess the current culture through a series of small group and one-on-one interviews. We'll ask questions like what are your organization's core values? What behaviors are expected and rewarded? What behaviors are punished or corrected? What gets people hired, fired, or promoted here?
The combined answers are then clustered into key themes. In high-performing cultures, the themes are consistent and aligned with the organization's stated values. But...that's rare. Sometimes we'll encounter discussions and disagreement about what the organization's vision, mission, and values are. Many respondents must look them up. They're clearly not top of mind. Sometimes there's even disagreement about which are the most current ones.
Many people see a huge disconnect between the "aspired values" and the "lived values" that get people hired, fired, and promoted. For example, a bully boss who kisses up and kicks down is promoted because he or she delivers results. Results at any cost are the organization's real values -- despite lofty mission, vision, and values statements. ?
领英推荐
Values-based leadership and cultures have huge payoffs . Here are a few ways leaders can embed values in their own behaviors and build high-performance cultures :
Who's in charge of safety or service or quality or whatever you're stated vision, mission, or values are? Do frontline servers and team members embody and own your values? If a delegation visited your organization to see how alive your values are, what would they find? Would they hear and see consistent alignment and ownership at every level??
President at Little Diamond Enterprises Ltd.
2 年Jim, your article reminded me of the legendary story of the new Alcoa CEO who told investors that his turnaround strategy was to focus on improving organizational safety performance over profitability, much to their consternation. He implemented a policy requiring managers to have their safety incident reports on his desk within 24 hours along with their plan to prevent recurrence. The first manager who did not comply with this directive was fired. Once alignment was achieved, safety performance improved exponentially, as did profitability and stock price.