Culture Is King
Barbara J. Jackson, PhD, DBIA
Nationally Recognized Speaker | President at Barbara Jackson LLC | Founder & Facilitator at Women Building Change Leadership Boot Camp
Most of us in the design and construction business are aware that our industry is going through some growing pains. We have been in the middle of a significant transformation for some time.??
It started with a shift in delivery approach from traditional design-bid-build, which is epitomized by the low-bid mentality and a command-and-control style of leadership, to the more collaborative, team-based approaches such as CM-at-Risk, Design-Build, Progressive Design-Build, and Integrated Project Delivery, where optimized solutions and value generation is the goal—or at least should be.??
Unfortunately, even when we change delivery methods or contracting methods, so often, our attitudes and beliefs themselves don’t change. From a cultural perspective, we are attempting to execute and leverage the benefits of collaborative delivery strategies while maintaining our traditional command and control cultures.??
Peter Drucker, the famous business guru once said,?“Culture eats strategy for breakfast.”?And in our business, unfortunately, our failure to address the many cultural challenges that our industry is currently experiencing is eating our strategies for breakfast, lunch, and dinner! This failure is showing up in many ways. Here are just a few:
I realize that there are many impediments beyond our control that have molded our change-resistant culture. Change equates to risk, and we are, first and foremost, very good at managing risk.??
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But our methodologies for managing risk have outgrowth their effectiveness. We now operate in a VUCA world and many of our projects could be described as VUCA projects—Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, and Ambiguous.??
The command-and-control techniques that had been so successful for us when the world, and circumstances, were more predictable, are no longer effective. As a matter of fact, they tend to do more harm than good.??
Today’s project environment requires flexibility, transparency, open communication, collaborative interdisciplinary teaming, and integrated thinking. These characteristics DO NOT represent our traditional culture. In fact, our culture is generally characterized as being just the opposite.??
However, the good news is that we don’t have to be stuck with the way we have always done things. We can take steps to begin to morph our cultures in the direction we want them to go. Making a cultural shift isn’t easy, but it’s not impossible either. But when we recognize that not changing, is riskier than changing, we’ll realize we have no choice.??
*For more information on how you can benchmark your company’s current culture and begin to identify the changes that would best support your organization and future goals, contact Barbara Jackson at [email protected].
Originally published on barbarajackson.com
Culture is the backbone of any successful organization. Dr. Jackson’s piece on the significance of culture is spot-on. A thriving culture fosters innovation, boosts morale, and enhances productivity. It’s more than just a buzzword; it’s an essential component for sustainable growth. #scalingupconstruction
Director of Special Projects at Adolfson & Peterson Construction
3 年Couldn't agree more on the Low-Bid mentality creating more risk rather than the misconception that it is lowering risk!
Project Executive at Swinerton
3 年Great write up!?
Senior Construction Project Manager | Endurance Sports Addict | Mentor
3 年Yes yes yes yes! The last bullet point especially - construction is going to have real problems if younger professionals continue to look up the ladder at their boss and their boss's boss and they don't want to be like that 'when they grow up.' Those roles should be aspirational and instead they are seeing the same boot stomping on them that they experience every day in their current role. I think creating a more inclusive and receptive environment, driven more by value then by cost, would go a long way toward fixing that issue.
Principal at Precision Construction Services
3 年Couldn't agree more.