Values Aren’t Culture
I had coffee recently with an executive in a family business. He isn’t part of the family. He’s talented, growth-oriented and extremely frustrated.
The owner is the CEO and a wonderful guy. He has a language problem, however, that causes his business (and its people) to suffer greatly. He confused two words — value and culture — and attempted to create an environment rich with Christian values but instead produced a mess.
I have no problem with what are commonly known as Christian values. (Yes, I understand that you don’t have to be a Christian to share those values, and I’m not making an argument for or against organized religion of any kind.) The problem is that he confused those values with an effective business culture. Accountability and performance are nonexistent.
Most of us prefer to work with friendly, kind, compassionate people. But the culture you build, whether by design or default, is a function of the behaviors you allow and reward. I haven’t met a CEO yet who consciously rewards profit-destroying behavior, but I’ve seen plenty who allow it.
When I start a coaching engagement with an executive, I typically interview members of the executive’s team. Board, boss (if not CEO), peers and subordinates. It’s helpful for me to understand the culture, because people must work within a set of norms to succeed. I often find that the desired culture isn’t the existing culture. The quickest way to understand the real culture is by asking two questions: “Who are the heroes around here?” and “How do you get in trouble around here?”
Do values inform culture? Unless everyone is playing games, absolutely. Do values equal culture? Heck no.
Should values be part of your hiring process? Perhaps. You have to be careful about discrimination and realize that a diverse team is stronger than uniformity. However, values alone won’t produce a healthy culture. What you reward and allow will create your culture. You can manage culture, but it takes thoughtful planning and healthy communication about performance to make it flourish.
coaches CEOs to higher levels of success. He is a former CEO and has led teams as large as 7,000 people. Todd is the author of, Never Kick a Cow Chip On A Hot Day: Real Lessons for Real CEOs and Those Who Want To Be (Morgan James Publishing).
Connect with Todd on LinkedIn, Twitter, call 303-527-0417 or email [email protected].
Tristram D. Coffin, CMC
11:01 am October 25, 2017Thank you for your insight and perception. Tris Coffin, CMC
Tristram D. Coffin, CMC
10:57 am October 25, 2017Excellent post, Todd. You have excellent insight and thank you for sharing it! Tris Coffin, CMC
Todd Ordal
11:01 am October 25, 2017Thanks, Tris!
Rudy Miick
10:49 am July 23, 2020Only half the story here Todd… I love your two questions. And, there’s a bigger dialogue here. Likely that’s your point to get potential clients to call. cool.
As usual your writing is so clear and concise, I love it!
Best to you and your client community!