WE HAVE ASKED THOUSANDS OF executives from around the world the same simple question: “Who is responsible for culture in your organization?” Hands go up and, almost to a person, the response is, “Everyone.”
We then ask a follow-up: “If everyone is responsible for culture in your organization, what do you do to manage it?”
Hands go down. Gazes divert. The most common answers are uninspiring: “Keep an open-door policy.” “Provide good performance reviews.” “Check in with employees.” While each of these actions may be helpful, not one is specific to culture. They are simply generic management habits — that is, none are practices specific to translating a company’s unique set of values into a lived experience for the people who work there.
Organizational culture is the set of shared values that guide how work gets done. There used to be a debate about whether culture predicts high performance or whether high performance affords leaders a strong and cohesive culture. Evidence now overwhelmingly supports the former.¹ But for a business to harness the power of culture, it needs midlevel leaders across the organization — the managers and team leaders — to go beyond believing that they are responsible for culture to actively building it.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Spring 2024-Ausgabe von MIT Sloan Management Review.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Spring 2024-Ausgabe von MIT Sloan Management Review.
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