Creating a High
Performing Culture During Tough Times
By Holly G.
Green
How do you keep employees engaged and productivity when
everything around them is diverting their attention these days? It
is difficult enough in good times, but when times are tough and you
really need employees aligned and focused, distractions can be
devastating to your organization.
High performance and success are not dependent on one simple
factor or as a result of one or two things. The entire context you
operate in greatly impacts your results. Think back to a time when
you did not have the tools to do your job, or when you did not feel
supported in getting done what you thought had to be done or even
when you had a boss who was more of a hindrance than a help. You
probably did not perform as well as you could have. Now contrast
that memory with one of feeling particularly successful. How many
things or people can you list that influenced the difference in your
performance?
High performance and success are not dependent on one simple
factor or as a result of one or two things. The entire context you
operate in greatly impacts your results. This context includes the
culture of the company - how things get done, how decisions get
made, what works and does not work as far as behaviors and what gets
rewarded and how - the complete environment in which employees
interact with each other and with other stakeholders.
Every company has a culture. The key to building a
high-performing culture is to make sure you consider ‘what’
and ‘how’ you will get to your destination points (the clear
definitions of where you are going in a specific timeframe).
-
What do the
‘norms’ in the organization need to be to enable everyone to
work effectively on the right initiatives?
-
How can you
clarify and reward the behaviors you desire and enact
appropriate consequences for undesirable behavior?
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What elements
of the culture need to change?
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How much change
is required, and how do you successfully implement the change?
The majority of employees want to be a part of a compelling
future, want to know what is most important at work and what
excellence looks like. When you create a culture of performance and
success, you inspire loyalty with employees and other stakeholders,
and you create advocates who promote the company positively to
others.
The specifics of a high performance culture are unique to
your company because they are based on what will work best for you
to get you to where you want to go within the parameters you have
defined. Every decision you make, almost every behavior you engage
in has advantages and disadvantages, so there is no one perfect way.
There is no ‘one size fits all’ when it comes to culture.
However, there is ample research to help us understand some
commonalities for what makes a high performing culture. The
following are common attributes across 200 high performing
companies.
Clearly define what
winning looks like:
Look across the
entire organization and define what it looks like from a variety of
perspectives – Sales, Marketing, Finance, R&D, etc. Tap into
your employees as a resource. Listen more
and keep employees vested in success by communicating. Ask
them if they have all the tools they need to be successful in their
jobs. Ask what would help them be even more productive?
Measure what
matters and what employees can relate to.
Focus on additional
metrics besides the financial ones.
-
How are
customer leads handled in order to achieve a desired profit
margin?
-
How are
customer orders, returns, inquiries handled?
-
How
are products determined & developed?
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How does work
get done (collaboration or individual efforts)?
-
What are the
customer and employee retention targets?
Be sure to communicate these other metrics on a monthly
basis. Employees who are not in the financial world will be able to
relate better to the results and will feel more included in the
process. Visibly reward the desired behaviors and results.
Develop an
ownership mentality and enable-educated risk-taking:
Educate your
employees by communicating acceptable behaviors and boundaries.
When individuals understand the boundaries in which they can
operate, as well as where the company wants to go, they feel
empowered with a freedom to decide and act, and most often make the
right choices. They begin to think and act like an “owner”.
Keep an eye on the
external environment:
High-performing organizations complement their drive to create a culture
aligned to their destination points with an ongoing vigilance of
looking at the external environment.
-
Build Deep
Relationships: Talk to your current suppliers and customers
about their business and their perceptions of what’s going on in
the marketplace.
-
Keep tabs on
your competitors and what is going on in your particular
industry.
-
Take a look at
other industries especially those doing well in tough times.
What can you learn or adapt from their approach?
Monitoring the ever-changing environment gives
you the edge in responding to new technologies and new competitors
as well as downturns or upturns in the marketplace.
Commit
to setting up employees for success and nurture their trust:
Think back to a time when you did not have the
tools to do your job, or when you did not feel supported in getting
done what you thought had to be done or even when you had a boss who
was more of a hindrance than a help. You probably did not perform
as well as you could have. Now contrast that memory with one of
feeling particularly successful. How many things or people can you
list that influenced the difference in your performance? There are a
lot of factors involved so make sure to think through what
excellence will take and set your employees and yourself up for
success. Tools might include training, coaching and feedback as
well as engaging employees in sharing ideas and candidly discussing
issues.
High-performance organizations do not take their
culture for granted. They plan it, monitor it and manage it so that
it remains aligned with they want to achieve. Through the process
of clearly defining your destination points, as well as creating
your breakthrough model and operations plans, you will have explored
both the ‘what’ and the ‘how’.
Excellence happens
in context™
Completing and effectively communicating your strategic framework
helps drive important components of the culture. When the
destination is clear, people develop a sense of direction and focus,
and this in turn contributes to a thriving culture and a successful
journey.
A
virtual cycle evolves when the strategic framework is cloudless, the
culture is intentionally defined, and individuals are held
accountable to achieving the behaviors and results outlined in
both. Higher results are possible and, in fact, a more probable
outcome.
Read other articles and learn more about
Holly G. Green.
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