By Bill Kaiser, Vice President
Leaders certainly have plenty on their plates these days. So many competing priorities make focusing on one or two, very difficult. I’m sure some of your targets and expectations have been revised and some projects or initiatives have been back-burnered. That being said, we still need to prioritize and deliver results.
Far be it from me to tell you what those priorities should be and in what order. That would be misguided, presumptuous, and tad bit arrogant. I don’t know your challenges and certainly can’t decide for you what is most important to focus on to deliver the results you desire. However, I would like to alert you to a bias and dispel a myth that may be preventing you from prioritizing your culture as a critical driving force towards your company’s success.
Biases Against Prioritizing Culture
In Patrick Lencioni’s book, The Advantage, the author makes a great case for why focusing on your organization’s health (culture) supersedes anything else in business. He identifies three biases that interfere with leaders embracing culture as a key strategic initiative.
Lencioni admits, in some ways, it’s hard to blame them for having these biases. After years of “off-site meetings filled with ropes courses and trust-falling exercises, even the most open-minded executives have come to be suspicious of anything that looks or sounds touch-feely.”
A Closer Look
Let’s take a closer look at The Sophistication Bias. Again, consider the times we’re in and the many competing priorities we are challenged with. Entertaining an initiative or change, with the perception that it may cause operational chaos or turmoil, quickly lands it in the “not this quarter” pile. But what if the change was simple, easy to implement, and most importantly, led to sustained success?
Four Simple Steps
Achieving a high-performing culture doesn’t require a rocket science degree from MIT or a Wharton MBA. It’s a matter of 4 simple steps.
We’re so proud that over 320 companies have partnered with us to create higher-performing cultures in their organizations. Just about every industry is represented in the mix of clients. But several beliefs are common. One, they recognize the dramatic impact their culture has on the performance of their people. Two, they understand that their culture is a distinct competitive advantage in the worlds they compete in. And third, they realize that their culture is too important to leave to chance. Leaders have to define, drive, and leverage the culture they want in their organizations.
So maybe it’s time to shuffle the deck and reprioritize to make sure that your culture is at the top, or near the top, of your priority list. Your results will make you glad you did.
If you want to learn more details of the 4 steps and how to deploy CultureWise, the simple most complete operating system for creating and driving a high-performing culture, give us a call. To hear what our clients say about CultureWise, click here.