Culture eats strategy for breakfast.
- Peter Drucker -
If Peter Drucker, one of the greatest business thinkers of our time, would say that culture is more powerful than strategy, then business owners and consultants ought to sit up and take notice. Members of The NCP have certainly done that; their personal experience of leading teams and managing businesses has proven time and time again that the execution and implementation of strategy is the true key to success.If they can define and articulate a strategy and business plan, why is it that many businesses struggle to define and articulate their culture? It’s really not that hard when you consider that culture is the end result of the patterns of behaviour that are encouraged (or not discouraged) over a period of time. What that means is simple: understanding the way people behave within a business is the key to unlocking the drivers of culture. Unfortunately, we find it hard to accurately and effectively observe and assess our own behaviour. That is why good coaches and mentors are highly sought after. They can be a trusted and independent set of eyes; they can give us feedback on our behaviours and their consequences.Any business owner or leader wanting to transform their team’s business performance in 2016 and beyond needs to have both a clear strategy and a culture that is consistent with achieving those objectives.
Here are your three key action points:
On first read, these three elements may seem to be listed in the wrong order. However, if the culture and hallmark behaviours are not easy to define, then perhaps the strategy is not as clear as you thought it was! One of the benefits brought by the fresh independent set of eyes of a trusted advisor or consultant to your business, is the awareness of that gap.Once you have clarity on what success looks like, then it is time to revisit the strategy; it is time to ensure that the strategy is clear and linked. And then it is time to engage the people who will be able to behave in ways that support and enhance the delivery of the strategy.It seems on reflection that Drucker was saying that both strategy and culture need to exist in clarity for a business to be successful; and that if a choice needed to be made about where a greater emphasis should be placed, then culture is the tipping point.
Another oft used phrase is that the behaviour you walk past (or ignore) becomes the standard you need to live by. In other words, what you accept is what you will get more and more. If you indicate a tolerance for a laissez-faire or relaxed approach to poor customer-service behaviours, then the culture will not place a high emphasis on customer service. As a consultant I can recall a client asking for support to improve the performance of a front-line customer service person who was just handing forms across the counter for customers to fill in. Good consultants will ask questions to clarify the desired outcome. In this instance the client needed some coaching before he was able to clearly state what behaviour he would prefer. Once he defined the desired behaviour, it became easy to inform and train the staff member who previously had lacked guidance and clarity on what good customer service involved.The trouble with assuming that staff know what you mean, is that this is based on staff having the same experiences, beliefs and values as you do. That is unlikely given that every human is unique. This can be especially unfair to expect a recent graduate to bring the same number and amount of business experience that we possess after a couple of decades of business experience.Yes culture eats strategy for breakfast. Yet together they create a balanced diet that will lead to greater business success and improved performance.
Pam Macdonald
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