Shaping your corporate culture

Corporate culture is an important facet in the success and longevity of a company. Similarly, if a corporate culture incites undesirable behaviours within its people, it may lead to the downfall of an organisation.

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Culture is not something that is built overnight. It develops over time until it becomes a standard and comfort zone of a set of people. When it is ingrained deeply in their minds and conduct, it becomes an accepted norm. On the other hand, the wrong values or culture that become a regular practice in your organisation will be difficult to undo and change to how you want it to be.

Hence, it is vital that an entrepreneur shapes the corporate culture of his company in the onset. However, not all business owners may have this in mind when everything is just starting to roll, especially for those who spend the initial stage doing all the roles by themselves and employed people only a few years later. Before they know it, the establishment has grown and people have become absorbed to a particular mindset, psyche, belief, language, behaviour and interaction that may dictate to how things are perceived and done in the organisational space.

If you want your company to adapt to a particular corporate culture, there are a few things you need to do to shape it according to how you want it to be. It may yield far longer than you have anticipated, so you have to exercise patience, persistence and consistency to achieve the desired results.

1.       Determine the values you want to inculcate

Envision the kind of workplace and interaction you want to attain within your business. From that, identify the values that you want your company, brand and employees to have. You may want your business to be attributed as a fast, efficient and reliable one. It could be that you prefer a family-type of environment among your staff and with your clients. You may want to hype creativity within your group that others will associate you for your out-of-the-box ideas. Whatever it is, your vision of your work environment is essential in carrying out the specific tasks to introduce and build a particular culture in your organisation.

2.       Include in the policies

The good thing about being an entrepreneur as compared to working as an employee in a huge company is that you have a hand on how the work culture would be within your business. To reinforce your aim and turn your ideas into action, you will often need to put it into policy. For example, if you want punctuality as a culture within your venture, then you need to have HR guidelines on work hours, turn around time and activity timelines.

3.       Communicate and listen to your team

For you to be successful in shaping corporate culture, there has to be a buy-in from your staff and stakeholders. Keep mentioning about the kind of work environment you’d like to have during meetings whenever you give a pep talk to your team until it has become ingrained in their thoughts. Include this as an agenda in your regular huddles. Create an atmosphere of suggestion where your team can openly share their thoughts on the culture. If everyone agrees to it, emphasise it through reminders on your bulletin boards or in your various communication channels. You can introduce a culture or policy through a teambuilding activity, where you can hire a consultant to help you convey to your team the culture you have in mind.

4.       Hire according to the culture fit and skills set

The challenge often is when a new person comes in and it disrupts the current culture of the team. When hiring a new staff member, look into the candidate’s culture fit as much as you review the credentials and skills set that they may bring to the table. Once you have successfully selected the right person for the position, make sure to orient the new hire about your corporate culture to avoid misunderstanding or possible conflict in the future. They must know what they’re getting into and be committed to abiding by the rules and culture of your business.

5.       Validate right behaviour with rewards

To fortify actions that contribute to the corporate culture you want to build, validate them through a rewards system. As in the example above, if punctuality is something you want to be part of your culture, then include an award for employees who come to work early or do things without delay. When employees develop a good feeling towards something they have done, they will tend to continue with it or improve on it.

6.       Lead by example

The best way to entrench in the consciousness of your team about the kind of culture you want to have in your workplace is to live by example. Whatever they hear from you or read in employee manuals will be substantiated by your action. You cannot stress punctuality if you come late to work. Otherwise, it will cause some cracks in your organisation because people will no longer take your word seriously.

If you don’t know where or how to start shaping your corporate culture, seek counsel from a mentor or someone who has done it before. Remember that culture involves people and people are dynamic. Thus, culture may evolve or it may come out differently as to how you imagined it to be.

Stay focused on your vision, mission and values, which are the foundation of your corporate culture, and set your directions based on that. Conduct self-reflection and evaluate your work environment regularly. A positive and encouraging culture can bring happiness to you and your entire team, which can lead to a motivated staff that works with you in achieving your goals.