how to build company culture in 10 steps
Post on 21-Apr-2017
4.844 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
Nurture the people and practices that make your culture unique early on. It will guide
your company as it grows.
T H I N K A B O U T C U LT U R E E A R LY
Having an articulated vision for your culture will educate others about your mission and hold
you and your company accountable over time. Even better? Share it with the public.
W R I T E I T D O W N
T A W N I C R A N Z , C H I E F T A L E N T O F F I C E R A T N E T F L I X
“More and more people choose to work at a company not for the work but increasingly for the company culture and leadership.”
W R I T E I T D O W N
A culture doesn’t just build itself. Appoint a leader like Katie Burke, HubSpot’s VP of
Culture and Experience, and task them with building and measuring culture.
K A T I E B U R K E , V P O F C U LT U R E A N D E X P E R I E N C E A T H U B S P O T
D E S I G N A T E L E A D E R S
You can’t build a culture without tying it to meaningful metrics. Is your goal to improve employee retention by a certain percentage?
Attract more potential candidates?
Recording and measuring these data points will determine the success of your culture initiative.
M E A S U R E I T
“One of the main reasons why culture initiatives fail or tend not be viewed with seriousness is because they often lack a core business metric.”
W R I T E I T D O W NM E A S U R E I T
K A T I E B U R K E , V P O F C U LT U R E A N D E X P E R I E N C E A T H U B S P O T
As a leader, it’s your responsibility to demonstrate the values you find most important. If you offer your employees
flextime, use flextime yourself.
If you encourage using all your PTO, make sure you take your vacation days, too.
L E A D B Y E X A M P L E
"You have to make a business case for culture. Explain why it actually matters to the business and show how it ties to core business objectives."
C O N N E C T C U LT U R E T O O U T C O M E S
K A T I E B U R K E , V P O F C U LT U R E A N D E X P E R I E N C E A T H U B S P O T
Establishing a culture just for “fun” will never stick.
Make employee satisfaction the goal behind everything you do. But it’s not enough just to focus on the metrics, you need to add
personal touches as well.
E M P L O Y E E H A P P I N E S S
"The last employee happiness survey we did got 764 responses. I read every single one of them."
E M P L O Y E E H A P P I N E S S
K A T I E B U R K E , V P O F C U LT U R E A N D E X P E R I E N C E A T H U B S P O T
As Mattermark’s co-founder Andy Sparks points out, gimmicks like these are a “trite
replacement for authentic company culture.” Instead, focus on what’s meaningful to your
employees rather than random perks.
A N D Y S P A R K S , C O - F O U N D E R O F M A T T E R M A R K
F O C U S O N V A L U E , N O T A P P E A R A N C E
A wise person once said, “A ping pong table does not a culture make.”
Plenty of companies offer perks, so think about what will make your culture most attractive to current and potential
employees.
Beyond basic benefits, figure out what sets you apart--unique perks, a heartfelt company
manifesto, or an articulated company purpose go a long way towards helping you
establish your culture.
B E U N I Q U E
Let’s face it: You’re not going to have a thriving culture on day one. But aspiring to build the culture you imagine for your
organization will help get others on board with your goal.
A S P I R E T O B E G R E A T
Want more insight on culture, HR, and running a great business?
Sign up for the ZenFive newsletter
top related