Ducks In A Row: Cultural Support
by Miki SaxonWhen you build an edifice that you want to withstand the stresses of everyday living as well as crisis and catastrophe it’s important to include structural supports in the design.
The same is true for corporate culture and I call them “infrastructure building blocks” or IBBs.
There are three categories of IBBs—philosophy, attitude/style, and policy. There are many things that can be included, but here is a list of the most basic ones, some are fairly self-explanatory, others include commentary and links where possible.
The philosophy category includes
- Fairness: pay parity, merit promotions, egalitarian policies,
- Open communications: not a technology function, but a part of MAP.
- Business 101: basic information to reduce/eliminate naiveté, fuzzy or rose-colored views of the company’s business.
- No surprises
- Pragmatism
The attitude/style category includes:
- Manager vigilance: a constant awareness of what is going on and a willingness to deal with the reality of it immediately.
- Management-by-walking-around
The policy category is the concrete expression of the Philosophy and Attitude/Style IBBs. Just as the Preamble to the Constitution delineates the doctrines underlying it, each Policy IBB supports one or more of the IBBs described above.
Policy IBBs should be reasonably broad—macro rather than micro—since they support a flexible process, not ossified bureaucracy. They are your most potent infrastructure—the most tangible and, therefore, the hardest to corrupt or ignore, but also the most dangerous, because they can turn into bureaucracy in the blink of an eye if you’re not careful.
- Business Mission Statement (BMS)
- Cultural Mission Statement (CMS)
- Dual Mission Statement (DMS)
- Open-door
- Management by Box: actually a way to set your people free
- Dual Ladder Career Path: a series of hands-on positions that equate straight across the board with management positions.
- Hiring process: transparent and painless and easy to use for both candidates and hiring managers.
- Stock bonus plan (or similar)
- Sales incentives
- Reviews: Done correctly, they encourage personal growth, make negative behavior much harder to conceal and can even act as a screening tool during interviews.
- Surveys: useful for discovering problems, attitudes, product directions, company standing, etc. as perceived by employees and selected outsiders.
One caveat when implementing these and other approaches: lead by example; both managers and workers will do as you do, not as you say.
Your comments—priceless
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Image credit: flickr
January 27th, 2009 at 3:19 pm
thanks for sharing; I appreciate your site.
January 27th, 2009 at 3:27 pm
Tony, Thank you for visiting and for your kind words!
February 18th, 2009 at 6:33 am
[…] Saxon of Leadership Turn writes about infrastructure building blocks . He’s using his own terminology for what we refer to as Shared Values and Teachable […]