Article
7 min
ArticleEmployee experience
4 min read ·August 29, 2024
Written by
Founder & CEO, Culture Amp
At Culture Amp, we work with over 6,000 companies, helping them measure and improve their company culture. These organizations include some of the world's most innovative businesses.
People often ask me how these leading companies think about measuring and improving their culture. I tell them there are five common differences between the best organizations and other organizations. These differences are all related to their approach to measuring culture.
In our experience, we've found that the leading organizations:
Ask any company whether or not they have a culture of "excellence" and "teamwork," and they'll claim they do. But you'll be none the wiser if they're building the next generation of VR applications in a Manhattan high-rise or breeding worms for compost in a bush nursery. Your organization's values and culture can't be described in generic terms.
High-performing companies can meaningfully describe the ideal culture and experience they want their people to have. Then they measure whether the reality reflects that culture and the employee experience.
Success is measured by whether everyone in the organization can answer questions like:
In his book, Delivering Happiness: a Path to Profits, Passion and Purpose, Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh describes how he cultivated a culture of happiness. "We had built a business that combined profits, passion, and purpose," he writes. "And we knew it wasn't just about building a business. It was about building a lifestyle that was about delivering happiness to everyone, including ourselves."
The challenge for most organizations we work with is not that they have a "good" or "bad" culture. Instead, it's that their culture is inconsistent across the organization. The challenge is to achieve a consistent and coherent culture that every part of the business can recognize and reap the benefits from. It's why we work to ensure people at Culture Amp feel they belong, whether they work in an office or remotely.
The best organizations go on to ask: "Is our unique culture reflected everywhere, from the mailroom to the C-suite?"
IDEO believes creativity is a group activity, not an individual activity. So when IDEO measures culture, they measure whether everyone in the office, from accounting to ideation, feels they are in an environment where they can contribute and that their contribution is valued. They're active in ensuring that the culture of group creativity permeates the entire organization.
Do individual behaviors support the culture you're trying to cultivate? High-performing companies not only look at the standard measures everyone deploys, but they also have a deeper understanding of how these measures are connected to the everyday behaviors of their people.
It's a two-way loop: individuals see what is important to the organization by looking at what factors are being measured by the organization. Knowing what the organization values and measures reinforce those behaviors.
For example, Walmart was born as a culture-first organization focusing on frugality. Employees were expected to take ownership of expense control for anything within their authority as though it were their own money. Behaviors Walmart expected of its people included reusing and recycling paper clips, envelopes, rubber bands, and writing on both sides of a piece of paper (there's a good account of Walmart's "cultural indoctrination" process here).
For a long time, measuring culture was something that was done once or twice a year via an engagement survey. These surveys were a big, slow project that could take months to return results.
Instead of this project-based approach, high-performing organizations have the willingness to say: "This shouldn't just be a project. This should be an ongoing activity that we build into the fabric of how we run the company." They embed how they measure and improve culture into the existing cadence of their organization.
This means that a business, on a quarterly cycle, is now discussing people and culture data four times a year, simultaneously with their budget and sales planning sessions.
The best companies understand what makes their organization unique and ensure these differences permeate. They measure the day-to-day behaviors of their employees and rigorously determine how they drive the organization's success.
Culture-first behaviors require substantial work to embed into an organization. They are an ongoing process that requires effort and commitment. But as these organizations continue to demonstrate, Culture First delivers substantial results.
Culture first isn't always easy, but it is always worthwhile.