What Stops Your Organization From Having a Winning Culture?


If the CEO is committed to creating possibilities from “nothing”, he or she cannot transform those possibilities into reality as a
lone wolf. If he surrounds himself with the smartest people, it does not mean
those people will be comfortable turning “nothing” into something
extraordinary. Even the smartest people need to be motivated to produce
astonishing results. And, without a culture to support extraordinary, high
performance becomes a pipe dream. Therefore, the CEO is also responsible for
creating a winning culture.
While there is no silver bullet, the solution is

much
simpler than it sounds. Every organization has a culture. Every culture is made
up of a network of conversations (social anthropologists say the culture of a
country, company or family is made up of a network of conversations). If you
listen to what stakeholders – employees, suppliers, community, management,
government, media, etc. – say, that will provide insight into what the culture
of the organization is. Regardless of what you wish the culture to be, what
people say about a company determines what the culture is. Sometimes the water
cooler conversations are most telling.

There are 3 main kinds of conversations that make up a
culture in an enterprise:
   
Under performing
– Like all cultures, under performs use key words. The conversations sound
something like: “Things are unfair.” “I don’t like.” “I don’t know how.” “I
don’t care.” “That’s impossible.” “You’ll never be able to do it.” “Something
is wrong with.” In general, the underperformers tend to be victims and feel
powerless to change anything.
   
Average performing
– The average performers talk about the following: “If it was meant to be it
will be.” “Let’s see how it goes.” “I’ll give it my best shot.” “If they do it
first, I will do it.” “Under promise and over deliver.” It seems as though this
group is committed to avoiding any type of pressure.
   
High performing
– In this paradigm, the people occur as though they are from another planet. To
start, they are making unreasonable promises to accomplish the task at hand.
They almost appear reckless. Yet, there is a high level of integrity and
accountability. Furthermore, they are making unreasonable requests of one
another, without complaints. The language would sound more like: “this is going
to require real effort to accomplish. And, I am up for it.” “Let’s take care of
this now.” “Nothing can stop us now.” “Let’s work on this together.”
As you can see, the language within an organization can
predetermine outcomes. If you watch the 3 groups closely, you will see their
actions are always correlated with the conversations they have. With that
understanding, it becomes clear why some corporations, divisions or teams have
difficulty executing easy initiatives.
Therefore, if you are a leader/manager, it is not necessary to control your people. It is, however, imperative to create a network of
conversations that will support the possibilities you invent.
While I may have over simplified this method for creating a
winning culture, it works. Except, the network of conversations has to start at
the top. In some cases, leadership does not have the core competencies to
transform culture. If that is the case, it is better to bring in outsiders with
the expertise. That way you avoid trial and error and get it right the first time.
Like creating possibility from nothing, the CEO gets to create the language of
high performance from nothing as well. 
What are the conversations in your organization? 
What do you think? I’m open to ideas. Or if you want to
write me about a specific topic, let me know.