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Are You Watering Your Culture Tree?

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I’m a fan of Wally Bock’s Three Star Leadership blog. A couple of recent posts focused on company culture and how easily it can be destroyed to the detriment of company success.

In Home Depot at 30: A Lesson in Corporate Culture, Wally tells the story of how the founders created a company based on trust of its employees, especially knowledgeable salespeople easily found and approached on the warehouse floor and store managers with a great deal of local autonomy. Then one founder retired and Bob Nardelli came in as the new CEO, cutting those knowledgeable salespeople to the bone and replacing 98 percent of executives. As Wally says, rebuilding the culture under a new CEO will be difficult as “the old, experienced people took the old culture with them. It’s not likely that many will come back.”

In Lessons from the Rise and Fall of Delta Airlines, Wally describes an airline so beloved by its employees that they banded together to buy the company it’s first Boeing 767. And business travelers extolled Delta’s great service far and wide as it became the premier airline for business travelers. Then Ron Allen came in as the new CEO, instituting cost-cutting measures and leading acquisitions that decimated the company and its culture.

In each post, Wally offers a few nuggets of wisdom – his “Boss’s Bottom Lines.” These two in particular rang true with me:

“Culture is a slow growing tree. In the beginning it needs protection. But after a couple of decades the culture will be stronger than you are. You need to work with it, not against it.”

“Culture is a powerful but fragile thing. If you burn down the culture tree, it takes a long time to grow another one.”

What is your company culture today? Is it the same culture as always – decades in the making and strong – or a sapling that is just beginning to grow, perhaps after the old culture was burned down? Many companies have been able to manipulate their social architecture to change their culture into one of appreciation. Is your culture one that needs to be destroyed and replaced with one of appreciation?

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Editor's Welcome

 

Hello! I'm a great believer in the power of stories, whether they be folk tales, novels, films or TV dramas.
 
They have a wonderful ability to get complex moral or social issues over to us in a palatable, easy-to-understand way and can provide many lessons if only we care to look just a little bit below the surface.
 
But they can also act as a fun starting point for discussion and debate on rather more serious topics that are all too often brushed under the carpet and ignored.
 

Hence our decision to start up a Review slot on the site to look at those everyday stories that are all around us from an HR perspective.

Although we've been publishing book reviews (take a look at our Book Club list of suggested possible non-fiction works for evaluation here) for some time, you may also have noticed that we've been running a weekly home page blog on The Apprentice courtesy of The Chemistry Group for a while now.

And Pauline Wood, managing director at specialist retail headhunter, court & spark consulting, was likewise kind enough to write our first film review on the Headhunters movie.

But the big question is, why don't you give it a go yourself? There's a world of choice out there and I, like the rest of the community, would love to hear your thoughts and insights.

So next time you watch a movie, see a TV drama or read a novel that you think has an HR message worth sharing, send your review to me at cath.everett@siftmedia.co.uk or post it directly to our blogs section at www.hrzone.co.uk/blogs.

So get critiquing and look forward to hearing from you very soon.....

Cath Everett
HRZone Editor 
 
 
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