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Use Your Company Values to Drive Business Success

Back to blog homepage for: Strategic Employee Recognition: by Derek Irvine

I’m always on the look-out for CEOs who get the benefit of a Values-driven culture. Since the mid 1980s, company executives have invested billions in time, effort and money to develop mission statements and list the values they need employees at every level to demonstrate to achieve that mission.

However, very few actually do anything with those statements other than create a plaque to hang on the wall or include in their annual report. Then there is Ron Cain, chairman and CEO of TMSi Logistics. As he writes in this article, a values-driven company can better withstand tough economic times, reap bottom-line benefits and track the tangible results.

“The difference between companies that can weather an economic storm and those that cannot is a business model driven by values, rather than dollar signs. Values-driven organizations have been able to withstand the test of time, achieving success and maintaining resilience even when economic circumstances have made competitors throw in the towel.

“There are many reasons to implement a values-driven culture. Typically, values-driven organisations operate at a higher level of production, enjoy greater employee satisfaction, and have better employee retention. An employee that feels that his or her individual skills, values, and opinions are recognised and appreciated tends to be more productive and take greater joy in his or her work.

“Translating intangible values into tangible results for both the business and the community are critical indicators of a successful values-based culture. Although the developmental phase is important for determining the existing and desired values of an organisation, implementation proves to be the only way that long-term benefits will be realised. Efficient results tracking methods and a plan for achieving the desired key performance indicators (KPIs) gives leaders and team members the ability to effectively measure improvements.”

We, of course, advocate using a strategic recognition programme as a means of both positively reinforcing your company values relative to specific tasks and measuring the results. When done properly, you can use recognition as a scorecard to reveal areas lagging in their understanding and demonstration of company values, then target training and intervention directly to those areas.

Well done, TMSi Logistics and Ron Cain. What about your organisation? Are you a truly values-driven organisation? How is that demonstrated?

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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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