Description
For a relative handful of world-class performers, however, the picture looks different.
E X E C U T I V E F O R U M
W
hat do people at your company do when no one is watching? Are they
motivated to act like owners? Do they know how to innovate and advance
the business without being explicitly told what to do?
Every leader wants to be able to answer these questions with an unquali?ed yes, but
in reality many cannot. The problem is that too many companies lack con?dence in
the ties that bind their enterprise together. In a recent Bain & Company survey, more
than one-third of executives worldwide did not agree with the statement,“Our stated
values effectively drive frontline actions, even when no one is looking.” Many others
share these concerns.
For a relative handful of world-class performers, however, the picture looks different.
These companies inspire loyalty from employees, who want to stay and be part of a
team. They generate commitment to go the extra mile, to do the right thing rather
than just the easy thing. At these companies, people not only know what they should
do, they know why they should do it.
How do these standouts ensure that everyone acts in the best interests of the company,
even when no one is watching? The answer: culture. At a time when it is common-
place for enterprises to stretch around the globe, culture provides the glue that creates
trust and a sense of shared purpose. Bain surveys indicate that business leaders fully rec-
ognize the role that culture plays in focusing and engaging a company’s employees.Yet
our research also indicates that fewer than 15 percent of companies succeed in building
high-performance cultures.
It’s tempting to imagine that all high-performance cultures look alike. They don’t, and
that is part of their power. To be effective, a high-performance culture must be tailored
For bulk reprints of this article, please call 201-748-8771.
55 Winter 2006
B Y P A U L M E E H A N ,
O R I T G A D I E S H , A N D
S H I N T A R O H O R I
Culture
as Competitive
Advantage
Leader to Leader
to the business that the company is in. Contrast Intel’s
data-driven culture of manufacturing excellence and zeal
for innovation with the mutual fund ?rm Vanguard’s
focus on keeping overhead and marketing costs low and
passing the savings on to investors. A high-performance
culture is as unique as a ?ngerprint—and the one thing
about a business that rivals can’t copy. Among executives
at companies identi?ed as high performers for a recent
Bain survey, 54 percent said “culture” was one of their
strongest attributes, second only to “vision
and priorities.” This pairing is no coinci-
dence. A strong culture is the emotional path
by which a company’s vision and priorities
spread from top to bottom. Herb Kelleher,
founder and chairman of Southwest Air-
lines, puts it this way: “Everything [in our
strategy] our competitors could copy tomor-
row. But they can’t copy the culture—and
they know it.”
A company’s culture is essentially the orga-
nization’s soul, shaped through success and
setback. A ?rm’s heritage certainly plays an
important part. But culture can also be
molded and actively managed—in fact, one
crucial job of a company’s leaders is to do
just that. The high performers continuously
reinforce a shared set of practices and be-
liefs. They also use the events that require a
company to evolve—an acquisition, a struc-
tural or regulatory shift, a change in strate-
gic direction—to shape the culture and harness it to
what the company wants to achieve.
This is no easy task. Most company cultures naturally
resist change. But the elements that make up a high-
performance culture can be directed and managed using
some practical guidelines. It takes time, determination,
and a willingness to make culture a top priority. The re-
quirements are high, but so is the payoff. As Lou Gerstner,
former chairman and CEO of IBM, said, “Culture isn’t
just one aspect of the game, it is the game.”
De?ning a High-Performance Culture
A
company’s culture is a mixture of values, beliefs,
and behaviors. A sliver of it appears in visible arti-
facts, such as a mission statement. Clues also exist in the
ways people act every day on the job. How much time
does the CEO spend with customers? How
many bottom-up ideas get implemented
and celebrated? Will the CEO waiting in
line with other customers get served ?rst? If
he sees litter on the plant ?oor, will the
CEO pick it up himself ?
One characteristic that distinguishes high-
performance cultures is that people inside
them can recognize and often articulate the
company’s authentic core—the unique soul
and personality that de?ne a company’s
character. An authentic core that’s widely
recognized creates an emotional bond be-
tween a ?rm and its employees. One South-
west Airlines employee captured it well
when he said,“We all work hard, but to do
anything else would be like letting your
family down.”
An authentic core provides a necessary in-
gredient for great teamwork and esprit, but
it isn’t enough to foster high performance.You can have
an authentic core and still lose your way. To turn com-
mitment into strong performance, a company’s core
needs to be complemented by a set of values and be-
haviors that motivate people in the organization to do
the right things.
Through our work helping companies transform their
businesses, we began to notice two important patterns.
56
Paul Meehan is a
partner with Bain &
Company in Sydney,
and a co-leader of
Bain’s Organization
practice in Asia. He
has worked with com-
panies in the retail,
consumer products,
health care, and ?nan-
cial services industries.
His recent work has
focused on corporate
transformations.
I
Winter 2006
First, cultural change is often a powerful and essential cat-
alyst for companies seeking to reach their full potential.
Second, while each company has developed its own shared
values and way of doing things, tailored to its business sit-
uation, the high-performance cultures we encountered
tended to have elements in common.
Six Attributes of
High-Performance Culture
W
e examined the link between ?-
nancial outperformance and high-
performance culture at 200 companies, and
combined this analysis with case studies of
three dozen high performers. The research
con?rmed our experience, and sharpened
the common elements to six key attributes.
1. Know what winning looks like.
Many companies engender a desire to win,
but people in high-performance organiza-
tions know what winning looks like, and
they know how to get there.They won’t ac-
cept doing the same thing this year as they
did last year. They set high standards and the
performance bar keeps going up. The stan-
dard Jack Welch set years ago for General
Electric—No. 1, No. 2 or ?x, close, or sell—
distilled the cultural aspiration for a genera-
tion at GE. At Samsung, being a strong No. 2
will not satisfy employees. They aspire to be
No. 1 in every aspect.
But winning in a high-performance culture
is rarely focused solely, or even primarily, on ?nancial
success. Short-term ?nancial victories please the mar-
kets, but a culture that measures success in those terms
alone rarely builds long-term value or creates passion for
results. At high performers, winning is about exceeding
goals on quality, cost, or customer satisfaction—objec-
tives that lead to pro?t but are more real for people on
the front line.That’s important, because the desire to win
is more powerful when people throughout the company
are passionate about their role in making it happen.
Consider Toyota, known for its principle of
continuous improvement and the quality
of its products. This principle is so deeply
woven into Toyota’s culture that the impetus
for continuous improvement often comes
from workers on the assembly lines. The
company aspires to high goals: 15 percent
global market share, 30 percent cost reduc-
tion over three years, and shortening the cycle
for developing new products from 20 months
to 12. By creating a clear picture of how Toy-
ota wins and placing it at the center of its cul-
ture, the company makes sure that evolution
and innovation are pursued and celebrated
not just in the design lab but also on the fac-
tory ?oor and in the sales department.
2. Look out the window.
Companies with high-performance cultures
don’t get overly distracted by looking in-
ward. They focus instead on what’s outside
the company: customers, competitors, and
communities. Enterprise Rent-A-Car, for
example, has grown to be one of the largest
car-rental agencies in the United States in
large part by instilling the conviction among
employees that attention to customers’ needs
leads to success. That focus is reinforced
through the company’s use of clear and simple customer-
advocacy metrics. One of these is the “Enterprise Service
Quality index” (ESQi), which measures customer satis-
faction with each rental on a ?ve-point scale. Rental
branches’ ESQi scores are a key variable in determining
57
Orit Gadiesh is chair-
man of Bain & Com-
pany. She has worked
with CEOs and senior
executives to develop
and implement global
strategy, structure and
manage corporate port-
folios, execute turn-
arounds, and improve
organizational effec-
tiveness. A frequent
contributor to business
publications, her work
has appeared in Har-
vard Business Review,
the Wall Street Jour-
nal, and the Financial
Times, among other
publications. She di-
vides her time on client
work primarily be-
tween North America
and Europe.
I
Leader to Leader
promotions for branch managers and employees. So they’re
watched closely, and branch employees learn to take per-
sonal responsibility for turning customers into enthusias-
tic promoters of Enterprise.
When it comes to ordinary day-to-day operations, the
company says, ESQi is “one of many ways
in which we remind ourselves to put cus-
tomer needs ?rst.”As company founder Jack
Taylor said, “Put customers and employees
?rst, and pro?t will take care of itself.” En-
terprise leaders have taught that philosophy
to managers and employees throughout the
organization.
Performance cultures have external radar
that extends beyond their customers. The
competition, for example, is never taken for
granted or ignored. High performers are
keenly aware of their competitors’ capabili-
ties so that they can shape their own to best
advantage. High-performance cultures are
also attentive to another external constitu-
ency: the communities in which they oper-
ate. One paragraph of what Johnson &
Johnson calls “Our Credo” begins,“We are
responsible to the communities in which we
live and work and to the world community
as well”—a principle that guided the com-
pany during its legendary response to the
Tylenol crisis of the 1980s and again through
the Procrit counterfeiting crisis in 2003. A
strong community focus provides more than
just good PR. It builds goodwill both inside
and outside the company.
3. Think and act like owners.
A hallmark of a high-performance culture is that em-
ployees take personal responsibility for business perfor-
mance. Often, they are owners. Like many high per-
formers, for instance, U.K. retailer ASDA has an exten-
sive employee share-ownership plan, the largest of its
kind in Britain. Roughly 92,000 “associates,”as the com-
pany calls its employees, own options in parent Wal-Mart.
Having a stake helps, of course, but more im-
portant than ownership is the extent to which
employees think and act like owners. Con-
sider the decisions made by Enterprise Rent-
A-Car branch managers in the aftermath of
the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Stranded travelers
desperately sought cars to return to their
homes. Enterprise ordinarily doesn’t rent
one-way; its neighborhood branch system
lacks the logistics and operations to track and
retrieve one-way rentals. But many branch
managers quickly decided to give customers
the cars anyway and worry about how to get
them back later. It wasn’t until three days af-
terward that Enterprise headquarters issued a
policy allowing one-way rentals and waiving
drop-off fees. “There will be losses,” said
CEO Andrew C.Taylor, who stayed in touch
with employees via e-mail during the crisis.
“But right now we’re just concerned about
taking care of our customers.”His managers,
as it happened, were way ahead of him.
4. Commit to individuals.
Sadly, the cliché about traditional corporate
or bureaucratic cultures is frequently true:
individuals can be treated like cogs in the
machine. To the extent their contribution is valued, it
is based on who they are today, not who they might be-
come. High-performing cultures turn this notion on its
head. They make a point of investing in individuals at all
levels of the organization and helping them develop
their full potential.
58
Shintaro Hori is man-
aging partner of Bain
& Company’s Tokyo
of?ce, and a co-leader
of the ?rm’s Orga-
nization practice in
Asia. He has worked
with company leaders
on corporate strategy,
business turnarounds,
improving company
organization, and
product-market strate-
gies in industries rang-
ing from automobiles
and electronics to retail
and consumer products.
He has written several
books on growth strat-
egy and company
transformation.
I
Winter 2006
This commitment takes different forms at different com-
panies: The strong leadership development programs at
GE, Nestlé, and Enterprise, for instance, measure lead-
ers in part by their abilities as coaches and mentors, and
promote almost exclusively from within. It requires an
environment where feedback is open and honest about
what people do well and where they can improve.
Performance cultures reinforce their investments in indi-
viduals by providing training programs for all employees,
not simply managers. ASDA offers its associates a variety
of “best in class” training programs through the ASDA
Academy and has introduced a range of innovative work-
place practices, such as child care leave, ?extime, job shar-
ing, and even grandparents’ leave for the birth of a
grandchild. Nucor, the American steel company, provides
its employees not only pro?t sharing, an employee stock-
purchase plan, bonuses, and service awards but also siz-
able annual stipends toward the college or vocational
education of their children and spouses.
The message in all these cases is unmistakable: a com-
pany will not achieve its full potential unless its people
do, as well.
5. Spread courage to change.
Today’s successful companies must be able to change and
adapt to new environments quickly and continuously. But
how many company leaders can truthfully say that their
employees (or themselves) comfortably take risks, exper-
iment, and challenge the status quo? How many can say
they are happy for employees to make mistakes, as long
as they learn from them? General Electric has managed to
instill in its employees a recognition that taking measured
risks is necessary in order to achieve its clearly de?ned
business goals. CEO Jeffrey Immelt wants the company to
spawn more creativity and innovation, and is asking busi-
ness leaders to come up with three or more large-scale
“Imagination Breakthrough” proposals every year.
Taking risks is not a goal in itself, of course. But compa-
nies with high-performance cultures ?nd ways to make
risk acceptable, within clearly de?ned boundaries and
with the right controls in place. Steelmaker Nucor, as
the company declares on its Web site,“aggressively pur-
sues the latest advancements in steel making around the
world,”and expects mill managers and employees to take
the lead in implementing the technologies it acquires.
Companies that succeed in taking risks know how to deal
with the risks. While many major global corporations
have focused more on their core businesses, leading Ko-
rean Chaebols, such as Samsung, are succeeding through
diversi?cation. By working in a high-achievement envi-
ronment, by having a keen sense of when to take a risk
and of what the risk entails—and what countermeasures
should be taken if a risk back?res—Korean conglom-
erates have written some of the world’s biggest success
stories.
6. Build trust through debate.
Even the most talented and energetic group can fail if its
members are not aligned. Cohesive teams trust one an-
other. They aren’t afraid to engage in con?ict around
ideas, but once they commit to a decision, they walk out
of a meeting with a common plan of action.
This principle gets tested thoroughly when two cultures
merge following an acquisition.The process of merger in-
tegration can reveal a company’s culture in high relief, and
often provides a new understanding of that culture, even
among people who have lived it for years.When Johnson
Wax Professional took over Unilever’s DiverseyLever unit
in May 2002, for instance, some cultural differences be-
tween the companies were stark. Johnson Wax Professional
had relied on an entrepreneurial, intuitive, and unstruc-
tured culture to become a world leader in ?oor care and
housekeeping solutions. DiverseyLever, meanwhile, was
highly structured, both in its communications and in its
59
Leader to Leader
planning. The cultural gulf became apparent at the very
?rst meeting of the integration team. Diversey executives
dominated the early discussions with their formal briefs
and confrontational style, catching the Johnson execu-
tives off guard.
As a ?rst step toward a “third way” that would accom-
modate both cultures, Gregory E. Lawton, the new CEO
of the combined ?rm, JohnsonDiversey, called a time-
out to help members recognize their different approaches
and talk about them without judgment. “These differ-
ences weren’t good or bad, just different,” he says. The
leadership group began to work
through decisions in a way that
both teams could accept, com-
bining the entrepreneurial, del-
egating style of Johnson with the
structure, discipline, and organi-
zation of DiverseyLever. During
the critical period between the
deal’s announcement and its
close, Lawton put the new team
on one compensat i on and
incentive system that linked di-
rectly back to the success of the
new company. A year later, Di-
verseyLever had retained most of
its key executives and major ac-
counts. The expected deal synergies had materialized.
Through careful attention, the culture had knitted to-
gether into a single enterprise where differences were
encouraged.
E
ach of these six attributes contributes to a stronger
and more coherent culture. But the real measure of
a high-performance culture is an organization’s ability to
nurture and combine all six. In our experience, the an-
chors are knowing what winning looks like and com-
mitting to individuals. Both of these create the con?dence
and the conditions within an organization to spread the
courage to change. Risk-taking becomes easier, and more
important, people understand what types of risk to em-
brace when the company has clearly de?ned the picture
of winning, along with the strategy to get there, and the
value placed on individual effort and achievement. With
these attributes in place, an organization tends to build
trust, empower debate, and create ranks that can think
and act like owners, which is often the ?rst milestone in
building a high-performance culture.
Leading Cultural Change
C
hanging a culture is often
dif?cult because it entails
in?uencing people’s deepest be-
liefs and most habitual behaviors.
At some companies, the culture
may be so thorough in its focus
on cost ef?ciency, for instance, or
on a narrowly de?ned “Com-
pany Way,” that the culture itself
becomes a bottleneck to change.
That’s why crisis—which focuses
attention and breaks down resis-
tance—can be a potent catalyst
for cultural change. New com-
petitors, new technologies, or
new regulations often require
organizational change on a large scale. And that kind
of change is often necessary to get to the next level of
performance.
Compelled by such necessities, companies have found
that they can change their cultures, provided that their
leaders are truly committed to change and that they un-
derstand the steps involved. But companies shouldn’t
have to wait for a crisis to precipitate cultural change.
High-performance cultures rarely stand still. Indeed, cul-
tures with strong customer focus or those that reinforce
innovation often excel at inducing cultural change. In
60
I
Leading by example
is the only way to
change an organization’s
culture.
I
Winter 2006 61
our survey, 76 percent of executives said they believe it
is possible to change a company’s culture, while 65 per-
cent said they needed to change the culture of their own
companies.
Clear, effective leadership, not surprisingly, is the criti-
cal ?rst element. Cultural change starts at the top, or it
doesn’t start at all. The process begins with aligning the
top team around a common vision of the future, and
then rolling out the vision and values to the entire or-
ganization. The importance of strong leadership was
underscored by our survey results: leadership behaviors
and decisions were cited as the single most important
in?uence on their organization’s culture by 80 percent
of executives, ahead of the type of people recruited (70
percent), evaluation and promotion systems (56 per-
cent), compensation systems (44 percent), and the type
of people encouraged to leave (41 percent).
Cultural change cannot happen unless leaders model the
behaviors and values that de?ne the evolving culture, and
then spread them constantly through personal contact
and communication. Our experience, validated by the
survey results, is clear on this point: leading by example is
the only way to change an organization’s culture.
Each company and every leader will follow a different
course. But leaders who succeed at cultural change tend
to follow some common principles:
• Stay close to the front line. Cultural change is often
catalyzed when senior managers identify linchpin
employees, people who will buy in to the culture
and whose word will carry weight. These employees
become natural mentors, passing along the values
and behaviors that characterize the change in
culture. At the same time, leaders need to identify
mission-critical roles in the organization and deploy
its top talent—people who exemplify the desired
culture—in these roles.
• Use symbols to send and reinforce the message. Symbolic
changes shake people up. They signal that the com-
pany really is serious. Leaders may get rid of the cor-
porate jet or paint over reserved executive parking
spaces. Maybe they set in motion a redesign of the
of?ce layout, or do away with old job titles. Leaders
of cultural change can publicize milestones, celebrate
successes, and reward heroes. Word will get around.
• Align the organization with the new culture. This step
may entail revamping corporate structure and deci-
sion roles—removing or adding managerial layers,
for example, or changing the balance of authority
between corporate headquarters and regional opera-
tions. Metrics and incentives must be aligned as well.
It does little good to promote teamwork, for exam-
ple, if performance reviews, pay increases, and pro-
motions are based on individual performance alone.
• Zap the “cultural terrorists.” In any organization there
will be people who don’t go along with the new
culture, including a few who actively resist it. An
important job of any leader is to act quickly to
move out the naysayers and encourage those on the
fence to join in. The most effective leaders actively
retain linchpin employees, the people critical to
spreading the new culture.
• Track the changes. Leaders need a simple, practical
way to measure their performance on each of the
six dimensions—a scorecard that allows them to
see where they started and what progress they have
made toward their objectives.
No culture is forever. Culture change requires commit-
ment on the part of a company’s senior leadership, and
the job is never really complete. But the payoff is sub-
stantial. Little else in this age of globalization provides a
company with an edge that competitors can’t simply
copy or buy. Culture—the force that determines how
people behave when no one is looking—is one such
competitive advantage. When people want to do things
right, and want to do the right thing, companies have an
invaluable asset. I
doc_229271304.pdf
For a relative handful of world-class performers, however, the picture looks different.
E X E C U T I V E F O R U M
W
hat do people at your company do when no one is watching? Are they
motivated to act like owners? Do they know how to innovate and advance
the business without being explicitly told what to do?
Every leader wants to be able to answer these questions with an unquali?ed yes, but
in reality many cannot. The problem is that too many companies lack con?dence in
the ties that bind their enterprise together. In a recent Bain & Company survey, more
than one-third of executives worldwide did not agree with the statement,“Our stated
values effectively drive frontline actions, even when no one is looking.” Many others
share these concerns.
For a relative handful of world-class performers, however, the picture looks different.
These companies inspire loyalty from employees, who want to stay and be part of a
team. They generate commitment to go the extra mile, to do the right thing rather
than just the easy thing. At these companies, people not only know what they should
do, they know why they should do it.
How do these standouts ensure that everyone acts in the best interests of the company,
even when no one is watching? The answer: culture. At a time when it is common-
place for enterprises to stretch around the globe, culture provides the glue that creates
trust and a sense of shared purpose. Bain surveys indicate that business leaders fully rec-
ognize the role that culture plays in focusing and engaging a company’s employees.Yet
our research also indicates that fewer than 15 percent of companies succeed in building
high-performance cultures.
It’s tempting to imagine that all high-performance cultures look alike. They don’t, and
that is part of their power. To be effective, a high-performance culture must be tailored
For bulk reprints of this article, please call 201-748-8771.
55 Winter 2006
B Y P A U L M E E H A N ,
O R I T G A D I E S H , A N D
S H I N T A R O H O R I
Culture
as Competitive
Advantage
Leader to Leader
to the business that the company is in. Contrast Intel’s
data-driven culture of manufacturing excellence and zeal
for innovation with the mutual fund ?rm Vanguard’s
focus on keeping overhead and marketing costs low and
passing the savings on to investors. A high-performance
culture is as unique as a ?ngerprint—and the one thing
about a business that rivals can’t copy. Among executives
at companies identi?ed as high performers for a recent
Bain survey, 54 percent said “culture” was one of their
strongest attributes, second only to “vision
and priorities.” This pairing is no coinci-
dence. A strong culture is the emotional path
by which a company’s vision and priorities
spread from top to bottom. Herb Kelleher,
founder and chairman of Southwest Air-
lines, puts it this way: “Everything [in our
strategy] our competitors could copy tomor-
row. But they can’t copy the culture—and
they know it.”
A company’s culture is essentially the orga-
nization’s soul, shaped through success and
setback. A ?rm’s heritage certainly plays an
important part. But culture can also be
molded and actively managed—in fact, one
crucial job of a company’s leaders is to do
just that. The high performers continuously
reinforce a shared set of practices and be-
liefs. They also use the events that require a
company to evolve—an acquisition, a struc-
tural or regulatory shift, a change in strate-
gic direction—to shape the culture and harness it to
what the company wants to achieve.
This is no easy task. Most company cultures naturally
resist change. But the elements that make up a high-
performance culture can be directed and managed using
some practical guidelines. It takes time, determination,
and a willingness to make culture a top priority. The re-
quirements are high, but so is the payoff. As Lou Gerstner,
former chairman and CEO of IBM, said, “Culture isn’t
just one aspect of the game, it is the game.”
De?ning a High-Performance Culture
A
company’s culture is a mixture of values, beliefs,
and behaviors. A sliver of it appears in visible arti-
facts, such as a mission statement. Clues also exist in the
ways people act every day on the job. How much time
does the CEO spend with customers? How
many bottom-up ideas get implemented
and celebrated? Will the CEO waiting in
line with other customers get served ?rst? If
he sees litter on the plant ?oor, will the
CEO pick it up himself ?
One characteristic that distinguishes high-
performance cultures is that people inside
them can recognize and often articulate the
company’s authentic core—the unique soul
and personality that de?ne a company’s
character. An authentic core that’s widely
recognized creates an emotional bond be-
tween a ?rm and its employees. One South-
west Airlines employee captured it well
when he said,“We all work hard, but to do
anything else would be like letting your
family down.”
An authentic core provides a necessary in-
gredient for great teamwork and esprit, but
it isn’t enough to foster high performance.You can have
an authentic core and still lose your way. To turn com-
mitment into strong performance, a company’s core
needs to be complemented by a set of values and be-
haviors that motivate people in the organization to do
the right things.
Through our work helping companies transform their
businesses, we began to notice two important patterns.
56
Paul Meehan is a
partner with Bain &
Company in Sydney,
and a co-leader of
Bain’s Organization
practice in Asia. He
has worked with com-
panies in the retail,
consumer products,
health care, and ?nan-
cial services industries.
His recent work has
focused on corporate
transformations.
I
Winter 2006
First, cultural change is often a powerful and essential cat-
alyst for companies seeking to reach their full potential.
Second, while each company has developed its own shared
values and way of doing things, tailored to its business sit-
uation, the high-performance cultures we encountered
tended to have elements in common.
Six Attributes of
High-Performance Culture
W
e examined the link between ?-
nancial outperformance and high-
performance culture at 200 companies, and
combined this analysis with case studies of
three dozen high performers. The research
con?rmed our experience, and sharpened
the common elements to six key attributes.
1. Know what winning looks like.
Many companies engender a desire to win,
but people in high-performance organiza-
tions know what winning looks like, and
they know how to get there.They won’t ac-
cept doing the same thing this year as they
did last year. They set high standards and the
performance bar keeps going up. The stan-
dard Jack Welch set years ago for General
Electric—No. 1, No. 2 or ?x, close, or sell—
distilled the cultural aspiration for a genera-
tion at GE. At Samsung, being a strong No. 2
will not satisfy employees. They aspire to be
No. 1 in every aspect.
But winning in a high-performance culture
is rarely focused solely, or even primarily, on ?nancial
success. Short-term ?nancial victories please the mar-
kets, but a culture that measures success in those terms
alone rarely builds long-term value or creates passion for
results. At high performers, winning is about exceeding
goals on quality, cost, or customer satisfaction—objec-
tives that lead to pro?t but are more real for people on
the front line.That’s important, because the desire to win
is more powerful when people throughout the company
are passionate about their role in making it happen.
Consider Toyota, known for its principle of
continuous improvement and the quality
of its products. This principle is so deeply
woven into Toyota’s culture that the impetus
for continuous improvement often comes
from workers on the assembly lines. The
company aspires to high goals: 15 percent
global market share, 30 percent cost reduc-
tion over three years, and shortening the cycle
for developing new products from 20 months
to 12. By creating a clear picture of how Toy-
ota wins and placing it at the center of its cul-
ture, the company makes sure that evolution
and innovation are pursued and celebrated
not just in the design lab but also on the fac-
tory ?oor and in the sales department.
2. Look out the window.
Companies with high-performance cultures
don’t get overly distracted by looking in-
ward. They focus instead on what’s outside
the company: customers, competitors, and
communities. Enterprise Rent-A-Car, for
example, has grown to be one of the largest
car-rental agencies in the United States in
large part by instilling the conviction among
employees that attention to customers’ needs
leads to success. That focus is reinforced
through the company’s use of clear and simple customer-
advocacy metrics. One of these is the “Enterprise Service
Quality index” (ESQi), which measures customer satis-
faction with each rental on a ?ve-point scale. Rental
branches’ ESQi scores are a key variable in determining
57
Orit Gadiesh is chair-
man of Bain & Com-
pany. She has worked
with CEOs and senior
executives to develop
and implement global
strategy, structure and
manage corporate port-
folios, execute turn-
arounds, and improve
organizational effec-
tiveness. A frequent
contributor to business
publications, her work
has appeared in Har-
vard Business Review,
the Wall Street Jour-
nal, and the Financial
Times, among other
publications. She di-
vides her time on client
work primarily be-
tween North America
and Europe.
I
Leader to Leader
promotions for branch managers and employees. So they’re
watched closely, and branch employees learn to take per-
sonal responsibility for turning customers into enthusias-
tic promoters of Enterprise.
When it comes to ordinary day-to-day operations, the
company says, ESQi is “one of many ways
in which we remind ourselves to put cus-
tomer needs ?rst.”As company founder Jack
Taylor said, “Put customers and employees
?rst, and pro?t will take care of itself.” En-
terprise leaders have taught that philosophy
to managers and employees throughout the
organization.
Performance cultures have external radar
that extends beyond their customers. The
competition, for example, is never taken for
granted or ignored. High performers are
keenly aware of their competitors’ capabili-
ties so that they can shape their own to best
advantage. High-performance cultures are
also attentive to another external constitu-
ency: the communities in which they oper-
ate. One paragraph of what Johnson &
Johnson calls “Our Credo” begins,“We are
responsible to the communities in which we
live and work and to the world community
as well”—a principle that guided the com-
pany during its legendary response to the
Tylenol crisis of the 1980s and again through
the Procrit counterfeiting crisis in 2003. A
strong community focus provides more than
just good PR. It builds goodwill both inside
and outside the company.
3. Think and act like owners.
A hallmark of a high-performance culture is that em-
ployees take personal responsibility for business perfor-
mance. Often, they are owners. Like many high per-
formers, for instance, U.K. retailer ASDA has an exten-
sive employee share-ownership plan, the largest of its
kind in Britain. Roughly 92,000 “associates,”as the com-
pany calls its employees, own options in parent Wal-Mart.
Having a stake helps, of course, but more im-
portant than ownership is the extent to which
employees think and act like owners. Con-
sider the decisions made by Enterprise Rent-
A-Car branch managers in the aftermath of
the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Stranded travelers
desperately sought cars to return to their
homes. Enterprise ordinarily doesn’t rent
one-way; its neighborhood branch system
lacks the logistics and operations to track and
retrieve one-way rentals. But many branch
managers quickly decided to give customers
the cars anyway and worry about how to get
them back later. It wasn’t until three days af-
terward that Enterprise headquarters issued a
policy allowing one-way rentals and waiving
drop-off fees. “There will be losses,” said
CEO Andrew C.Taylor, who stayed in touch
with employees via e-mail during the crisis.
“But right now we’re just concerned about
taking care of our customers.”His managers,
as it happened, were way ahead of him.
4. Commit to individuals.
Sadly, the cliché about traditional corporate
or bureaucratic cultures is frequently true:
individuals can be treated like cogs in the
machine. To the extent their contribution is valued, it
is based on who they are today, not who they might be-
come. High-performing cultures turn this notion on its
head. They make a point of investing in individuals at all
levels of the organization and helping them develop
their full potential.
58
Shintaro Hori is man-
aging partner of Bain
& Company’s Tokyo
of?ce, and a co-leader
of the ?rm’s Orga-
nization practice in
Asia. He has worked
with company leaders
on corporate strategy,
business turnarounds,
improving company
organization, and
product-market strate-
gies in industries rang-
ing from automobiles
and electronics to retail
and consumer products.
He has written several
books on growth strat-
egy and company
transformation.
I
Winter 2006
This commitment takes different forms at different com-
panies: The strong leadership development programs at
GE, Nestlé, and Enterprise, for instance, measure lead-
ers in part by their abilities as coaches and mentors, and
promote almost exclusively from within. It requires an
environment where feedback is open and honest about
what people do well and where they can improve.
Performance cultures reinforce their investments in indi-
viduals by providing training programs for all employees,
not simply managers. ASDA offers its associates a variety
of “best in class” training programs through the ASDA
Academy and has introduced a range of innovative work-
place practices, such as child care leave, ?extime, job shar-
ing, and even grandparents’ leave for the birth of a
grandchild. Nucor, the American steel company, provides
its employees not only pro?t sharing, an employee stock-
purchase plan, bonuses, and service awards but also siz-
able annual stipends toward the college or vocational
education of their children and spouses.
The message in all these cases is unmistakable: a com-
pany will not achieve its full potential unless its people
do, as well.
5. Spread courage to change.
Today’s successful companies must be able to change and
adapt to new environments quickly and continuously. But
how many company leaders can truthfully say that their
employees (or themselves) comfortably take risks, exper-
iment, and challenge the status quo? How many can say
they are happy for employees to make mistakes, as long
as they learn from them? General Electric has managed to
instill in its employees a recognition that taking measured
risks is necessary in order to achieve its clearly de?ned
business goals. CEO Jeffrey Immelt wants the company to
spawn more creativity and innovation, and is asking busi-
ness leaders to come up with three or more large-scale
“Imagination Breakthrough” proposals every year.
Taking risks is not a goal in itself, of course. But compa-
nies with high-performance cultures ?nd ways to make
risk acceptable, within clearly de?ned boundaries and
with the right controls in place. Steelmaker Nucor, as
the company declares on its Web site,“aggressively pur-
sues the latest advancements in steel making around the
world,”and expects mill managers and employees to take
the lead in implementing the technologies it acquires.
Companies that succeed in taking risks know how to deal
with the risks. While many major global corporations
have focused more on their core businesses, leading Ko-
rean Chaebols, such as Samsung, are succeeding through
diversi?cation. By working in a high-achievement envi-
ronment, by having a keen sense of when to take a risk
and of what the risk entails—and what countermeasures
should be taken if a risk back?res—Korean conglom-
erates have written some of the world’s biggest success
stories.
6. Build trust through debate.
Even the most talented and energetic group can fail if its
members are not aligned. Cohesive teams trust one an-
other. They aren’t afraid to engage in con?ict around
ideas, but once they commit to a decision, they walk out
of a meeting with a common plan of action.
This principle gets tested thoroughly when two cultures
merge following an acquisition.The process of merger in-
tegration can reveal a company’s culture in high relief, and
often provides a new understanding of that culture, even
among people who have lived it for years.When Johnson
Wax Professional took over Unilever’s DiverseyLever unit
in May 2002, for instance, some cultural differences be-
tween the companies were stark. Johnson Wax Professional
had relied on an entrepreneurial, intuitive, and unstruc-
tured culture to become a world leader in ?oor care and
housekeeping solutions. DiverseyLever, meanwhile, was
highly structured, both in its communications and in its
59
Leader to Leader
planning. The cultural gulf became apparent at the very
?rst meeting of the integration team. Diversey executives
dominated the early discussions with their formal briefs
and confrontational style, catching the Johnson execu-
tives off guard.
As a ?rst step toward a “third way” that would accom-
modate both cultures, Gregory E. Lawton, the new CEO
of the combined ?rm, JohnsonDiversey, called a time-
out to help members recognize their different approaches
and talk about them without judgment. “These differ-
ences weren’t good or bad, just different,” he says. The
leadership group began to work
through decisions in a way that
both teams could accept, com-
bining the entrepreneurial, del-
egating style of Johnson with the
structure, discipline, and organi-
zation of DiverseyLever. During
the critical period between the
deal’s announcement and its
close, Lawton put the new team
on one compensat i on and
incentive system that linked di-
rectly back to the success of the
new company. A year later, Di-
verseyLever had retained most of
its key executives and major ac-
counts. The expected deal synergies had materialized.
Through careful attention, the culture had knitted to-
gether into a single enterprise where differences were
encouraged.
E
ach of these six attributes contributes to a stronger
and more coherent culture. But the real measure of
a high-performance culture is an organization’s ability to
nurture and combine all six. In our experience, the an-
chors are knowing what winning looks like and com-
mitting to individuals. Both of these create the con?dence
and the conditions within an organization to spread the
courage to change. Risk-taking becomes easier, and more
important, people understand what types of risk to em-
brace when the company has clearly de?ned the picture
of winning, along with the strategy to get there, and the
value placed on individual effort and achievement. With
these attributes in place, an organization tends to build
trust, empower debate, and create ranks that can think
and act like owners, which is often the ?rst milestone in
building a high-performance culture.
Leading Cultural Change
C
hanging a culture is often
dif?cult because it entails
in?uencing people’s deepest be-
liefs and most habitual behaviors.
At some companies, the culture
may be so thorough in its focus
on cost ef?ciency, for instance, or
on a narrowly de?ned “Com-
pany Way,” that the culture itself
becomes a bottleneck to change.
That’s why crisis—which focuses
attention and breaks down resis-
tance—can be a potent catalyst
for cultural change. New com-
petitors, new technologies, or
new regulations often require
organizational change on a large scale. And that kind
of change is often necessary to get to the next level of
performance.
Compelled by such necessities, companies have found
that they can change their cultures, provided that their
leaders are truly committed to change and that they un-
derstand the steps involved. But companies shouldn’t
have to wait for a crisis to precipitate cultural change.
High-performance cultures rarely stand still. Indeed, cul-
tures with strong customer focus or those that reinforce
innovation often excel at inducing cultural change. In
60
I
Leading by example
is the only way to
change an organization’s
culture.
I
Winter 2006 61
our survey, 76 percent of executives said they believe it
is possible to change a company’s culture, while 65 per-
cent said they needed to change the culture of their own
companies.
Clear, effective leadership, not surprisingly, is the criti-
cal ?rst element. Cultural change starts at the top, or it
doesn’t start at all. The process begins with aligning the
top team around a common vision of the future, and
then rolling out the vision and values to the entire or-
ganization. The importance of strong leadership was
underscored by our survey results: leadership behaviors
and decisions were cited as the single most important
in?uence on their organization’s culture by 80 percent
of executives, ahead of the type of people recruited (70
percent), evaluation and promotion systems (56 per-
cent), compensation systems (44 percent), and the type
of people encouraged to leave (41 percent).
Cultural change cannot happen unless leaders model the
behaviors and values that de?ne the evolving culture, and
then spread them constantly through personal contact
and communication. Our experience, validated by the
survey results, is clear on this point: leading by example is
the only way to change an organization’s culture.
Each company and every leader will follow a different
course. But leaders who succeed at cultural change tend
to follow some common principles:
• Stay close to the front line. Cultural change is often
catalyzed when senior managers identify linchpin
employees, people who will buy in to the culture
and whose word will carry weight. These employees
become natural mentors, passing along the values
and behaviors that characterize the change in
culture. At the same time, leaders need to identify
mission-critical roles in the organization and deploy
its top talent—people who exemplify the desired
culture—in these roles.
• Use symbols to send and reinforce the message. Symbolic
changes shake people up. They signal that the com-
pany really is serious. Leaders may get rid of the cor-
porate jet or paint over reserved executive parking
spaces. Maybe they set in motion a redesign of the
of?ce layout, or do away with old job titles. Leaders
of cultural change can publicize milestones, celebrate
successes, and reward heroes. Word will get around.
• Align the organization with the new culture. This step
may entail revamping corporate structure and deci-
sion roles—removing or adding managerial layers,
for example, or changing the balance of authority
between corporate headquarters and regional opera-
tions. Metrics and incentives must be aligned as well.
It does little good to promote teamwork, for exam-
ple, if performance reviews, pay increases, and pro-
motions are based on individual performance alone.
• Zap the “cultural terrorists.” In any organization there
will be people who don’t go along with the new
culture, including a few who actively resist it. An
important job of any leader is to act quickly to
move out the naysayers and encourage those on the
fence to join in. The most effective leaders actively
retain linchpin employees, the people critical to
spreading the new culture.
• Track the changes. Leaders need a simple, practical
way to measure their performance on each of the
six dimensions—a scorecard that allows them to
see where they started and what progress they have
made toward their objectives.
No culture is forever. Culture change requires commit-
ment on the part of a company’s senior leadership, and
the job is never really complete. But the payoff is sub-
stantial. Little else in this age of globalization provides a
company with an edge that competitors can’t simply
copy or buy. Culture—the force that determines how
people behave when no one is looking—is one such
competitive advantage. When people want to do things
right, and want to do the right thing, companies have an
invaluable asset. I
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