What is ONE thing you did in your company that had the biggest impact on culture?
1. Helped Our Staff Find Their Voice
“Once people have been with us for around two years, we let them create their own roles within the company. They know our clients well, and they know what they love about the work they do, so we invite them to dream bigger, supporting them in building out that aspect of the company and their role. This creates a culture where we not only serve the dreams of our clients, but also our staff.”
- Corey Blake, Round Table Companies
2. Created a Culture of Accountability
“We created a culture where what matters is deliverables and making sure that deadlines are met. When and where work is done is unimportant, as long as it is done. This approach to work created a culture of accountability and independence, which has enabled me to hire and retain top talent who have served our clients well. ”
- David Ehrenberg, Early Growth Financial Services
3. Got a Keg
“We recently moved into a new office, and one of our new toys is a ‘kegerator.’ Sometimes a change of scenery or situation can have a huge effect, and, although it may sound silly, the existence of beer on tap encourages our team to sit down together and take a break.”
4. Gathered for Virtual Happy Hours
“I work with a virtual team, and gathering together on Google+ Hangouts for “happy hours” once every few months helped build the social lubrication that you miss out on by not sharing a physical office. We grab a drink, talk about life outside of work and always wear silly costumes. ”
5. Started Culture Week
“We’ve found that culture has to be deliberate. As such, we started Culture Week-every week, someone on the team is in charge of culture. People have planned Valentine’s Day parties, Iron Chef-esque cookoffs, brewery tours, trips to museums, and more during their culture weeks. It means that there’s always something fun to look forward to!”
- Kit Hickey, Ministry of Supply
6. Gave Our New Hires Free iPhones
“We give all of our new hires new cell phones and pay the bills every month. We consider it part of our benefits package. Doing this ensures that all of our employees communicate in the same fashion and leverage the necessary mobile apps and tools that help us run our business. Of course, we also have some fun with our phones by facilitating the occasional gaming contest.”
7. Scheduled a Morning Meeting
“Every morning, we have a meeting in which everyone answers what they’re most excited to do today, along with a silly question we come up with. It’s a chance to share a little bit about what we’re working on, as well as a little bit about ourselves-and it has become a key staple to every day at Greatist.”
8. Fired Myself
“I went away on vacation and read Michael Gerber’s ‘The E-Myth.’ After I returned, I started firing myself from jobs and allowing others to take the reigns. By allowing others to take my vision and run with it, the company played into everyone’s strengths on the team and deepened the overall culture.”
- Eric Holtzclaw, Laddering Works
9. Established a No-Drama Policy
“Work isn’t life, and it’s the last place where people want to go to get caught up in drama outside their personal lives. In the salon business, drama and gossip are rife, so we simply made instigating it a fireable offense. The result is a chain of salons without any drama, and an employee base that sticks around because they hate working at all of those drama factories.”
- Michael Portman, Birds Barbershop
10. Implemented Efficient and Focused Meetings
“We have more focused meetings with different divisions of our company, and then a large meeting on Wednesday. They are only a half hour long, and we are able to discuss issues that have come up during the week that need to be addressed, or ideas for different parts of our website. We are able to connect our engineering and our customer service more efficiently.”
- Jordan Fliegel, CoachUp, Inc.
11. Emphasized Public Recognition
“Public recognition beats all other types of rewards. Encouraging public recognition by awards, shout-outs, and emphasis in meetings identifies the behaviors you want so you are incentivizing and memorializing them.”
12. Hired for Culture
“While it may seem obvious, if you’re trying to cook a dish with the wrong ingredients, it won’t turn out the way you want. We didn’t put enough focus on people’s values and motivators when hiring, and culture just didn’t happen. We learned to define our values, asked candidates to share theirs, and then looked for a fit. Two-thirds of our interview process now focuses on culture fit. ”
- Shradha Agarwal, ContextMedia
Ahaa, its pleasant discussion on the topic of this article at
this place at this website, I have read all that, so at this time me also commenting at this place.
http://www.patrickseaman.com/cheap-knock-off-michael-kors-bags
Hello there! This is my 1st comment here so I just wanted to give a quick shout out and tell you I genuinely enjoy reading through your blog posts.
Can you recommend any other blogs/websites/forums that go over the same subjects?
Thank you so much!
You could certainly see your enthusiasm within the work you write.
The world hopes for even more passionate writers like you who are not afraid to
say how they believe. Always go after your heart.