No Image Available

Derek Irvine

Globoforce

Senior Vice President of Global Strategy

LinkedIn
Email
Pocket
Facebook
WhatsApp

Blog: The Goldman Sachs resignation – Three lessons on corporate culture

stop_no_entry

Recognise This! – Your company culture can withstand a multitude of shocks – but should it?

I’m guessing most people in the world of HR, management or leadership have read Greg Smith’s resignation letter from Goldman Sachs – which appeared in the New York Times.
 
Personally, I was more interested in the reaction from management, leadership and HR bloggers and editors I respect. Just a few lessons offered by these thought leaders:

1) Proactively manage your culture, or it will manage you
 
From Ron Thomas, Principal at StrategyFocusedHR, as reported in TLNT:
 
“What happens when the culture that you bought into changes?…Culture, in so many companies, has shifted during these tough economic times, and the stress for survival has caused fault lines to appear in the cultural framework. These fault lines, if not examined and repaired, will eventually produce a level of discontent with the talent pool that is a breeding ground for this type of behaviour.”
 
Some believe organisation culture “just happens.” And that is unfortunately true in many cases. But wise leaders work to proactively manipulate and manage their culture as Ron describes. Doing so leads to culture changes over time that leaders often never intended or desired.

2) Take your values off the wall and put them to work to manage your culture
 
From the HR Capitalist, Kris Dunn:
 
“How do you prevent that type of culture decay and the behaviour that follows? Start by repeating after me: ‘Your corporate/company values that you have on the wall don’t mean anything unless they become operational in how performance is measured.’…If you want to really drive a culture and not let it slip over time, you’ve got to identify the DNA it takes for people to be successful in your company. You’ll use the factors across all employees in your company. Then you ruthlessly use the potential factors to HIRE, PROMOTE/REWARD and FIRE.”
 
Kris suggests the best way to manage your culture – put your values to work.
 
If you are not willing to take the hard actions – removing those who violate the values for whatever reasons (even if they are “producing”) – as well as the easier (or at least more enjoyable) actions of recognising and rewarding those who do live the values, then those values are nothing more than art on the wall.
 
You must be willing to make those values real in the daily work of every employee.
 
3) Create a culture that can withstand one-off employee actions or adapt to employee needs
 
From John Zappe, also reported in TLNT:
 
“The other issue raised by Smith’s public resignation is the more familiar one of burning bridges. Smith is ‘toast’ as far as Wall Street is concerned, says Blooomberg columnist William Cohan, author of Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World. … But I have to believe there are times when a larger  service is performed by going public in the way Greg Smith did.”
 
Sure, Mr. Smith took a drastic measure regarding a failed organisational culture as he saw it. But he offers a clear lesson for leaders – can your culture withstand an employee action that may be out of line?
 
Equally as important, if employee responses to a negative culture environment are legitimate and presented in a way that can be addressed, are you prepared to do so?
 
 
Derek Irvine is senior vice president of global strategy at Globoforce.
 
We welcome any and all contributions from the community, so please feel free to share your views and opinions with us, your colleagues and peers via our blogs section.

Want more insight like this? 

Get the best of people-focused HR content delivered to your inbox.
No Image Available
Derek Irvine

Senior Vice President of Global Strategy

Read more from Derek Irvine