Shine: How Can Culture Change Affect Your Business Results?
 

Issue 29 - June 2008

>> How Can Culture Change Affect Your Business Results?

Dear Akasha 

This month we explore the effect that culture change can have on your business results, and argue that until your business results have changed (for the better!), culture change hasn't happened.

Please forward this issue to anyone else you think will enjoy reading it and find it useful. They can subscribe to receive their own free monthly copy by clicking the link.

Best wishes,

Kate and Gil

How Can Culture Change Affect Your Business Results?

How much time is wasted around your office coffee machine, by people talking about your organisation's culture and its impact on performance? Think about some typical comments:

  • 'We're not delivering the results we should'
  • 'There's no leadership around here'
  • 'There's no coherent strategy'
  • 'We're not working together as a team'
  • 'All we seem to do is fire-fight'

People talk about the results that would be possible if the culture were just right, and they complain where they see people's attitudes and behaviour affecting performance. But if your organisation is like most others, the talk masks a kind of resignation - it's 'just the way things are around here'.

It's easy to talk - what's rare, however, is recognition of the fact that great leaders explicitly manage the culture of their organisation. If you understand this, you will recognise the need to consciously design 'the way things are around here', manage it into place and measure, monitor and review it for ever. Then you will use all that wasted time and hot air on making your business outstandingly successful, and producing results which are a reflection of a culture which is anything but resigned.

Results are the Outward Expression of Your Organisation's Culture

Every credible organisation, like yours, has a set of tangible, measurable, and objective results to produce. Different kinds of organisation will have different kinds of measurable and tangible results, but in business they always include profit and cash.

The state of your organisation's results displays its prevalent culture. We're not talking just about long-term results; we're talking about results in every period - including this quarter, this week, today! Where there is a shortfall in results, there is always a shortfall in culture. If you look for the cultural shortfall and resolve it, your required results will be easier to produce.        

Take the example of a company who generally managed to reach its quarterly, half-yearly and annual targets, but always only by the skin of its teeth and a frantic last-minute dash to the finish line. Early in every result period, there was a prevailing feeling that 'there's plenty of time', and a disinclination to be held to rigorous forecasts on a daily, weekly and monthly basis. They felt it would be OK, because they had a lot of ideas 'in the pipeline', and were confident they could recover later. But the weeks raced by, and suddenly it was 'that time' again! Through rigorous examination of the culture that was driving this stressful pattern, they decided to challenge this behaviour and instead to build and develop a culture of, 'we deliver on our commitments, regardless of the circumstances'. Nowadays they put in place rigorous business forecasts and measure and monitor their progress towards them. More accountability from the start, which can feel like hard work at first, has saved them hundreds of hours of urgent reactive work and untold stress in the panicky 'will-we, won't-we' dash at the end of every year.         

How to Quantify the Impact of Culture on Performance  

In quantifying the impact of culture on profitability, there are 3 things that matter:          

  • People do things they shouldn't do
  • People don't do things they should do
  • People take too long to do things         

And there are 2 dimensions of business profitability impact:

  • Lost opportunity for increased sales
  • Lost opportunity for lower costs          

For help with how to quantify this in monetary terms, click here to go to the Shine Website and download our document 'Quantifying the Effects of Culture Change on Your Business Results'.   

Culture Change Hasn't Happened until Different Results are Produced!       

Some groups are very keen to address their cultural issues, and in these groups we sometimes see the same issue from the opposite point of view. People celebrate a wonderful 'breakthrough' in culture. Relationships are repaired and teams are built - hooray!  Surely, breakthrough results are on the way?  Don't count on it.           

Unless your new breakthrough is immediately demonstrated in tangible, measurable, and objective results, it has not been tested and will fade into memory. The time and resources you have spent on the culture change will have been a waste of money. While there might be a new possibility and a lot of excitement, these don't add up to a new, long-term, sustainable culture. The reality is that the organisation's results still reflect the former culture. If early attempts to alter results are met with resistance in some way, then the work of culture change is not complete, and the enthusiasm for change will be blunted or killed entirely.           

So to answer our opening question, not only can culture change affect your business results, it must! Until your key results have changed to reflect your new culture, and you have demonstrated that you can consistently and sustainably deliver the new level of performance, the hard work of changing your organisation is not complete!

>> What To Do

Examine your group's most urgent issue of underperformance (everybody has one, regardless of how good they are!).

Identify the shortfall in mindset or culture that the underperformance represents.

Quantify the value of the underperformance. For help with how to quantify this in monetary terms, click here to go to the Shine Website and download our document 'Quantifying the Effects of Culture Change on Your Business Results'.

Change the mindsets. (see our April 2008 article on how to shift mindsets).   

With the new mindset in place, change the performance - time is of the essence!  Do it immediately and tend it closely.

Enjoy your new level of performance!     

 

If you realise that some of the steps above may be beyond the current skills in your organisation, call us on 01865 883423 / 881056 for anything from an informal chat about it, to specialist help.

 

>> An Example

A client company had had an underperforming sales force for 3 consecutive years, top performers' results were declining and some were leaving the company. A prevailing mindset was that an average of 1.8 sales calls per day was a stretch "given the complexity of the sales process and required administration".

 

It had been estimated by a Best Practice Sales Project Group that a modest improvement in each salesperson's call rate from 9 to 10 sales calls per week would earn the company £50,000 in increased revenue every week.

                  

Some focused work on the existing mindset and a newly introduced sales process drastically reduced sales call times and total average sales call frequency to complete sales orders. Average call rates increased from 1.8 to 2.2 per day.

                   

An additional 30% of the sales force exceeded their sales targets in the following 2 years. Sales staff turnover reduced by 32% and the company's revenue increased by an average of 23% over the same period.

>> Shine Consulting

At Shine Consulting, we work with leaders who are consciously engaged in designing their organisations to be places where people:

  • are consistently passionate, inspired and committed
  • produce results well beyond the predictable norm

In short, organisations that really shine!

You can find out more about us and the work we do on our website where you can also find a full archive of all the previous issues of this newsletter.

Shine Consulting   01865 881 056   info@shineconsulting.co.uk

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