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Create short, memorable phrases or "isms" that articulate your core values (e.g., "Constant Gentle Pressure"). This provides your team with a shared language and metasignal, reinforcing cultural priorities and making them easily scalable across the organization.

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Don't ask "what should our values be?" Instead, identify the 5-10 things that are the reason you are succeeding. Codify those real, existing behaviors—like "speed above everything"—into your company's operating principles. This makes them authentic and effective.

Instead of a long list of values, high-performing CEOs create an energized culture by defining and rigorously enforcing a minimal set of core values, such as "be competent and be kind." This simplicity makes them easy to remember, measure, and act upon decisively.

To maintain its culture across 5,000+ employees, Canva identified 12 skills embodying success. These are codified and woven into every part of the employee lifecycle, from onboarding to performance reviews, ensuring consistent cultural alignment as the company grows.

Create a public document detailing your company's operating principles—from Slack usage to coding standards. This "operating system" makes cultural norms explicit, prevents recurring debates, and allows potential hires to self-select based on alignment, saving time and reducing friction as you scale.

To ensure cultural consistency while scaling, A16Z codifies its values in a document that every new hire must sign. This is followed by a personal one-hour briefing from a co-founder, making the culture explicit and non-negotiable from day one.

BBDO's cultural principles became sticky because they used memorable, human phrases (“hand raisers, not finger pointers”). This created an internal language that people naturally used to describe behavior, embedding the culture far more effectively than slogans on posters.

To drive cultural change and ensure adoption of a new process, give it a memorable, idiosyncratic name. Rippling calls its Product Quality List the 'Pickle' (PQL). This creates a 'vessel for meaning' that becomes part of the daily lexicon, making the process stick in a way a generic name wouldn't.

Instead of asking "what culture do we want?", BBDO asked "what are the characteristics of people who do best here?". This approach reverse-engineers a culture based on proven success, creating a practical and authentic behavioral language for the entire organization.

Instead of vague values, define culture as a concrete set of "if-then" statements that govern reinforcement (e.g., "IF you are on time, THEN you are respected"). This turns an abstract concept into an operational system that can be explicitly taught, managed, and improved across the organization.

To ensure brand consistency at scale, Way created internal "culture codes" on which employees are bonused. Codes like "we keep it real in a way that feels kind" directly reflect the brand's candid public persona. This operationalizes culture and turns every employee into an authentic brand ambassador.