Brands meticulously map the customer journey but often ignore the employee experience. To build a strong culture, apply the same brand principles to every employee touchpoint—from the job offer to their first day—to ensure everyone is aligned and delivering on the brand's promise.
The same marketing funnels used to acquire paying customers can be directly applied to attract and 'close' new employees. This reframes recruiting from a siloed HR function to a core marketing activity, allowing you to leverage skills you already have to build your team.
Unlike companies where values are just posters, Amazon integrates its leadership principles into core processes like promotion documents and project meetings. This constant, practical application forces employees to learn and embody the principles, making them the true operating system of the company culture.
Frame employee training as an investment, not a cost, because 'growth follows people, not plans.' Train your team beyond the technical aspects of their job to focus on building genuine human connections. This approach transforms a transactional service into a loyal community, turning your staff into powerful growth multipliers.
Values are not just words on a wall; they are an active management system. They should be a filter in the hiring process, a reason for public celebration when embodied, and a non-negotiable standard for performance. A company's true values are defined by the behavior it is willing to tolerate.
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.
Effective company culture isn't about corporate perks but about founders who genuinely invest in their employees as individuals. Taking the time to build personal relationships, such as meeting families, fosters a deeper, non-transactional connection that directly improves employee retention.
Most engineers only interact with customers during negative events like outages or escalations. To build customer empathy and a product mindset, leaders must intentionally create positive touchpoints. This includes sending engineers to customer conferences or including them on low-stakes customer calls.
When contractors complain they can't find good people, it's often a culture problem, not a talent shortage. A great workplace turns existing employees into recruiters who attract other high-quality talent from their networks, creating a self-sustaining recruitment pipeline.
Caribou Coffee translates its purpose—"create daymaking experiences"—into action by embedding core values directly into HR processes. Behaviors tied to these values are integrated into hiring, training, and performance reviews, ensuring employees are empowered to deliver the brand promise.
Beyond the standard offer letter, managers should tell new hires what unique qualities made them stand out in the hiring process. This simple act establishes their value, sets their identity within the team, and boosts motivation from day one. It's never too late to do this.