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Dimon believes culture is built through daily actions focused on customer value. He deliberately waited to publish JPMorgan's "how we do business" book until employees had experienced the new culture firsthand, ensuring it was authentic and lived, not just a document that gets ignored.
Most corporate values statements (e.g., "integrity") are unactionable and don't change internal culture. Effective leaders codify specific, observable behaviors—the "how" of working together. This makes unspoken expectations explicit and creates a clear standard for accountability that a vague value never could.
The shift to a product-led culture wasn't a formal launch. The CEO began by stating "we are product-led" aspirationally, then relentlessly reinforced this message in every meeting and report. This constant repetition, backed by operational changes, gradually and organically transformed the company's identity and behavior.
Eloquent mission statements are meaningless if not embodied by leadership's daily actions. A toxic culture of vengeance and blame, driven by the leader, will undermine any stated values. Employees observe how people are actually treated, and that reality defines the culture.
Jamie Dimon uses travel and site visits as a primary tool for uncovering operational flaws. He returns with a detailed list of questions and required actions, creating a relentless feedback loop that forces accountability and prevents complacency among senior leaders.
Successful culture change doesn't start with an announcement or a new mission statement. It begins when a leader takes a decisive action that is inconsistent with the old culture. These actions organically generate authentic stories that employees share, which in turn shifts the organization's narrative and values.
Instead of imposing top-down values, Gamma's CEO created a "notebook" of behaviors that team members organically praised in each other. These observed, authentic actions became the foundation of their culture deck, ensuring the values reflected reality.
Culture isn't created by top-down declarations. It emerges from the informal stories employees share with each other before meetings or at lunch. These narratives establish community norms and create "shared wisdom" that dictates behavior far more effectively than any official communication from leadership.
Culture isn't an abstract value statement. It's the sum of concrete behaviors you enforce, like fining partners for being late to meetings. These specific actions, not words, define your organization's true character and priorities.
Ben Horowitz argues that culture isn't defined by platitudes like 'we love entrepreneurs.' It's defined by tangible actions: Are you on time? Do you respond to emails? Your culture is what you *do* and what behaviors you tolerate, not what you write on a wall.
To prevent values from being just words on a wall, create a running list of specific, concrete anecdotes where employees demonstrated a value in action. This makes the culture tangible, tracks adoption, highlights who is truly living the values, and provides a clear model for others to follow.