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DoorDash uses the value "One Team, One Fight" to define everyone's job as "helping the customer win," irrespective of job title. This fosters a culture of high accountability for the end result while simultaneously ensuring low blame, as everyone shares responsibility when problems arise.
To cultivate a culture of high agency, frame ultimate responsibility as a privilege, not a burden. By telling new hires 'everything's your fault now,' you immediately set the expectation that they have control and are empowered to solve problems. This approach attracts and retains individuals who see ownership as an opportunity to make an impact.
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.
In a highly collaborative and fast-paced environment, assign explicit ownership for every feature, no matter how small. The goal isn't to assign blame for failures but to empower individuals with the agency to make decisions, build consensus, and see their work through to completion.
Building a culture where teams hold each other accountable isn't complex. It requires a leader to be a "dictator" in setting clear expectations—literally saying "I want you all to be accountable"—and then being willing to deliver the verdict on consequences when people fail to meet those standards. The problem is often leader avoidance, not team inability.
At DoorDash, disagreements between smart people are not resolved by who writes the best document or has the most seniority. Instead, their "bias for action" value means they ship something—even a hacked-together prototype—to get real-world data and let the market settle the debate.
Creating a strong culture in a remote or distributed team requires more than virtual social events. It demands a structured system of defining core values for hiring and firing, and then relentlessly over-communicating important information across multiple channels to ensure alignment.
WCM avoids the 'family' metaphor, which implies unconditional belonging and can make performance conversations difficult. They prefer framing the team as 'a group of friends,' which emphasizes voluntary commitment and a mutual desire not to let each other down, fostering greater accountability.
To prevent silos, Apollo fosters a culture where employees spend time helping other teams, knowing the favor will be returned. This "flywheel" of mutual assistance is the core driver of their integrated model, cemented by firm-wide incentives like equity for all employees and bonuses tied to firm citizenship.
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.
Menlo's culture operates on the principle that when mistakes happen, the system is at fault, not the individual. This approach removes fear and blame, encouraging the team to analyze and improve the processes that allowed the error to occur, fostering a culture of continuous improvement.