We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
To cultivate a culture of emotional intelligence, translate abstract values like "curiosity" into concrete behaviors. Define what positive curiosity looks like (e.g., asking clarifying questions) and what it doesn't (e.g., analysis paralysis). This makes the value observable, coachable, and measurable for the team.
To make cultural values like "customer-centric" actionable, leaders must go beyond slogans. The critical step is to collaboratively define what that value looks like in practice within their specific context, especially for handling gray areas. This creates clarity and shared understanding.
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.
Abstract concepts like accountability are hard to manage. Make it concrete by using a model of behaviors, from negative (blaming, complaining) to positive (owning, solutioning). This gives people a clear framework for choosing self-accountability.
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.
Instead of aiming for vague outcomes like "empowerment," start by defining the specific, observable behaviors you want to see. For example, what does "being data-driven" actually look like day-to-day? This focus allows you to diagnose and remove concrete barriers related to competency, accessibility, or social reinforcement.
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.
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.
Abstract values like "celebrate diversity" are useless for driving behavior. A value is only effective if it's tangible enough to be used in a performance review. Instead, use an observable action like "include all perspectives," which you can coach and evaluate.
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.