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Values like "integrity" are table stakes, not differentiators, because no company advocates for the opposite. True values must have an "edge" and represent a conscious choice over another valid path. For example, "kids must love school" is a real value because many believe school should simply be endured.
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.
To prevent values from becoming empty platitudes, integrate them into your company's core operating system. At Applied Intuition, managers are assessed, compensated, and promoted based on their adherence to values. For example, "decisiveness" is a key metric evaluated under the value of "speed."
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.
Founders often mistake their preferences for principles. A true principle is a non-negotiable rule you adhere to regardless of the trade-offs (e.g., 'always do things the right way'). A preference is a desired path you're willing to abandon when circumstances change (e.g., 'prefer not to build a sales team yet'). Clarifying this distinction leads to more consistent and high-integrity decisions.
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.
Building a strong brand requires more than defining what you stand for; it requires clarifying what you stand against. This creates a sharp identity that resonates deeply with a core audience, even if it alienates others. Trying to be a brand for everybody results in a brand for nobody.
Generic values like "Speed" are meaningless because no one disagrees with them. To make a value impactful, embed its inherent trade-off into the statement, like Facebook's "Move Fast and Break Things." This acknowledges what you are willing to sacrifice, making the value a unique and actionable strategic choice.
A sustainable competitive advantage is often rooted in a company's culture. When core values are directly aligned with what gives a company its market edge (e.g., Costco's employee focus driving superior retail service), the moat becomes incredibly difficult for competitors to replicate.
There are few universally ideal values beyond basic table stakes like integrity. The effectiveness of a value is highly context-dependent. For example, a value of slow, careful consensus-building is critical in a nuclear facility but would cripple a fast-moving ad agency that requires decisiveness.
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.