Home Depot's culture inverts the traditional corporate pyramid. The most important person is the frontline employee interacting with the customer, not the CEO. This philosophy ensures that the entire organization is structured to support the people who directly create the customer experience and drive sales.

Related Insights

Frontline employees have the most information about customer needs, while leaders have all the authority. To deliver exceptional service, empower the people interacting with customers to make decisions in the moment. This closes the gap and allows the organization to be truly responsive.

Home Depot rejected the pristine look of traditional retail. Managers were ordered to scuff newly waxed floors with forklifts to create the atmosphere of a busy, working warehouse. This counterintuitive move signaled high volume, low prices, and constant activity to customers.

The board hired GE's Robert Nardelli, who focused on metrics over culture. He optimized for profit but killed employee morale and customer service, causing the stock to flatline. This proved a company's unique, founder-instilled culture is a tangible asset that can be destroyed by purely data-driven management.

Sears' decline was epitomized by a CEO who felt like a "stranger" in his own stores and pursued abstract corporate strategies. In contrast, Home Depot mandated that every executive spend time on the floor, ensuring that strategic decisions were grounded in the reality of the customer experience.

When Home Depot's culture began to erode due to a mindset that prioritized cost over people, the board's solution wasn't a new initiative, but a leadership change. Ken Langone credits the new CEO, Frank Blake, as a "founder" for his role in restoring the company's core cultural values.

At Crisp.ai, the core value is that the best argument always wins, regardless of who it comes from—a new junior employee or the company founder. This approach flattens hierarchy and ensures that the best ideas, which often originate from those closest to the product and customers (engineers, PMs), are prioritized.

Home Depot's decentralized model gives regional presidents significant autonomy but with clear, unspoken boundaries—the "invisible fence." This fosters local ownership and agility while ensuring alignment with core company principles. Crossing the line results in a "zap," maintaining strategic cohesion without micromanagement.

To truly build a people-first culture, give the head of HR (rebranded as 'Chief Heart Officer' to change perception) more political clout and decision-making power than the Chief Financial Officer. This organizational structure ensures that employee retention and happiness are prioritized over pure financial metrics, leading to long-term stability and success.

Contrary to a shareholder-first dogma, these leaders operate on an employee-first principle. They believe that well-treated, empowered employees provide superior customer service. This creates loyal customers, which drives sustainable profits and ultimately delivers superior long-term returns for shareholders.

Ken Langone applied the same people-first culture from Home Depot to turn around NYU Medical Center. By treating top surgeons and frontline security guards with the same respect and empowerment, he proved that an "upside-down hierarchy" is a universal model for excellence, applicable in both retail and academic medicine.

Home Depot’s "Upside-Down Hierarchy" Puts Frontline Employees Above the CEO | RiffOn