7 Top Ways to Create a Culture of Openness at Work
A culture of openness at work accelerates learning, strengthens collaboration, and improves both teamwork and decision-making. When ideas are freely shared and suggestions are genuinely welcomed, employees are more likely to feel valued, connected, and heard. Our organizational culture assessment data consistently shows that these conditions are linked to higher engagement, stronger productivity, and deeper organizational commitment.
Here’s how leaders can create and sustain a culture of openness at work that drives stronger collaboration, trust, and performance.
The real shift happens when leaders listen to understand rather than listening to respond. It also requires intentionally seeking out perspectives that differ in background, role, and experience.
Are your leaders creating space for curiosity about what others might be missing or overlooking?
Leaders reinforce this by establishing team norms that discourage back-channel conversations, making time for reflection before decisions, and treating mistakes as learning opportunities rather than failures to punish.
Are your leaders consistently reinforcing that it is safe to challenge the status quo?
When information is delayed, siloed, or filtered, decision quality declines and small issues often escalate into larger problems. Strong organizations treat information as a shared asset, not a source of control.
Is information flowing quickly and openly enough to support sound decision-making?
This includes sharing the “why” behind decisions, making performance and progress visible, and involving employees in meaningful discussions about change — not just informing them after the fact.
When clarity increases, guesswork decreases — and alignment improves.
Is transparency strong enough to support confident, informed decision-making across your organization?
When feedback becomes routine rather than rare, it becomes easier to deliver, easier to receive, and far more effective in shaping performance. Tools like regular check-ins, 360-degree input, and informal coaching conversations help normalize this rhythm.
Is feedback being used as a continuous driver of growth or an occasional performance event?
This can be reinforced through decision-making autonomy, involving employees in key choices, and supporting personalized development pathways that build capability over time.
Are employees trusted enough to act like owners?
Recognition does not need to be elaborate. Public acknowledgment, peer appreciation, or simple, timely thank-you’s can significantly reinforce desired behaviors and make them part of the culture.
Are your leaders consistently and visibly reinforcing openness in action?
The Bottom Line
Creating a culture of openness at work requires consistent and deliberate effort, but the high performance benefits are well worth it. We know from leadership simulation assessment data that your leaders hold the cultural keys to driving employee engagement, fostering innovation, and increasing change resilience.
To learn more about creating a culture of openness at work, download Changing Corporate Culture: 4 Do’s and 3 Don’ts

Tristam Brown is an executive business consultant and organizational development expert with more than three decades of experience helping organizations accelerate performance, build high-impact teams, and turn strategy into execution. As CEO of LSA Global, he works with leaders to get and stay aligned™ through research-backed strategy, culture, and talent solutions that produce measurable, business-critical results. See full bio.
Explore real world results for clients like you striving to create higher performance