Most Companies and Employees Want a Clear Direction for a Healthy Corporate Culture
Setting a deliberate direction for corporate culture is essential. Culture exists either by design or by default. Every organization has a way of operating — for better or for worse. At best, employees arrive with a sense of purpose and strive to deliver their best work for the right reasons. At worst, a toxic culture can create a downward spiral that ultimately undermines performance and sustainability.
Where does your organization fall on the spectrum between healthy and toxic culture?
An Example of an Unhealthy Corporate Culture
General Motors illustrates how a culture can deteriorate from within. The defective ignition switch scandal, which ultimately caused up to 300 fatalities, took more than eleven years to address.
Despite GM’s stated values — integrity, safety, accountability, quality, and customer focus — the organization fostered a culture of avoiding accountability, suppressing bad news, and prioritizing cost over safety. This case, like many project postmortems, shows how clearly stated values mean little if they are not actively monitored, reinforced, and lived by leaders.
Five Warning Signs of an Unhealthy Culture
In our two plus decades of assessing corporate cultures, we have come up with a list of warning signs that can lead to a failing corporate culture.
In GM’s case, while the values seem to have been clearly stated, they do not appear to have been monitored or reinforced.
At GM, the US Attorney identified a consistent unwillingness to raise problems for fear that it may delay the launch of a vehicle, cause reprisals or increase costs.
At GM, the US Attorney identified a culture that did not encourage constructive debate, but one that created a consistent unwillingness to raise problems for fear that it may delay the launch of a vehicle, cause reprisals or increase costs.
An Example of a Healthy Corporate Culture
Zappos provides a compelling counterpoint. Customer service wasn’t just a slogan — it was empowered at every level. Employees knew their expectations, and leaders actively modeled behaviors that ensured every customer interaction reflected the company’s values. Clarity, empowerment, and accountability drove Zappos’ cultural success.
What You Can Do to Create a Healthy Corporate Culture
The Bottom Line
Our organizational alignment research shows that corporate culture accounts for 40% of the difference between high- and low-performing organizations. Culture is not just a soft asset — it drives organizational health, engagement, and sustainable performance.
To learn more about setting the direction for a healthy corporate culture, download: Latest Research: The 3 Most Levels of a High Performance Culture that leaders Must Get Right
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