Excellence begins with each employee, with each individual. For instance, with the question of what type of attitude employees and their supervisors bring to work at the start of their day. It also includes the atmosphere awaiting them in their professional context. People are motivated when they can make contributions, develop as individuals, be seen, and feel valued. Here too, the survey of managers at the top 100 companies yields a critical result: only 53 percent of respondents stated that everyone at their company appears willing to go the extra mile, day in and day out. Most of their employees are motivated and committed in principle, the managers say. But their energy is not put to the best possible use in fostering collaboration, pursuing the company’s strategies, and achieving its goals.
“We before I”
The next level up is that of teams. High-performance organizations are guided by a “we before I” principle. Every team member needs to know their role in the organization, and the shared aim. The consultants have observed that collaboration usually works smoothly between clearly defined teams from the same department. During periods of transformation, however, there is an increased demand for interdisciplinary project teams and cross-functional collaboration. The question of resource allocation often leads to contention and controversy. Only 44 percent of the managers surveyed stated that strong interdepartmental collaboration is evident in their organizations.
The third level—that of the company itself—is formed by the sum of the teams. It thrives on entrepreneurial thought or “ownership.” Each employee should act as if the company were their own. But it is not uncommon for this principle to fall by the wayside, especially in what are often complex organizations. Here only 18 percent of respondents from the top 100 companies stated that they are transferring an increased level of decision-making authority to teams and individuals in order to foster entrepreneurship. And only 26 percent consider their organizations sufficiently flexible and agile to allocate resources based on need.
In order to achieve and maintain long-term organizational excellence, a company needs to communicate its strategies, aims, and values transparently and continually to all its employees. This can be done on a stepwise basis. Workshops, townhall meetings, and team discussions can start the process for mid-level management. The next step consists of bringing all the employees on board. Leadership personnel on all levels are then called upon to explain, answer questions, and convince their people, also in smaller groups. Two points are crucial here. First, repetition is nothing to be feared. For a culture to be influenced, it needs to appear regularly on the agenda. And second, top-level managers need to speak with one voice, send consistent messages, and demonstrate a high degree of unity to their workforce.
Communication alone is not sufficient, however. Success depends above all on leadership personnel truly embracing their company’s cultural values. Leaders who demand a team spirit from their staff members should possess this quality themselves and show it in authentic ways. This, unfortunately, has still been lacking too often in practice. At companies without a demonstrated high-performance culture, only 42 percent of their leadership personnel show commitment and collaboration themselves, compared to 61 percent at companies that do have this culture.
More on this topic in the strategy paper „High Performance Culture“.