PURPOSE: Creating A Culture

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PURPOSE: Creating A Culture

It is common for firms and their leaders to discuss values in strategy development. However, their focus on an idealized culture does not necessarily distinguish the firm for its unique aspects. Every company thinks that it is special. Every firm has a culture that is unique to them.

What determines the great from the good are those values are not just words on the wall or a website.

THE IMPORTANCE OF VALUES

Values are the relationships between employees and their interactions internally and externally. Each profession has a different model and a completely different culture. How each firm expresses its culture, internally and externally, is a good barometer for the brand. The exciting aspect of purpose and values is how it defines an environment where people thrive because they belong (or not). In Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, the idea of belonging is critical. Employees will only love their company if they align with that company’s culture.

When firms are struggling, it is usually what leaders say is different from what they do, or conversely, what thy do is different from what they say. Defining purpose lets everyone know what is true.

Firms with a purpose provide more opportunities for people to be successful. People leave their managers. They do not leave the companies It comes back to leadership. One of the essential components of leadership is alignment between what a leaders they are and how they behave.

Challenged to build your leadership team? The Architecture of Vision provides a framework, methodology, and assessment tools to give your firm the edge while building a collaborative, creative, and consensus-driven growth-focused culture. 

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WALKING THE TALK

Innovative organizations recognize that flaw, and rather than assign a non-qualified person to be the head of finance or HR, they look outside for staff with appropriate training and experience.

While exceptions exist, many people who enter professional services train in a specific discipline. Rarely does that discipline have a finance or operations component in the educational framework. For example, many schools of architecture require design labs and practice labs. Practice labs focus on translating design ideas into drawings and specifications rather than on the business of running the business.

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