The values an organisation holds and shares with its people can be instilled an reinforced through its management educations and development efforts.
I once worked for an organisation that seemed to embody the epitome of the ideal. If fact, everything the management gurus suggest should be evident in the "excellent" organisation, was there. Employees who were dedicated, management who cared about the staff (and who knew the business!), and customers who were loyal. The organisation even had a marketing department that involved the staff in the latest advertising and promotional schemes before going public! The corporate colours were blue and gold, and it was said that staff would die for the company if necessary and their blood would flow in the corporate colours.
Although I thoroughly enjoyed working there (and like all the others, would have shed blood, too), I thought the halcyon environment was merely a fluke and it was my good fortune to strike it lucky. With hindsight, I can now see the logic of why this organisation worked so well: it was the solid foundations on which this idyllic structure was built.
Those foundations were the corporate values. However, they were not mentioned overtly. Nor were they written up on any brass plaques. But evident they were. How did this organisation succeed in having "everyone singing from the same hymn book"? The answer lies in the nature and extent of the training that all staff experienced. For example, everyone joining the company attended two weeks of induction training before commencing in his or her role. This even applied to senior managers, who might be responsible for managing some of their fellow trainees.
It has taken me some years and the study of hundreds of organisations to realise that cementing organisation values into the training fabric of an organisation can have a dramatic impact on collective performance.
The Americans have coined a phrase that has become quite faddish in Australia - "walking the talk". It is intended to mean that management (and particularly top management) must model the behaviour they expect of others. But how often does it happen and, more importantly, does it work?
As Rob Lebow points out: "The only thing that really changes behaviour is when the proclaimed values are practiced at every level including at the top". The inference can be drawn that not only must managers "do what they say", but there also must be a collective understanding of "what precisely it is that we should all do".
Management education and development can be the vehicle that drives the collective understanding and turns the corporate values into practical, day-to-day behaviour.
My experience suggests that few Australian organisations take the time and effort to base their management training on such solid foundations as corporate values.
Has your organisation tried MBO? Quality Circles? TQM? ISO9000+? Benchmarking? Process engineering (or re-engineering)? Core competencies? While all these strategies are based on sound theory (and others' experience), they do not reflect the very nature of why your organisation has been successful - corporate behaviour that is based on shared values.
As a senior manager of a very successful Korean organisation put it "Corporate values work in mysterious ways - they can spur performance and satisfaction while instilling a sense of pride in belonging to a unique organisation".
All organisations have values, whether they be publicly evident or not. Before deciding to base the organisation's training on the values, it is important to have some understanding of what these values are. Lebow suggests there are two types of values: business values and people values.
Business values are directed at the outside world, for example, "high product quality" and "superior customer service". People values are directed to the inside world, for example, "trusting people" and "giving credit where it is due". My experience suggests that when the business values and the people values are in harmony, the organisation is healthy. When the two are not in sync, training and education (while being well meaning) will not be effective in the long term.
It is the leaders of the organisation who must convert the corporate values into day-to-day behaviour at all levels. In their studies of Australian leaders, Evans and Afors (Leaders in Australia, 1996) found that leaders who are committed and stick to their principles are those who have a personal alignment between their own welfare, the common good, and the organisation's values.
To help leaders develop the necessary leadership skills, training should be planned in four phases.
One of the most effective ways of doing this is to repeat the four-phase leadership training approach with managers and staff throughout the organisation. Each manager leads his/her team to assess the core values and how they can translate them into their field of operation.
Research by Joseph Badaracco suggests that values affect decision making. When a manager is faced with a difficult decision, what are the criteria by which he/she acts? Corporate values can provide a manager with an effective decision making tool. When faced with a difficult decision, they can help managers decide:
Organisations need leaders who can show the way and in whom people trust. Building leadership training on a solid foundation of corporate values can change the rhetoric into action so that leadership at all levels becomes a case of "do as I do".