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CHAPTER 12

CORPORATE CULTURE AND LEADERSHIP:


Keys to Good Strategy Execution

Copyright ®2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. McGraw-Hill/Irwin


INSTILLING A CORPORATE CULTURE
THAT PROMOTES GOOD STRATEGY
EXECUTION

♦ Corporate Culture
● Is the meshing of shared values, beliefs,
business principles, and traditions that imbues
a firm’s operating style, behavioral norms,
ingrained attitudes, and work atmosphere.
● Is important because it influences the firm’s
actions and approaches to conducting
business.

12–2
Key Features of a Firm’s Corporate Culture

Values, principles, Management Atmosphere and How managers and


and ethical practices and spirit embodied employees interact
standards organizational in the firm’s work and relate to one
in actual use polices climate another

Features of a Corporate Culture

Strength of peer Actions and Traditions and


How the firm
pressure to behaviors stories and “how
treats its
conform and encouraged we do things
stakeholders
observe norms and rewarded around here”

12–3
Perpetuating the Culture

Systematic
indoctrination of
new members
Screening and Vocal support by
selecting new senior managers
employees

Perpetuating
the Culture

Telling and Rewarding those


retelling of the who display
firm’s legends cultural norms
Ceremonies
honoring
employees

12–4
Forces That Cause a Firm’s
Culture to Evolve

New or revolutionary
technologies

New challenges in Diversification into


the marketplace new businesses
Causes of
Cultural
Change
Shifting internal Rapid growth
conditions of the firm

Merger or acquisition
of another firm

12–5
Company Cultures Can Be Strongly
or Weakly Embedded

♦ Strong-Culture Firm ♦ Weak-Culture Firm


● Has deeply rooted ● Lacks values and
widely-shared values, principles that are
behavioral norms, and consistently preached
operating approaches. or widely shared.
● Insists that its values ● Has few or no
and principles be traditions, beliefs,
reflected in the decisions values, common
and actions taken by all bonds, or behavioral
company personnel. norms.

12–6
Development of a Strong Culture

Founder or Commitment
strong leader Strong by the firm to
with strong Culture ethical
values behavior

Closely aligning corporate culture with the requirements


for proficient strategy execution merits the full attention
of senior executives.

12–7
Why Corporate Cultures Matter to
the Strategy Execution Process

♦ A culture well matched to the requirements of the


strategy execution effort focuses the attention of
employees on what is most important to this effort.
♦ Culture-induced peer pressure induces personnel to do
things in a manner that aids good strategy execution.
♦ A culture consistent with the requirements for good
strategy execution can energize employees, deepen
their commitment to execute the strategy, and enhance
worker productivity.

12–8
Healthy Cultures That Aid
Good Strategy Execution

Performance

Good Strategy
Execution

High-Performance Adaptive
Cultures Cultures

Commitment to
Willingness to accept
achieving stretch
change and take on
objectives and
challenges
accountability

12–9
Unhealthy Cultures That Impede
Good Strategy Execution

Change-resistant Insular, inwardly


cultures focused cultures

Unhealthy
Cultures
Politicized Unethical and greed-
cultures driven cultures

Incompatible
Subcultures

12–10
Substantive Culture-Changing Actions

♦ Replace key executives who are stonewalling needed


organizational and cultural changes.
♦ Promote individuals who advocate for cultural shifts and
can serve as a role model for the cultural behavior.
♦ Appoint outsiders with the desired cultural attributes to
high-profile positions.
♦ Screening candidates for positions carefully, hiring only
those who appear to fit in with the new culture.
♦ Mandate that all personnel attend culture-training.
♦ Design compensation incentives that boost the pay of
teams and individuals.

12–11
Symbolic Culture-Changing Actions

Changing the culture


of an organization

Top executive Ceremonial


Physical symbols
and upper events to honor
that represent
management exemplary
the new culture
behaviors employees

12–12
LEADING THE STRATEGY EXECUTION
PROCESS

♦ Leading Strategy Execution requires:


● Staying on top of what is happening and
closely monitoring progress.
● Putting constructive pressure on the
organization to execute the strategy well
and achieve operating excellence.
● Initiating corrective actions to improve
strategy execution and achieve the
targeted performance results.

12–13
Staying on Top of How Things Are Going

♦ Management by Walking Around (MBWA)


● Is used by leaders to stay informed about how well
the strategy execution process is progressing.
● Involves spending time with people at company
facilities, asking questions, listening to their opinions
and concerns, and gathering firsthand information
about how well aspects of the strategy execution
process are going.

12–14
Pressuring Organizational Units to Execute
Strategy Well and Achieve Operating Excellence

♦ Treat employees as valued partners.


♦ Foster an esprit de corps that energizes members.
♦ Use empowerment to create a fully engaged workforce.
♦ Make champions out of the people who spearhead new
ideas and/or turn in winning performances.
♦ Set stretch objectives that require personnel to give their
best in achieving performance targets.

12–15
Pressuring Organizational Units to Execute
Strategy Well and Achieve Operating Excellence

♦ Use benchmarking, reengineering, TQM, and Six Sigma


to focus attention on continuous improvement.
♦ Use motivational techniques and compensation
incentives to inspire, nurture a results-oriented work
climate, and enforce high standards.
♦ Celebrate individual, group, and company successes.

12–16
Leading the Process of Making
Corrective Adjustments

Making corrective actions


successfully requires:

Good business Good


A thorough
judgment in implementation
analysis of the
deciding what of the corrective
situation
actions to take actions

12–17

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