Meet Jerry Haney - Noted Business Keynote Speaker and Organizational Culture Change Leadership Trainer with over 30 years of experience
Jerry Haney, author of the acclaimed leadership book Making Culture Pay Solving the Puzzle of Organizational Effectiveness, and leadership keynote speaker invites you and your enterprise to engage with him to ensure that your organization lives up to its full potential.
Let the associates at Visionomics show you their unique model for understanding and dramatically improving workplace cultural performance at every level of your enterprise. The Visionomics model can also enable you to bring every part of your enterprise into alignment with the purpose, vision and strategic intent you have for it.
With over three decades of leadership experience, I’ve learned a few things about workplace culture, and I’d like to share some of them with you today.
There are common characteristics within organizations that perform at very high levels, characteristics that are often missing in lower performing enterprises. I call them “cultural elements.”
With over three decades of leadership experience, I’ve learned a few things about workplace culture, and I’d like to share some of them with you today.
There are common characteristics within organizations that perform at very high levels, characteristics that are often missing in lower performing enterprises. I call them “cultural elements.”
Here are the six cultural elements I have found to be critical to cultural effectiveness:
Core Values – How we deal with our stakeholders.
Products & Services – How well we are meeting stakeholder needs.
Direction – A clear understanding of our direction as an organization.
Structure – Our organizational capacity to perform effectively.
Measurements – Being able to understand our progress.
Rewards – Recognizing associates for desired behavior and results.
Leaders who have done the work to properly “flesh out” each of these critical elements build high performance cultures that:
Consistently produce outstanding bottom-line results
Attract, motivate and retain top talent
Readily adapt to changing conditions
During my career I continually sought better ways to effectively communicate the need for these important cultural elements within the organizations of the leaders who reported to me. By doing this I made sure the elements were in place within every part of the organization (the “subcultures” of the enterprise).
Unfortunately, most managers tend to believe that only the top managers of an enterprise are responsible for organizational culture. I’ve found that the most important cultural leaders are in fact the divisional and departmental leaders. These leaders must be trained and held accountable for cultural leadership if any enterprise is to reach its full potential.
Remember, while outstanding enterprise-wide cultures may be ideally led from the top of the organization, having a "less than optimal" corporate culture should never be an excuse for leaders (at any level) not to assume the responsibility for maximizing the effectiveness of their own sub-culture. As long as the organization is viable, leaders of sub-cultures have all of the resources necessary to dramatically improve their workplace.
In the coming blogs we will look at each of the critical cultural elements and give every one of you the opportunity to objectively assess the potential of your present culture. We will also look at ways to develop specific action steps for building an improved workplace culture, no mater how good it is right now.
So, stop looking around for someone to fix your workplace culture, and get ready to take your own inherent, personal responsibility for creating an exciting and more productive workplace for yourself and everyone in your organization.
More Information
Great organizational cultures don’t just happen. They are created by leaders who understand the critical elements of high performance organizations. These leaders constantly monitor these critical elements within their organization to ensure that they are steadily applying leadership direction to constantly move their workplace cultures toward their true performance potential by building organizations that consistently:
Produce outstanding bottom-line results
Attract, motivate and retain top talent
Readily adapt to changing conditions
Making Culture Pay
An essential tool in maximizing the potential of your organization, Jerry's book "Making Culture Pay: Solving The Puzzle Of Organizational Effectiveness" will provide you with a new understanding of culture... and reveal a proven process for cultural renewal!