Weekly eNewsletter

Sign Up for Your Free CorpU Weekly eNewsletter







Contribute
Management vs. Culture Print E-mail

Who is to Blame or Get Credit - Your Management or Your Organization's Culture?

Do you wish your organization were performing better? Of course, the answer is yes. And a "yes" answer will be more emphatic from those of you whose organizations are struggling. We all worry about our livelihood. Similar to the "nature versus nurture" question about whether one's genes or environment contributes more to an individual's personality and character, I pose this question: What influences an organization's future performance more - the competence of its current executive management team or the momentum or excess baggage of its culture?

Wouldn't We All Love a Crystal Ball that Works?

Some of you have been either lucky or astute enough to choose to work in an industry or public sector agency that has and may still have enjoyed substantial upside growth. I had little appreciation for this until I read the book Strategy and the Business Landscape by the Harvard Business School Professor Pankaj Ghemawat. Ghemawat's book ranked the highest to lowest industry sectors on a return on equity (ROE) basis for the years 1978 to 1998. It made so much sense. The highest were cosmetics, pharmaceuticals and tobacco and the lowest were steel, air transportation, and paper and forest.

If you knew these differences in advance when you were young and just entering the labor market, you could have pursued the winners and had a nice tailwind at your back - plus a more secure personal financial future and possibly higher job satisfaction, too. It's more likely to be fun to work at a place that is growing than shrinking. Think of the exhilarating experience of the young workforce today - even this afternoon - at Yahoo! or Google.

Then there is the reality of our current personal career situations. Some of us work for an organization with sustained high growth, but we work in a division or department for managers who are losers or a pain. The flip side is some of us are employed in an organization, such as a newspaper that is adversely threatened by technology (e.g., the Internet), but every day is an exciting thrill compared to the rote jobs of some of our friends.

Why can't we all have fun? Organizational success is not a zero-sum game where the winner's gains are offset by the loser's. Although Adam Smith's historic breakthrough 1776 book, The Wealth of Nations, was 903-pages long, its fame came from a simple message - we can all have a more prosperous life together (if countries specialize in what they are best at). Why can't Adam Smith's principles apply at the organizational level? Why today are so many of the companies highlighted in Tom Peters' and Robert H. Waterman's best-selling book of 1982, In Search of Excellence, bankrupt or no longer in existence (e.g., Kmart, Wang Labs, Delta Airlines, Amdahl and Digital Equipment)? The big question I am asking is: How much is an organization's future performance going to be determined by its leadership team or by its culture?



 
Untitled Document