Measure your company culture in real-time!
Copyright by Stephan Klaschka 2010-2024
From my series on how to build a successful BRG.1
It is difficult if not impossible to assess organizational culture directly. Instead, the common approach for managers favors surveys to measure organizational climate as a first step. However, surveys fall short in many ways and can lead to skewed results as input to managerial decision-making. Better than surveys is observing employee behavior with meaningful metrics.
What is your organizational culture?
No matter where you work, you are a part of it: the organizational culture. Culture is understood to comprise shared beliefs, values, norms, and traditions but also myths of employees about interpersonal relationships, behaviors, and activities of the organization.
A (favorable) strong culture indicates alignment with organizational values and goals – some call it the organization’s personality. This is the internal glue for collaboration and outstanding results as an organization. In a strong culture, ‘can do’ stories share ‘how things are being done around here’ that inspire and motivate employees to action and ‘organizational citizenship behavior’. A strong culture supports employee satisfaction and retention as well as innovation and productivity. (See also my post on: How to create an innovation culture with diversity!)
In contrast, the misalignment of values and goals in an unfavorable weak culture has an eroding effect. They easily lead to extensive rules and bureaucracy that rely on exercising control. Working in this place is not much fun. Don’t expect anyone to go the extra mile!
Unfortunately, organizational culture is a slippery and complex subject, which makes it hard to grasp – and hard to measure directly. It is easier to feel than to express.
– Try it! How does the culture of your organization feel in your gut? How about putting it in words?
How to measure culture?
A common approach is to measure a company’s organizational climate by looking at the culture’s outcomes or consequences rather than trying to grasp culture directly. Thereby, the climate is used as a surrogate marker for the underlying culture, since outcomes are easier to observe and to measure.
Here we find a handle on whether the employees are happy at work and feel valued, if they enjoy their work environment and trust their colleagues, if they go the ‘extra mile’ for their team – or if they are frustrated, disengaged, or even act hostile against coworkers or the organization.
Factors to establish metrics offer themselves relating to –for example- communication, accountability, behavioral standards, rewards, trust, and commitment.
Organizational climate’s primary driver is daily leadership which influences the expectations as well as the behavior of all individuals in the organization. The leadership also determines the organizational structure, another key to an organization’s effectiveness. Both enable the organization to reach its goals but also reflect priorities and heavily affect how employees communicate, collaborate, and interact with each other.
Many factors obscure the clear picture including a rapidly growing workforce and geographic separation but also the way we actually measure organizational culture.
Yet another survey?
Many companies invest in surfacing climate data to ‘feel the pulse’ of their staff and to confirm positive effects or apply corrective action to adverse findings.
The most common way to measure climate is a climate survey repeated to compare changes over time. Despite our daily information overload, many companies typically use surveys to collect data from as many employees as possible to paint a representative picture of the company.
Surveys seem the first tool in the managerial arsenal. They appear attractive, simple, and powerful. Survey results are seen as straightforward, clear, quantifiable, and reflecting the ‘truth’ since the workforce was asked directly.
‑ But are surveys truly the best tool available or even a proper tool at all as a starting point?
What is wrong with surveys?
Unfortunately, surveys are far from ideal for several reasons.
The first issue we face is that there is no common standard for measuring the ‘climate’. Every organization or consultant comes up with a different scale. If an organization introduces its scale and applies its metrics consistently, it can build a database over time. The data, however, only compares directly against other client organizations or industries that were measured similarly, i.e. sharing the same scale, at a premium for this proprietary benchmarking.
Even worse, results hardly compare because surveys ask questions relying on terminology and language. A slight nuance in the phrasing of a question may change the meaning and influence the responses. After all, words are ambiguous and open for interpretation – and even more so in a multicultural society and multi-lingual. Terminology does often not get defined clearly; for example, who is meant exactly when asking about ‘management’ in a matrixed organization?
For consistency and easy processing, they typically come with a fixed set of response options such as multiple choice, which can limit the responders’ options and influence what they respond.
Often overlooked, the real workload comes after the survey closes in the analysis, when you start slicing the data to combine questions, and sub-populations or start exploratory analyses in an afterthought with all the shiny data you find in your hands that seem to open endless opportunities for finding answers. This is where you easily run out of time or budget – and where it becomes tempting to cut corners just to finish up and deliver results while sacrificing depth and consistency.
Surveys tend to be inherently skewed – Why?
When was the last time you enjoyed taking a survey?
Our email inboxes and social apps are full of customer service surveys for a recent purchase or some service call over the phone or online. The whole world seems to want to improve their services – and sends us a survey.
However, surveys are far from ideal for several reasons including these (and many more):
Fatigue – There is no shortage of surveys these days. Coming back to our information overload and time constraints, many people just don’t want to fill out another questionnaire or find time for it in the first place. ‑ Did you ever give random responses or skipped questions just to get it over?
Bias - Typically, we give more negative feedback when we are upset rather than positive feedback when we are content.
Privacy – Some other questions you may not feel comfortable answering in the first place because they invade your privacy by collecting data with questionable benefit to you.
Anonymity – in the computer age, anonymity is hard to find. Even in an otherwise anonymous survey, the combination of responses can identify individuals under certain circumstances feeding privacy concerns.
Past – Surveys measure the past. Even the most credible survey questions inquire about past behavior at best, which is the most solid data you can get out of a survey. The results may be good for forensics but hardly reflect the current situation.
Diversity – a diverse workforce can come with communication barriers of language or cultural background that lead to misunderstanding. Geographic idiosyncrasies can induce further bias in distributed organizations.
Delay – surveys take time to prepare, to conduct, and to analyze. Don’t expect to get the results anytime soon, especially because you cannot control when your responders choose to respond. You have to adjust to their schedule, so getting survey results removes you far from ‘real-time’.
Precision – in surveys, you can easily measure everything to a dot and even farther to the right of the decimal point. Some give you the tendency to ask and measure too much just because we can or we feel the results (and our work) look more credible this way. Often it is an illusion that a higher level of precision adds to clarity when it adds to inertia instead of a flood of obscure information irrelevant to the decision you want to make.
The list goes on… you got the point. The question remains what is a better approach to measuring organizational climate?
Why it is better to measure behavior
A survey measures our intent – not our behavior. Unarguably, behavior is a much stronger indicator than intent. It comes down to whether we observe people putting their money where their mouth is or if we get only the lip service that a survey represents. – Think of it as the litmus test you remember from chemistry class: It shows you the truth and reveals whether your assumptions hold true!
Let us look at the benefits of measuring behavior using the same list again:
Fatigue – As human beings, we can refuse to respond to a survey ‑ but we cannot stop behavior as such. Even if we refuse to respond, this is our observable behavior and becomes measurable. For example, if large parts of the surveyed staff do not respond to the survey, this tells you something about the organization and what is important to the staff.
Privacy and Anonymity – Usually, your observable behavior as an employee is not a privacy concern, since you are out in the open and visible to your co-workers anyway. Again, you cannot not show behavior once you agree to go to work, there is nowhere to hide.
(Let’s not derail by focusing on or encouraging questionable, unethical,or even illegal intrusion of privacy at the workplace or outside.)
Past – Our observable behavior is now, it is the present. You can’t get better real-time data!
Diversity – For observations, it does not matter if your workforce is diverse or understands the questions you ask. There are no communication barriers when it comes to observing behavior. Quite the opposite holds true: employee behavior can help you to better identify communication barriers or other issues that a survey would not reveal!
Delay – observing behavior also takes time but it is mostly the time to identify what you want to observe for what reason as well as observing it and then summarizing the results. There are no polishing questions and response options. You get results faster because you are on your schedule and do not have to wait for responses to trickle in.
Precision – the key is to measure only as much as needed, i.e. to establish necessary and actionable facts. Forget the fluff and focus on the one or two most important aspects needed for effective decision-making.
How to measure behavior?
Now, measuring behavior is not always easy. It requires thinking through the cause-and-effect dependencies. – A well-known example of how not to do it is the questionable relation of using the price of butter in Bangladesh to predict the stock market in the USA…
What the right metrics are depends on what you want to find out. What is the underlying business problem you are trying to solve? Many roads can lead to Rome, so to speak, but the basic idea is to keep your target simple. Choose a target that is meaningful, robust, and easy to observe.
Clarity helps. As much as we crave being informed and gathering data this approach is not helpful, since it tends to produce clutter. Instead, focus on measuring the minimum you need as the basis for making a sound decision. Don’t fall for the nice-to-have and garnish data you could have in addition.
How precise do you need the results really to be? – As an example, you may be concerned about low meeting attendance. Does it make a difference for your decision-making if you find out that in three consecutive meetings “63.26%, 58.18%, and 69.4% of the invitees did not show up” versus “on average, 2/3 don’t attend”? – Let me guess, “2/3” does just fine to decide slimming down who is invited in the future or to change the purpose of the meeting, right?
The key is to stick to clearly observable behavior. Some solid behavioral data may already exist within the organization. – For example, a long tenure and low turnover may reflect that employees prefer to stay with the organization, while many internal job applications reflect dissatisfaction with their current position or department.
Bottom line
Next time you think of running a survey consider taking a close look at employee behavior first!
Stay tuned for my next post: Job description for an Executive Sponsor
From my series on how to build a successful BRG (=Business Resource Group) group, i.e. a business-focused ERG (=Employee Resource Group) first published on OrgChanger.com.