by Laura Smith, Head of HR and Community at Trade Ledgerâ˘
In fact, itâs the 3rd most commonly cited reason for failure after poor market fit and insufficient capital. Yet so few companies proactively manage their culture and people the way they would other sources of competitive advantage, like their IP or manufacturing process. But thatâs changing. With a demonstrable and strong correlation between company culture and business performance, more effort is being invested into understanding how to build and retain high-performing teams. Here are some of my thoughts.
Think about the most talented people you know. Are they actively looking for a new job? Usually the answer is no â because the best talent are lavished with interesting work and perks, and companies are continuously fighting to retain them.
So why do those companies looking for the best talent post on job boards?
In my experience, if you want to attract the best people you need to do five things really well:
Iâve never really thought it was the job of HR to improve morale â winning and learning every day takes care of that. Similarly, I donât believe itâs solely the role of HR to map out an employeeâs learning needs and create formal learning courses. Our role, alongside leaders is to build an open and rewarding learning environment, to attract the smartest people who can share their knowledge with others and allow people to create their own learning path.
The fact is that in todayâs fast-moving environment if youâre not learning every day on the job, then youâre probably working for a dinosaur. If we gave you a learning plan, it would be obsolete within a month.
In todayâs world of shorter job tenure, everyone needs to be more mindful of their own development. A few ways that you can encourage internal knowledge sharing include: facilitating lunch & learn sessions, sharing âweekly blundersâ so others can learn from it, and fostering a no blame culture/physiological safety, so people feel safe to step out of their comfort zone.
SMART goals can suffer from two fatal flaws â they can be too long-dated for a system of flux and theyâre another form of micromanaging in a world where autonomy increasingly counts. In a fast moving, innovative company, it is near impossible to predict the exact steps you will need to take to achieve your overall objective. Rather than box people with SMART objectives and be too prescriptive on the path people need to take, we focus on the outcome we want people to reach and align to where our company is heading. We then empower and trust our people to figure out theâhow theyâre going to get thereâ themselves. After all, thatâs why we hired them.
In the industrial age, the main goal for companies was to operate at the highest scale. Work was therefore organized into standard, repeatable tasks with strict processes and formal hierarchies. But we now live in the information age where we need to give employees â and teams â the freedom and autonomy to learn, problem solve and grow. We have ditched the heavy performance management tools, and annual misery. They slow us down, and become a tick box exercise. Letâs be honest, nobody likes an annual performance review.
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We now live in the information age where we need to give employees â and teams â the freedom and autonomy to learn, problem solve and grow. So throw out the other baggage from the past â like SMART objectives, meetings for meetingsâ sake, and job descriptions â and challenge the status quo.
So throw out the other baggage from the past â like SMART objectives, meetings for meetingsâ sake, and job descriptions â and challenge the status quo.
I remember when I was first referred to âthe employee handbookâ. A ring binder of at least 100 pages that would be given out to new employees and set everything from expense policy to dress code. I couldnât believe such a thing still â or ever â existed.
In the company I work for now, we make software that runs banks. How can we trust people to do that but not to expense a meal? The answer is that common sense must prevail. You canât legislate for every possible rogue action, but instead youâve got to assume that, on balance, most people will do the right thing.
The command and control management style is thing of the past. A bottom-up leadership style empowers teams to operate independently and with the freedom to move quickly. This is a great benefit for fast moving companies, to help increase productivity and efficiency. We hire people who aim to solve tomorrowâs problems â before we may even know they exist â rather than waiting for managers to instruct their next steps.
Invest in your leadership capability and be clear on the leadership style you want to foster⌠it will have a huge impact on your culture. And once you find the right leadership style for your business, the rest in terms of the right structure will follow.
Many businesses are ditching the outdated pyramid hierarchical structures filled with bureaucracy, for smaller cross-functional, self-organized teams. Whether you organise your people into squads, tribes or scrum teams â productivity can thrive when you have the right leadership style and structure in place for your business.
Culture gets to the heart of how a business functions. However, a great culture doesnât just happen by itself. Like a garden, culture grows organically. But, in the same way as you need to mow the lawn and cut the hedges to get the garden you want, you need to cultivate the right culture. What use is posting values on the wall if the leaders donât embody them or you donât expect people to live up to them? Negative behaviour begets negative behaviour in the same way as positive behaviour begets positive behaviour. And since culture has been proven to make such a significant difference to performance â it canât just be left to itself.
At Trade Ledgerâ˘, we created a Culture Hub, that consists of a group of employees who continuously focus on bringing our culture and values to life. This can range from running weekly round-up sessions (to keep everyone informed on business updates) all the way to organising our social events â because having fun is equally important to us!
Imagine if you kept a secret about who you really are and couldnât tell anyone at work for fear of discrimination. Could you do your best work? Would you be able to reach your full potential? Diversity and equality arenât important because thereâs a section in your annual report devoted to them. Diversity and equality matter because you want everyone to bring their whole self to work and be valued for who they are â this is when people can reach their full potential.
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Diversity and equality arenât important because thereâs a section in your annual report devoted to them. Diversity and equality matter because you want everyone to bring their whole self to work and be valued for who they are. If you want to attract the very best people, avoid asking them to choose between unpalatable trade-offs, like having to choose between motherhood and a career when both should be possible.
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At Trade Ledgerâ˘, the best thing we have done was focus on building an inclusive culture first, and it naturally brings diversity to the workplace. As noted, diversity advocate VernÄ Myers puts it,
âDiversity is being invited to the party. Inclusion is being asked to danceâ
Inclusive cultures require top-down commitment from the leadership team, a transparent culture and a review of every step of the employee life cycle. If want to attract the very best people, avoid asking them to choose between unpalatable trade-offs, like having to choose between motherhood and a career when both should be possible. Try to walk the talk, donât just talk the talk: being more flexible with your team at work can go much further than a few extra $$.
Companies need to offer a competitive financial package for sure. There is so much more transparency than in the past that people know what they could get paid elsewhere. But paying a big premium is unlikely to get you much better people in my experience. Why? Because although people expect to be paid well for the work they do, thatâs not enough. People want to be constantly learning. People want autonomy. People want to feel comfortable in their work environment, which to some people might mean a foosball table, but to most means a tolerance for risk-taking and forgiveness for mistakes. And, increasingly, people want to know the work they do makes a difference. Being bullish, I believe we can continue to make the world much better â because the best people will gravitate towards the places where they can have the most social impact.
At Trade Ledger⢠we are reinventing lending to boost economic growth and social mobility. If youâd like to speak about joining our smart and fast-growing team, please drop me an email at laura@tradeledger.io.