Wednesday 23 March 2016

Company Culture... Is it a truly Progressive Platform for a Company… Part One…

Is company culture serving as a platform of control or as a platform of empowerment for employees? Part One of a Two Part Special…

Ever wondered how the guy who spends all his time backbiting every honest soul that was unlucky enough to cross his path ends up becoming the success story and poster boy for the company that you love? We often attribute such a success to an unforeseen factor that propelled him to stardom, maybe he “has what it takes” or maybe management have being fooled by a clever operator who knows how to manipulate his way to the top!

Regardless of the reasons, it would not be possible if company culture did not support such behaviour. Let’s map the behaviours out in this use case:

Exhibit A - ‘The Hotshot’: A narcissistic taker type who has only time for himself and feels no fellowship with his workmates nor empathy towards them. He is expert at feigning concern when it is useful to achieving his own ends and makes some employees who are more ‘warm hearted and caring’ very nervous for reasons they cannot really explain.

Exhibit B - ‘Management’: They are a mix of old and young that are all ambitious, uncomfortably trusting of each other and locked into a common goal of running a company to make the most money possible. They share in a command in control mentality and are very harsh with neigh sayers, problem raisers and independent thinkers whom they view as ‘trouble-makers’ and a threat.

Exhibit C - ‘The ‘ordinary’ Employee’: They are a mix of personalities whom are attracted by the paycheque and being disengaged, they stay for the paycheque. Any other personality type just doesn’t cut it at the firm. When something unethical happens that offends their sensibilities, their first thought is “oh, glad it was not me that got it” rather then “how dare they do that to my fellow workmate”. The ordinary employee is disengaged and does exactly what management asked for without question but not an iota more. Learned helplessness aka ‘oh, what can I do about it?’ is a common coping mechanism for workplace issues, which allows them to ‘let it go’.



So, Exhibit B (management) sets up a workplace culture that allows Exhibit A (hotshot) to prey upon Exhibit C (everybody else) gaining favour with Exhibit B (management) allowing Exhibit A(hotshot) to become more powerful and climb the ladder at the expense of ???

If it sounds familiar, then you have practical experience with the downside of classical management theory. The fact is that company culture can make or break your company as it grows/declines over time. This is why you should tune in to my next blog post in two weeks time about tips on engineering your company culture…

About the author: John Mulhall is a Marketing Technologist and newly Minted Software Developer. John is also a committed blogger and from February 2016 onwards, will be publishing blogs every second week on topics around Technology, Leadership and Sustainable Capitalism.


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