What Is Company Culture? Definition, Examples & Tips
This article is part of a larger series on Hiring.
Company culture represents the collective attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors of a company and its employees and how they relate to the actions of the business. It is one of the key factors to a company’s success and longevity, impacting operations, strategic planning, and, ultimately, overall business performance. Areas that are part of or influence company culture include corporate policies, management style, and core values.
Basics of Company Culture
Company culture—which starts at the beginning of the hiring process, from finding employees to interviewing and onboarding—drives how employees feel about working for your business once their basic needs of compensation and safety are ensured.
Click through the tabs below for more detail on some of the key elements that help shape your culture.
Other Key Components of a Great Company Culture
- Mutual Respect: At the end of the day, if there is no respect among staff, team members will never believe their culture is one worth contributing to. Although conflict occurs in a healthy workplace, mutual respect is essential to allowing a culture to grow and thrive.
- Individual and Team Trust: Trust is an attribute that flows throughout the entire organization. When it is strong and healthy, there is no limit to your company’s potential. When trust is waning, your chances of establishing a great company culture decrease a little every day.
- Communication: Good communication is essential within an organization. The definition of strong organizational communication needs to come from your employees, not your leadership team.
- Decision-making: Allowing some decision-making channels to run through non-leadership committees is a great indicator that the management team trusts the capability and expertise of the teams. This practice promotes team ownership and directly feeds into a cultural building exercise employees deeply appreciate.
- Goals/Strategies: Allowing team members into the strategic planning process, at least at the goal-setting level of planning, sends the message that you value their input.
- Adaptability: Being adaptable includes handling revolving markets, competition, and other business-threatening demands in addition to quickly pivoting to meet changing employee needs.
- Results Orientation: Nothing is more powerful than completing large projects as a team. When a results-driven mindset fuels the company, it promotes organizational processes and programs that matter.
- Teamwork: It is difficult to imagine a great company culture that does not promote inclusive teamwork. Your organization should avoid placing people in silos and prioritize an inclusive atmosphere where all departments and employees work together.
- Employee Engagement: To promote engagement, you have to focus on motivating and inspiring your team members (your greatest asset) to be part of your organization. Learning what makes them tick is essential.
- Learning Opportunities: Cost-effective growth opportunities are essential to maintain to be considered an employer who truly engages a multigenerational workforce.
- Meaning/Purpose: Beyond the employee’s paycheck, healthcare benefits, and vacation time, the attribute that your employees desire more than anything is purpose. They want to know that the role they play in your organization matters significantly.
- Safety: Physical safety, like for construction companies, and job security are important to employees. It’s your job to convince your team members that they are safe, valued, and cared for.
- Leadership Team Approachability: Nothing says “we are in this together” more than when the newest team member can walk into an executive team member’s office and speak their mind respectfully.
Company culture affects every step of the employment cycle, even the beginning. For help with hiring, check out our guide on how to hire new employees.
Tips for Building a Good Company Culture
Understanding company culture is one aspect of being a successful employer; building it is another. To build a solid company culture, you must take a holistic and integrated approach.
Mission and vision statements are key components of any business. They help set a goal of what you want to be and where you want to go. If you need help creating your vision and mission, see our articles with great examples of vision statements and mission statements.
To build a strong company culture, you have to live out your vision and mission. For example, a company focusing on improving healthcare options might have a very generous time off policy while a company that wants to be innovative may have workspaces that include items such as games and whiteboards to stimulate play and creativity.
Asking employees about the company’s strengths and weaknesses and if it is doing a good job acting on its core values will go a long way in developing a positive culture. You should also be intentional about asking a diverse group of employees in your company. A diverse group of employees will help you build an inclusive culture that will attract a large, diverse set of customers. Lastly, these types of conversations will also help you to know what questions to ask new applicants to see if they would be a good cultural fit.
Based on your employees’ responses and customers’ feedback, you may decide you need to change some aspects of your culture. That may mean changing core values, adding new policies, loosening some restrictions, or even revising your vision or mission statement. Being agile enough to change with the times will allow your culture to grow (and grow with) your businesses.
If you’ve built a great company culture, make sure you market that to current and prospective employees. Check out our articles on employer branding and how to advertise an open position.
Bottom Line
Understanding what defines your company’s culture and how you can develop and nurture that culture will help you to build a great place to work and a growing and thriving business. We’ve provided company culture examples to help you understand how to improve or promote the culture you already have in your business.