Are you driving away employees with sub-par company culture?
Employee-centric culture is essential to inspire and retain your team.
Plenty of factors pushed workers to make their exit during the Great Resignation, but company culture was the largest indicator of which companies lost employees, according to the MIT Sloan Management Review/Glassdoor Culture 500.
And a recent LinkedIn Global Talent Trends report shows that today’s job seekers are no longer settling for a subpar corporate culture. In fact, people are looking at almost twice as many job posts as they did just a few years ago, stopping at those that elaborate on culture. (Take note, HR teams: that’s a 67% engagement boost when a job post mentions culture.)
So what are today’s knowledge workers looking for in a company culture?
In my experience, many enterprises have a misguided view of culture. They focus on company rituals and special occasions when what employees really want is a corporate culture that values meaningful work, collaboration and goal achievement. After all, culture isn’t just holiday parties and happy hours. It dictates how people work and the unique qualities that make an organization successful and is shaped by who you hire, fire, reward or reprimand.
As the Great Resignation gives way to the Great Reshuffle, enterprises looking to win the war on talent must lean into an employee-centric culture that inspires people through engagement, collaboration and reciprocal accountability. Here’s how:
Cultivate engagement
Knowledge workers, those one billion employees who sit behind desks and provide business value with their brainpower, need engagement to thrive. They need to know exactly what they’re doing, why they’re doing it and how it benefits their coworkers, organizations and customers.
But creating the kind of open, communicative culture that unlocks engagement is hard. And maintaining consistent communication with distributed teams or when scaling an enterprise is even harder.
That’s why some of the most successful modern enterprises (think Google) use a management and goal-setting methodology called objectives and key results or OKRs. OKRs help executives and managers create a common language for the entire enterprise to discuss what’s valuable–namely, the company’s mission and its strategy for achieving that mission.
The company’s strategy and mission become the foundation for the core of the OKRs methodology — every employee and team sets ambitious goals and measurable results to be achieved over a certain period of time. And because all business activities should support the organization, all OKRs flow from the stated mission and strategy. As a result, employees at every level can see how their responsibilities advance the company’s success. And this connection to meaningful work inspires a culture of engagement and purpose.
How does a modern enterprise adopt and maintain the OKRs methodology?
OKRs, or at least the roots of the methodology, have been around since the 1950s, but dedicated OKRs technology makes it easier to adopt, implement and scale in the modern workplace. Using a platform, everyone across the enterprise has visibility into the organizational strategy, as well as all team and individual OKRs. They can all see how their team and individual efforts lift up the entire organization — and if they’re moving the needle.
Initiate collaboration
There’s little doubt that the future of work is hybrid. But organizations walk a fine line between offering a culture of freedom to work from anywhere and a culture of silos and isolation. The antidote is connectedness through collaboration.
OKRs themselves embody collaboration. Setting team and individual OKRs should be negotiated between managers and the OKRs’ owners. Managers may set overly ambitious goals, employees may set conservative goals (especially in environments where hitting KPI targets are rewarded) and together they meet somewhere in the middle to set reasonably ambitious goals. This collaboration continues well after the OKRs are established. They are tracked and reassessed over time. After all, OKRs are solution agnostic and designed to keep organizations agile and capable of responding to threats and opportunities.
Thoughtful OKRs aren’t just developed collaboratively; they also enable collaboration. Whether remote or office-based, employees need visibility into what’s happening around them to transcend natural department silos and a “going it alone” mindset.
OKRs help employees understand what everyone is working on by creating a web of objectives that tie one colleague’s roles and responsibilities to another’s and anchor them to larger company priorities. By pinpointing related objectives, OKRs show the interconnectedness of each employees’ responsibilities. This objective mapping helps employees coordinate across reporting lines, enable cross-functional teams and cultivate a collaborative culture.
Celebrate accountability
The OKRs methodology prioritizes measurable outcomes (what the business wants to accomplish) over outputs (the actions needed to achieve those outcomes). And this laser focus on results sets crystal clear expectations for employees so they can succeed.
Of course, things don’t always go according to plan in the real world. So, the accountable culture that OKRs build must go both ways. Both managers and employees need to own things that don’t go well. And, with the measurable results OKRs provide, seeing success or failure isn’t hard.
There are no surprises with an effective OKRs platform. Real-time data shows employees how their efforts are (or aren’t) progressing toward their goals while leaders get a bird’s eye view of activity. Analytics, progress monitoring and OKR auditing allow managers and executives to track progress and make changes when necessary.
This OKR-enabled accountability has another benefit for employees and leaders alike. It eliminates micromanagement. With each employee and team understanding the outcomes they own, managers can focus on supporting their teams instead of looking over employees’ shoulders all day.
Superficial perks are nice to have, but they are often just distractions. Instead of attracting and maintaining talent solely through corporate perks, enterprises should focus on what makes a modern workforce thrive: workplace engagement, collaboration and accountability.