5 ELEMENTS OF GROWTH CULTURE
Creating a culture that fosters the growth and development of team members is a battle worth fighting.
Culture, by definition, is the shared values and beliefs that guide thinking and behavior. You would be wrong if you thought of culture as soft or some magical dust in the air in a few exceptional companies. Culture is the foundation that sets organizations and teams up for sustained success.
Peter Drucker famously said, “Culture eats strategy for breakfast.” Drucker didn’t mean the strategy wasn’t necessary, but he did know that when a group of people are aligned with their values and beliefs, their habits and behaviors would be a more promising route to sustained success.
Companies don’t grow, people grow, and they grow companies.
Embracing the responsibility that you both shape and impact the culture of your organization, team, or family is one of the most critical mindset shifts that happen in any leader’s journey. The reason is simple, when leaders prioritize culture, team members will gladly give the best version of themselves daily.
If leaders prioritize culture, team members will gladly give the best version of themselves daily.
Five Elements of a Growth Culture
Whether you are the CEO of a Fortune 500 company, lead a small team, or guide a family, five primary elements make up a growth culture:
1. Intentional Growth
Change is inevitable. Growth is intentional
Core values are the fundamental truths one holds to be true. Many organizations have defined their core values, but most don’t have one centered around learning and development.
How about creating continuous growth is a core value, the description of which could be "We’re going to get better every day. We need guys that want to get in the gym and work on their own. We’re going to get a culture in which they want to get better every day and that goes for academics and growing as young men as well."
3. Internal Promotions
Proving to employees that efforts to promote a growth mindset are more than just lip service. A study by a leading research group found that 40% of employees who left their job cited a “lack of future career development” as a primary motivator for quitting.
Leaders must consider how their actions — especially hiring and promotion practices — reflect on their commitment to career development and a growth mindset. When new positions open up, consider hiring from within. This doesn’t mean hiring from the outside is evil or shouldn’t be strongly considered. However, giving internal team members a serious look at promotional opportunities is a fantastic way to foster a growth culture.
4. Safety to Fail
Promoting a culture that embraces failure and learning from mistakes is a hard thing to do. No one sets out or desires failure. However, the best leaders understand that failure isn’t evil and it’s an essential step to long-term success.
Can you imagine if innovative entrepreneurs like Henry Ford or Steve Jobs were in a culture that immediately shut them down the minute they failed? We wouldn’t have great cars or awesome phones, we would have quitters.
Failure is not final, failure is feedback.
This is why I coach leaders to think about failure differently. Failure is not final, failure is feedback.
5. Continual Coaching
Psychologist Abraham Maslow famously said, “Every day, we can step into growth with courage or retreat into safety.” The key word here is courage. Without people willing to step out and do something when they are scared, creating a growth culture is almost impossible. It turns out that’s something you help people develop.
It’s the person’s responsibility of whether or not they will take growth steps. You can’t claim the outcome, but you can coach and encourage them.
The key here is leaders being willing and able to provide continual coaching and feedback. Coaching is a critical leadership skill that should be taught across the organization.
Closing
Only you and your team members know if the elements of intentional growth, core values, internal promotions, safety to fail, and continual coaching are present in your team or organization.
Regardless of where you are, strong or weak, there has never been a more critical time to create a culture that values growth and development because it’s a battle worth fighting for.
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