8 Rules For Creating A Passionate Work Culture BY Paul Alofs
Several years ago I was in the Thomson Building in Toronto. I went down the hall to the small kitchen to get myself a cup of coffee. Ken Thomson was there, making himself some instant soup. At the time, he was the ninth-richest man in the world, worth approximately $19.6 billion. Enough, certainly, to afford a nice lunch. I looked at the soup he was stirring. “It suits me just fine,” he said, smiling.
Thomson understood value. Neighbors reported seeing him leave his
local grocery store with jumbo packages of tissues that were on sale. He
bought off-the-rack suits and had his old shoes resoled. Yet he had no
difficulty paying almost $76 million for a painting (for Peter Paul
Rubens’s Massacre of the Innocents, in 2002). He sought value, whether it was in business, art, or groceries.
In 1976, Thomson inherited a $500-million business empire that was
built on newspapers, publishing, travel agencies, and oil. By the time
he died, in 2006, his empire had grown to $25 billion.
He left both a financial legacy and an art legacy, but his most
lasting legacy might be the culture he created. Geoffrey Beattie, who
worked closely with him, said that Ken wasn’t a business genius. His
success came from being a principled investor and from surrounding
himself with good people and staying loyal to them. In return he earned
their loyalty.
For the long-term viability of any enterprise, Thomson understood
that you needed a viable corporate culture. It, too, had to be
long-term. So he cultivated good people and kept them. Thomson worked
with honest and competent business managers and gave them his long-term
commitment and support. From these modest principles, an empire grew.
Thomson created a culture that extended out from him and has lived
after him. Here are eight rules for creating the right conditions for a
culture that reflects your creed:
1. Hire the right people
Hire for passion and commitment first, experience second, and
credentials third. There is no shortage of impressive CVs out there, but
you should try to find people who are interested in the same things you
are. You don’t want to be simply a stepping stone on an employee’s
journey toward his or her own (very different) passion. Asking the right
questions is key: What do you love about your chosen career? What
inspires you? What courses in school did you dread? You want to get a
sense of what the potential employee believes.
2. Communicate
Once you have the right people, you need to sit down regularly with
them and discuss what is going well and what isn’t. It’s critical to
take note of your victories, but it’s just as important to analyze your
losses. A fertile culture is one that recognizes when things don’t work
and adjusts to rectify the problem. As well, people need to feel safe
and trusted, to understand that they can speak freely without fear of
repercussion.
The art of communication tends to put the stress on talking, but
listening is equally important. Great cultures grow around people who
listen, not just to each other or to their clients and stakeholders.
It’s also important to listen to what’s happening outside your walls.
What is the market saying? What is the zeitgeist? What developments,
trends, and calamities are going on?
3. Tend to the weeds
A culture of passion capital can be compromised by the wrong people.
One of the most destructive corporate weeds is the whiner. Whiners
aren’t necessarily public with their complaints. They don’t stand up in
meetings and articulate everything they think is wrong with the company.
Instead, they move through the organization, speaking privately, sowing
doubt, strangling passion. Sometimes this is simply the nature of the
beast: they whined at their last job and will whine at the next.
Sometimes these people simply aren’t a good fit. Your passion isn’t
theirs. Constructive criticism is healthy, but relentless complaining is
toxic. Identify these people and replace them.
4. Work hard, play hard
To obtain passion capital requires a work ethic. It’s easy to do what
you love. In the global economy we can measure who has a superior work
ethic, who is leading in productivity. Not many industries these days
thrive on a forty-hour work week. A culture where everyone understands
that long hours are sometimes required will work if this sacrifice is
recognized and rewarded.
5. Be ambitious
“Make no little plans: they have no magic to stir men’s blood.” These
words were uttered by Daniel Burnham, the Chicago architect whose
vision recreated the city after the great fire of 1871. The result of
his ambition is an extraordinary American city that still has the magic
to stir men’s blood. Ambition is sometimes seen as a negative these
days, but without it we would stagnate. You need a culture that supports
big steps and powerful beliefs. You can see these qualities in cities
that have transformed themselves. Cities are the most visible examples
of successful and failed cultures. Bilbao and Barcelona did so and
became the envy of the world and prime tourist destinations. Pittsburgh
reinvented itself when the steel industry withered. But Detroit wasn’t
able to do the same when the auto industry took a dive.
6. Celebrate differences
When choosing students for a program, most universities consider more
than just marks. If you had a dozen straight-A students who were from
the same socio-economic background and the same geographical area, you
might not get much in the way of interesting debate or interaction.
Great cultures are built on a diversity of background, experience, and
interests. These differences generate energy, which is critical to any
enterprise.
7. Create the space
Years ago, scientists working in laboratories were often in
underground bunkers and rarely saw their colleagues; secrecy was prized.
Now innovation is prized. In cutting-edge research and academic
buildings, architects try to promote as much interaction as possible.
They design spaces where people from different disciplines will come
together, whether in workspace or in common leisure space. Their
reasoning is simple: it is this interaction that helps breed
revolutionary ideas. Creative and engineering chat over coffee. HR and
marketing bump into one another in the fitness center. Culture is made
in the physical space. Look at your space and ask, “Does it promote
interaction and connectivity?”
8. Take the long view
If your culture is dependent on this quarter’s earnings or this
month’s sales targets, then it is handicapped by short-term thinking.
Passion capitalists take the long view. We tend to overestimate what we
can do in a year, but underestimate what we can do in five years. The
culture needs to look ahead, not just in months but in years and even
decades.
The writer Arthur Koestler said that a writer’s ambition should be to
trade a hundred contemporary readers for ten readers in ten years’ time
and for one reader in a hundred years’ time. Lasting influence is
better than a burst of fame. Keep an eye on the long view.
Excerpted from Passion Capital: The World's Most Valuable Asset
© 2012 by Paul Alofs. Published by Signal, a division of Random House
of Canada Limited. Reproduced by arrangement with the Publisher. All
rights reserved.
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