Can Connecting Organizational Culture to Business Strategy Help Unlock Better Financial Performance? New CEO Study from Heidrick & Struggles Says Yes
Heidrick & Struggles (Nasdaq: HSII) released a report highlighting that while 82% of CEOs prioritized corporate culture during the pandemic, many failed to align it with financial performance. The study identified 'culture accelerators' who outperformed peers in revenue growth by focusing on culture as a strategy driver. Key findings reveal that 31% of CEOs prioritized culture for improving financial performance, yet 74% indicated employee engagement with cultural values. The report suggests that linking culture to strategy is crucial for success in today's market.
- Culture accelerators reported a 9.1% three-year CAGR in revenue, significantly higher than the 4.4% of non-accelerators.
- 54 CEOs identified as culture accelerators exceeded their culture goals more frequently, indicating effective cultural alignment.
- Many CEOs (nearly three in four) prioritize strategy or processes over corporate culture for driving financial performance.
- Challenges remain in meeting goals related to strategy change and ethics compliance.
CHICAGO, July 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Building and maintaining a strong corporate culture during the pandemic proved a priority for the vast majority of CEOs at large companies globally, but most leaders are not effectively aligning culture with financial performance, according to a new report from Heidrick & Struggles (Nasdaq: HSII), the premier provider of global leadership advisory and on-demand talent solutions, serving the senior-level talent and consulting needs of the world's top organizations.
The global CEO survey found that
"The pandemic was a true test of company cultures globally," said Rose Gailey, a partner and global lead for organization acceleration and culture shaping for Heidrick Consulting at Heidrick & Struggles. "It's become clear that thriving cultures will be the linchpin of success for companies going forward – but what we found most surprising in our results is how few of the CEOs we surveyed recognized the critical role culture can play in supporting business performance, particularly if they create the right metrics to assess their progress on an ongoing basis."
Aligning culture with the bottom line: How companies can accelerate progress reports the findings of a survey of 500 CEOs in nine countries around the world and examines how culture propels organizational performance as more companies begin returning to the office and navigating new workplace dynamics such as hybrid work environments and remote workforces.
In Their Culture Focus, CEOs List Various Goals Led by Financial Progress
CEOs listed various reasons for setting culture as a priority the last three years, with
Still, marked variation among CEOs emerged in reaching their organizations' cultural goals. Over half met goals, such as increasing employee engagement, strengthening diversity and inclusion and improving financial performance. But it proved harder to meet goals for reinforcing a change in strategy and addressing ethics or compliance issues. Regardless of success in reaching a specific result,
"Culture can play a decisive role in helping businesses adapt and succeed in today's fast-changing environment and uncertain world," said Gailey. "The most effective cohort of culture leaders in this survey aligned culture to strategy and operating models, and our report reveals lessons that apply to the hybrid work challenges all leaders now face."
What "Culture Accelerators" Do Differently
Companies often recognize they need to align strategy, operating models and culture, but many don't know where to start. This isn't the case with the 54 CEOs identified in the study as "culture accelerators" who explore culture with strategic intent and focus on their employees:
- Forty-eight percent center on culture to reinforce a change in strategy or direction versus
22% of others. These findings and the stronger financial results they generate suggest that starting with culture may be the right first step. - More often, they identify the culture elements that impact financial performance as people-related, and they center on customer and quality, and collaboration and trust.
- Forty-eight percent put diversity and inclusion efforts front and center versus
30% of other CEOs. - Two-thirds completely met or exceeded their culture goals, with
15% exceeding those goals versus5% of other CEOs.
"The survey results reinforce the business case for linking company culture to strategy and creating broad engagement with the culture," said Gailey. "A thriving culture is among a CEO's best options for accelerating performance in today's marketplace."
Select Set of "Culture Connectors" Are Even More Effective
Within the culture accelerators, the study identified 30 CEOs who were labeled as "culture connectors." These CEOs live the culture by focusing more tightly on clear, effective communication internally and externally and by engaging all their employees.
- Four of five selected "personal commitment to focusing on culture" versus
66% of culture accelerators and45% of other CEOs. - Nearly two-thirds of the culture connectors who believe appreciation and recognition support financial performance said those characteristics are prevalent in their culture, nearly double the share of other companies.
- These CEOs hold more two-way dialogues with employees about the importance of culture and more large-scale dialogue discussions to develop culture than do other CEOs.
Principles for Building a Thriving Culture
Heidrick & Struggles' survey results reinforce the benefits companies gain when they link culture to strategy and create broad engagement with the culture. The firm's four principles of culture shaping can help any leader get started to achieve those benefits:
- Purposeful leadership: lead with purpose, inclusively and with influence and adapt leadership approaches to the way people work.
- Personal change: live the culture, make the links between culture and financial performance and challenge others to do so too.
- Broad engagement: build momentum for the culture shaping process with employees at all levels of the organization through energetic and communicative leadership.
- Systemic alignment: ensure talent processes, onboarding and training include ways to develop and bolster key aspects of culture and measure progress regularly.
About Heidrick & Struggles
Heidrick & Struggles (Nasdaq: HSII) is a premier provider of global leadership advisory and on-demand talent solutions, serving the senior-level talent and consulting needs of the world's top organizations. In our role as trusted leadership advisors, we partner with our clients to develop future-ready leaders and organizations, bringing together our services and offerings in executive search, diversity and inclusion, leadership assessment and development, organization and team acceleration, culture shaping and on-demand, independent talent solutions. Heidrick & Struggles pioneered the profession of executive search more than 65 years ago. Today, the firm provides integrated talent and human capital solutions to help our clients change the world, one leadership team at a time.® www.heidrick.com
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