You just hired the perfect person: great work ethic, positive and upbeat, they show up early, leave late, take ten minutes of a fifteen-minute break, and do more than expected and more than you ask for. Now let’s take that person and put them into an environment where people are negative, aren’t held accountable, take three days off for a hang-nail, show up at 8:05 then spend 45 minutes “getting ready” for their day, start preparing to leave at 3:30 and leave at 5:00 like there’s a fire drill. What happens to that perfect hire? One of two things: they either become just like everyone else after about a month, or they leave.
Whatever your culture is, it has a substantial impact on performance. There is significant peer pressure to conform to the culture, be it good or bad. This peer pressure is one of the four main motivators for people who belong to any group. Positive peer pressure is what took my grades from Cs in the public high school to As and Bs in the private high school. It’s also what ensured that I made over 200 phone calls per day in my first job as a stock broker. If you’re a great team or organization with a great culture, fantastic. Unfortunately, most organizations have negative cultures, or at least elements of them.
Culture is top down; it begins at the top and flows down through the entire organization. Whatever the leadership team eats, breathes, walks and talks related to culture, will become the culture. As a leader, you don’t get what you want, you get what you tolerate and allow. And what you tolerate and allow you tacitly condone and get more of. If you allow people to miss their numbers year after year, when it’s evident they aren’t making the calls and doing the necessary work, you’ll get more of that. If you allow negativity in the workplace and don’t hold people accountable, you’ll get more negativity and more people not doing their job. On the flip side, if you lead by example, walk your talk, believe in people more than they believe in themselves, empower them, listen to them, give them all necessary tools and resources, and hold them to a higher standard, you’ll get more of that.
The culture in an organization is how people treat other people, how they treat work, and how they treat the work environment. Great cultures have rules and decrees regarding these three items. Written rules and decrees. Here are a few examples:
Your rules and decrees, totaling about eight to fifteen in number, should be framed and prominently posted in several highly-visible areas in the workplace on a document titled: Rules and Decrees of the Workplace. Prospective employees should also receive a copy of these during the interview process and you should have a conversation with them about how they feel about these. By the way, full acceptance of the rules and decrees is a non-negotiable prerequisite to being hired.
When Malcolm Butler was limited to a few special teams plays in Super Bowl 52, many people said that move cost the Patriots the Super Bowl. Maybe, and my contention is that, had they let him play and won Super Bowl 52, the Patriots would not have been back to play in Super Bowl 53. No one who breaks the rules gets a pass. If this is allowed even once, people inside the organization start to question the integrity of the culture, and the culture starts to crumble. When you’re more interested in winning, or making a sale, than living by your values, it’s the beginning of the end. Again, no one gets a pass on the rules, not even your top sales rep. This doesn’t mean people don’t get a mulligan. You can allow a mistake or two, but address it immediately, and keep the leash short. No chronic offenders who are making blatant and/or repetitive mistakes. While an occasional mistake may be inevitable, carelessness, ignorance, and apathy aren’t.
A great culture can’t simply be written out, placed on the wall, and left to die. It needs to be kept alive and well by visiting it often, talking about it, and reviewing it. Repetition is important, because like any new habit, it will take time to imbed the culture into the consciousness and subconsciousness of everyone in the organization. Once it’s locked in and habitually followed, discussing the culture keeps it on everyone’s radar screens and ensures it is remembered and adhered to. Also, it may be necessary to tweak some rules or decrees from time to time. Though many rules and decrees, like the examples I gave, aren’t likely to change, there may be times when changes in people, technology, and other unforeseen future events, make an edit necessary.
As part of the organization, the sales department is included in all rules and decrees. Everyone, from leadership to the mailroom, must be on the same page when it comes to culture. So, while the sales department may have some additional rules and decrees related to activity, quotas, and other items, building an all-in, solid organizational culture is what will ensure the success of the sales culture.
John Chapin is a motivational sales speaker and trainer. For his free newsletter, or to have him speak at your next event, go to: www.completeselling.com. John has over 31 years of sales experience as a number one sales rep and is the author of the 2010 sales book of the year: Sales Encyclopedia. You can reprint this article provided you keep contact information in place. | E-mail: johnchapin@completeselling.com.
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