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Your company is an organism; its cells need to divide to multiply, they need to differentiate to become something new. Donât worry about what youâre going to loseâthink about what youâre going to become.
But one thing could not have been more plain: Figuring out how to build a sustainable creative culture - one that didnât just pay lip service to the importance of things like honesty, excellence, communication, originality, and self-assessment but really committed to them, no matter how uncomfortable that became - wasnât a singular assignment. It was a day-in-day-out, full-time job. And one that I wanted to do.
Culture isnât something you can build up and then ignore. At Netflix, we are constantly debating our culture and expecting it will continually evolve. To build a team that is innovative, fast, and flexible, keep things a little bit loose. Welcome constant change. Operate a little closer toward the edge of chaos. Donât provide a musical score and build a symphonic orchestra. Work on creating those jazz conditions and hire the type of employees who long to be part of an improvisational band. When it all comes together, the music is beautiful.
I have seen the consequences of attempting to shortcut this natural process of growth often in the business world, where executives attempt to âbuyâ a new culture of improved productivity, quality, morale, and customer service with strong speeches, smile training, and external interventions, or through mergers, acquisitions, and friendly or unfriendly takeovers. But they ignore the low-trust climate produced by such manipulations. When these methods donât work, they look for other Personality Ethic techniques that willâall the time ignoring and violating the natural principles and processes on which a high-trust culture is based.
Itâs a clichĂ© that culture canât be taught; it has to be caught. And what better way to appreciate the exquisite nature of Danielâs food than to spend six months ferrying plates from the kitchen to the table? More important, while we were teaching people the technical points a little bit at a time, it would give them the opportunity to fully absorb the culture we were building, long before they became point person with a guest. And how we chose which people to invite onto the team became central to our success.