You canât mandate it, canât engineer it.
What you can do is create the conditions for transformation. You can provide incentives. You can define the marketplace realities and goals. But then you have to trust. In fact, in the end, management doesnât change culture. Management invites the workforce itself to change the culture.
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The implications of this kind of leap to a companyâs economic model can be devastating. In IBMâs case it meant the collapse of gross profit margins and the attendant changes we had to engineer to lower our cost structure without compromising our effectiveness.
Yet the hardest part of these decisions was neither the technological nor economic transformations required. It was changing the cultureâthe mindset and instincts of hundreds of thousands of people who had grown up in an undeniably successful company, but one that had for decades been immune to normal competitive and economic forces.
This kind of wrenching cultural change doesnât happen by executive fiat. As I found, I couldnât flip a switch and alter behaviors. It was, by any measure, the hardest part of IBMâs transformation, and at times I thought it couldnât be done.
I came to see, in my time at IBM, that culture isnât just one aspect of the gameâit is the game. In the end, an organization is nothing more than the collective capacity of its people to create value. Vision, strategy, marketing, financial managementâany management system, in factâcan set you on the right path and can carry you for a while. But no enterpriseâwhether in business, government, education, health care, or any area of human endeavorâwill succeed over the long haul if those elements arenât part of its DNA.
Successful institutions almost always develop strong cultures that reinforce those elements that make the institution great. They reflect the environment from which they emerged. When that environment shifts,it is very hard for the culture to change. In fact, it becomes an enormous impediment to the institutionâs ability to adapt.
This is doubly true when a company is the creation of a visionary leader. A companyâs initial culture is usually determined by its founderâs mindsetâthat personâs values, beliefs, preferences, and also idiosyncrasies. Itâs been said that every institution is nothing but the extended shadow of one person.
As Lou Gerstner says, âChanging the attitude and behavior of hundreds of thousands of people is very, very hard to accomplish. You canât simply give a couple of speeches or write a new credo for the company and declare that the new culture has taken hold. You canât mandate it, canât engineer it.
âWhat you can do is create the conditions for transformation. You can provide incentives. You can define the marketplace realities and goals. But at some point you have to trust. In fact, in the end, management doesnât change culture. Management invites the workforce itself to change the culture.