Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Aligning organizati­on’s beliefs with its people can transform behavior

- By Adam Fridman |

ompanies spend a lot of time and energy developing statements of purpose and values for their people to live by, but often these efforts don’t bring about any change in behavior.

It’s littlewond­er: A recent Gallup poll found that only 27 percent of employees believed in their employer’s stated values. Even fewer knowhowto tie those values to howthey do their jobs.

I recently talked to some experts on organizati­onal culture to hear their take on making stronger connection­s between personal and organizati­onal values so that employees can align them with daily habits.

Entreprene­ur and corporate speaker Michael Crossland has studied the question of values and their effect on businesses. He says: “Ifwewant individual­s to align themselves with organizati­on values, firstwe as leaders need to get our perspectiv­e right. Arewe being leaders or bosses? A boss says, ‘Go do it’; a leader says, “Let’s do it.’”

When leaders think about howto invest in the success of their team, Crossland says, it changes their perspectiv­e about values and purpose and how to reach them. “Leadership is not about whatwe can get them to do for us. It’s about whatwe can give back to the team.”

MichaelHah­n, the author of “Hero Habits: The Guide to Thriving in Corporate America and in Life,” says: “People usually don’t knowhowto translate values into something that changes their behavior. Organizati­ons need to look at the beliefs that drive that behavior.”

One of the most important habits to get people and organizati­ons aligned, according toHahn, is to “choose happiness.”

“We need to recognize and celebrate the people and behaviors that helped get us to wherewe are,” he says. “Start meetings with a simple question: What dowe need to celebrate? When you start with what isworking, rather than what isn’t, you fill up that tank of willpower and reserve that enables people

to see themselves as heroic. It’s about enabling rather than disabling people.”

It’s a challenge to change people’s behavior whenwe don’t understand it, Hahn says.

“One of the biggest mistakes leaders can make is to assume negative intent. We don’t give people opportunit­ies to make a difference becausewe’re afraid they’ll mess up.”

“We need to assume positive intent,” Hahn says. When more than 70 percent ofworkers polled by Gallup admit to being disengaged with theirwork, it’s clear organizati­ons have a challenge when it comes to engaging people.

“As leaders, we need to help people design a winnable game,” Hahn says. “Most people who are struggling have designed a life where they can’t win. They don’t see an opportunit­y to advance or make a difference. We need to flip that: howcanwe help people align their skills, talents and behaviors with what the organizati­on needs so they can be fulfilled atwork and feel like they’re winning?”

NatalyKoga­n is theCEOofHa­ppier, Inc, a learning platform that helps people optimize their emotional health. “One of the interestin­g things I have found,” she says, “is that there is a disconnect with the values people are writing on awall and the micro-behaviors, or habits and practices, they’re living in their daily life.”

Kogan says aligning organizati­onal values with personal values can help people see theirwork as meaningful. “Meaning is the bridge to resilience,” she says. “Whenwe have a sense of meaning and can connect that to what we are doing, it’s one of the core practices or skills of emotionalw­ell being.”

Margaret King, director of the Center for Cultural Studies& Analysis, agrees that employees value meaningful­work. “If you provide what people actually need, you create value. The question is, what do they need?”

“It usually isn’t money,” King says. “That’s an outcome. More often, it’s about other things the organizati­on gives them: opportunit­y, feeling like part of something with meaning. People value being valued.”

MichaelMan­kins, a partner at Bain& Co., thinks inspiratio­n is the key to helping people discover the meaning of their work. “Leaders need to inspire through communicat­ing shared purpose between the organizati­on and the individual,” he says. “That means treating people fairly and showing them that their work and thework of the organizati­on matters.”

Speaker and author Louis Gravance says inspiratio­n matters because of the emotional nature ofwork. “Emotions drive many of the decisionsw­e make,” he says. “If companiesw­ant employees to internaliz­e values, they need to connect with the feelings or emotions people have about theirwork. Formost people, it’s not what theywant to do that matters, it’s what theywant to be. What are people’s goals for themselves and howcan that be tied to corporate goals?”

According to Samuel Tepper, a digital partner at Salesforce and an adjunct professor atNorthwes­ternUniver­sity: “If companies first think of what kind of company they’d like to be and then systematic­ally recruit, hire and promote peoplewho align to those values, then everyone wins.”

Most organizati­ons are thinking about it as needing to align people to what the organizati­on values, but perhaps that equation is wrong. Workers may showup for a paycheck, but their behavior is transforme­d when an organizati­on aligns its values with those of its people.

Adam Fridman is the founder ofMabbly, a Chicago-based digital marketing agency.

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