I have a small old country fishing pond, about an acre, that reaches 13 ft at its deepest point. It’s a beautiful pond tucked away in a little valley. It’s peaceful and calming. It has become one of my favorite spots to pull up a chair and relax, watching the trees sway with the breeze and listening to the soothing soundtrack of the wind as it mixes with the water droplets crashing into the surface, succumbing to gravity shortly after being launched by the fountain.
Pond health can be easily swayed by many factors. Our pond has developed a problem. It’s being overtaken by water lotus.
It started out as just a few beautiful plants that appeared last summer in a small handful of areas. By fall, the plants had spread and the areas they covered had started to become a little larger, so I vowed to work on reducing them. Winter came and passed, and as spring arrived and temperatures rose, I began treating them in an attempt to reduce them back to the relatively small areas they occupied when I first noticed them.
I don’t know if I waited too long to begin treatment (timing is critical because they have to be growing) or if I didn’t apply enough of the specific herbicide, but even after consultation with the manufacturer, the lotuses weren’t deterred. In fact, they continued to rapidly grow and spread around the entire pond. Now, the first 10-15 feet of my once open shorelines are covered in lotuses.
Our culture is a lot like this. When our goals are defined, values set, and behaviors intentionally cultivated, life is pretty good. But, like in a pond, it doesn’t take a whole lot for an invasive species to creep in. What starts out barely noticeable can quickly take hold and spread throughout our organizations. And once they’ve become well established, they also become a lot harder to modify or eradicate.
Cultural isn’t just what we say...it's a combination of our defined
aspirations, our lived example, and the behaviors we allow.
Culture creates the environment where our strategies can be achieved. In a fishing pond covered in invasive lotuses, it becomes increasingly difficult to fish. In a company where the culture encompasses undesired behaviors, it becomes increasingly difficult to achieve the desired results, no matter how well-defined and intentional the strategy is.
Peter Drucker once famously said, “Culture eats strategy for breakfast”.
Cultural isn’t just what we say, what we aspire to, or even limited to the behaviors we personally model. Culture is a combination of our defined aspirations, our lived example, and the behaviors we allow.
So, as leaders, what can we do about it?
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