Published On: Mon, Jul 6th, 2020

ASSESSING A CLIENT’S CORPORATE CULTURE

When I am assessing a client’s corporate culture and the strength of their managers, I analyze their commitment to hire the best and invest in their employees. I ask the owner the series of questions to follow. The answers to these questions indicate whether the company has committed to hire only the best possible employees and invest in training and personal development for the company’s management and staff.

  • What are the company’s mission and vision, and is management focused on living up to their corporate culture statements?
  • Does the company have written corporate goals that connect to these cultural statements?
  • Does the company have timely, accurate, and simple-to-read weekly or monthly financial and operational reporting?
  • Does the reporting give the president and senior management team accurate information to measure employee productivity?
  • Does the company have well-documented policies, procedures, and goals for recruiting, hiring, and onboarding new employees?
  • Is the company recruiting top-tier management and employees who have the skills and ability to advance the quality of the management team and their staff?
  • Can the managers make sound business decisions for each functional area of the organization by using the information in the financial and operating reports? Or, on the contrary, does the finance department issue monthly reports late that get filed in a binder and stored on the manager’s credenza. Are the financial statements never reviewed because they are way too long, overly complicated, a cosmetic mess, and impossible to read and understand?
  • Are the managers willing to leave a vacancy open for months, if necessary, until they find the right outstanding candidate?
  • Is the human resources department investing the time and money to recruit qualified top-tier candidates? Or are they like most companies who delegate that function to the managers who have no idea how to recruit and hire high-quality candidates? Or is the company hiring the first warm body that shows up at the front door? You know, the candidate who needs a job and has a résumé that lists their professional experience saying that he or she qualifies for the position, whether or not the information on the resumé is accurate.
  • Does the company maintain consistent demanding standards for everyone in the organization? Or just the opposite: Is management willing to tolerate a weak division manager, a floundering sales force, or a poorly functioning department head?
  • Does the president formally review the results of each manager’s performance semiannually or annually? Do the managers evalu-ate the performance of their direct reports to determine if each employee is meeting their individual goals?
  • Does the company make progress each year with the management team for each department? Or is the next year going to have the same old managers doing the same old boring things and producing the same lackluster, mediocre results?
  • What is the company’s budget for employee training and development?

As we all know, times have changed, and the old-style methods of managing an organization have also changed. The process of recruiting, interviewing, hiring, onboarding, and developing employees has transformed in the past decade. An organization that promotes employees based upon job seniority no longer works, as it used to years ago. With businesses being more competitive due to the internet, companies must now have a top-tier management team to be successful in today’s business environment. Internet marketing, technology, and price pressures from companies like Amazon demand a strong management team—or the company will fail.

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My name is Robert Curry, and I am an Author, CEO Coach, Keynote Speaker, and Turnaround Specialist. Over the past 20 years, I have worked with more than 70 companies taking their businesses from Loses to Profits. Please click on the links below to read other articles like ASSESSING A CLIENT’S CORPORATE CULTURE:

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Recently I published two books about turnarounds: “From Red to Black – A Business Turnaround” and “The Turnaround.” Both books are true stories about turnarounds of real companies that I have turned around during my career. In both books, I have shared all my Profit Improvement Recommendations (“PIR’s”). PIR’s helped to grow sales, reduce expenses, improve cash flow, and most importantly, strengthen the management teams.

If the information in this article ASSESSING A CLIENT’S CORPORATE CULTURE helps you, your family or a business associate, please email me at bob@ceorsc.com and share with me the story.

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