
Jonathan Becher wrote a good piece in his blog on this issue, entitled Culture eats strategy for breakfast. He commented about his experience, and explained why he first concentrated on changing the culture rather than working on strategy or objectives or metrics.
He mentioned a 2005 Harvard Business Review study of more than 100 corporations and thousands of executive assessments showed that culture influences leadership style more than any other factor. Regardless of job function, employees who work in the same organization are 30% more likely to exhibit similar leadership styles than people who do the same job but work in different companies. He also mentioned an article of The Wall Street Journal that concluded that the biggest roadblocks for new leaders include:
1 - Not understanding or caring about the current culture
2 - Assuming the current leadership culture can support the new direction/strategy
3 - Not articulating his/her aspirational culture for the team
Becher finished with the statement: "Goals, initiatives, and metrics. I have a huge appetite for strategy management. But I shouldn’t forget that breakfast is the most important meal of the day – it all starts with culture."
When I mentioned Jonathan Becher's post on Twitter, Bruno Aziza replied me with: "culture eats strategy for breakfast, lunch and dinner. However it is not a substitute for strategy!" I agreed with him, you need to embrace both the culture and strategy. A corporate culture is a key factor in a corporate strategy. The number one purpose of strategy management is alignment. It's interesting for the organizations to foster the culture of performance. Bruno Aziza himself co-wrote with Joey Fitts a great book, where they also mention this issue called: Drive Business Performance - Enabling a Culture of Intelligent Execution.
