Culture: The Catalyst for Transformation
Many senior business leaders have missed the critical link between culture and success.
15 minutes
December 17, 2024 - 12:00 AM Author

What is on the minds of CHROs as they face the realities of a post-pandemic world of work?
Recently, LHH hosted a virtual roundtable with a dozen top HR executives from some of our largest strategic clients. The meeting was designed to identify pressing concerns around workforce renewal and transformation in these perilous times. A lot of obvious topics were covered: the impact of virtual work; pressures to downsize; uncertainty around the timing of the resumption of business, and how to keep people engaged.
THowever, the common theme cutting across all these topics was culture. Before the pandemic hit, a group of CHROs like this would have focused the discussion on areas such as talent management, leadership development and the global skills shortage. Although those will always be top concerns for the highest-level HR executives, there is increased awareness about culture, and in particular, the key role it plays in defining what an organization does and how it goes about doing it. The questions that arose from our virtual meeting were revealing. How can I get my leaders on board with seismic change necessary to respond to pandemic pressures? How can I develop an organizational mindset that sees the workforce as a renewable resource that must change to meet future opportunities? How can I ensure that the changes I introduce now are sustainable well into the future? Some organizations are well on the way to confronting and answering those questions, even with the added stress of the pandemic. However, too often in the past, many senior business leaders have missed the critical link between culture and success. We introduced initiatives to build better leaders, develop careers and provide opportunities to learn but often neglected the organizational culture needed to ensure these efforts became more lasting and meaningful.
This disconnect was clearly enunciated in a 2018 research survey conducted by LHH in partnership with HR.com that provides powerful insight into how organizations approach workforce transformation. Our survey—which captured the insights of more than 1,200 HR professionals across 20 countries and a wide swath of industries—established that while technology is often viewed as the catalyst for transformation, culture is the factor that determines whether it is successful. For example, nearly six in 10 respondents identified “advances in digital technologies” as the driving force behind the need to transform workforces. That is not surprising in and of itself; with the rapid growth of solutions based on AI and machine learning, we’re all trying to harness the power of new technologies. In competitive industries, no one wants to get left behind in applying the best new tools available.. However, 54% of respondents identified culture as the biggest barrier to workforce transformation. That makes sense on many levels. Although it can be complex, acquiring and deploying new technology is actually easier than designing and instilling a new organizational culture. In the context of any workforce transformation, culture and technology are completely intertwined. No matter how powerful the technology, the mindset of your workforce needs to sync with organizational goals. When there is a disconnect, you have a workforce that can be resistant to the technology that’s being introduced. Other barriers cited in the survey support this notion that culture ultimately determines the success of a workforce transformation. After general concerns about culture, the next two most-cited obstacles were a lack of discipline in the organization’s approach to change and mediocre leaders who are not held accountable. These are both intimately connected to issues of culture.
The connection between culture and workforce transformation seems clear, although the solutions for an organization that suffers from a weak or poorly defined culture are not. As was demonstrated in the LHH CHRO roundtable, even the best HR executives can find themselves struggling to find answers when culture needs a tune up.Make your organization antifragile
In his seminal 2012 book, scholar and author Nassim Nicholas Taleb coined the term “antifragility” to describe a phenomenon where a system, organism or organization thrives in the face of shocks, volatility, profound mistakes or attacks. Fundamentally different from resilience and robustness, Taleb theorized that organizations demonstrate anti-fragility when they can learn fast from current conditions and adapt in a way that allows them to take advantage of volatility. In many ways, this perspective has become more relevant than ever as organizations chart a future course in a pandemic world.
Conclusion
Many organizations steer clear of addressing cultural shortfalls because it’s an enormous issue with many moving parts and no clear and easy solution. In some instances, culture goes unaddressed because it is inconvenient for organizations and their leaders. In both instances, the failure to examine organizational culture and confront weaknesses only sustains the behaviors and attitudes—immaturity and ignorance—that are preventing an individual company from being better.
A company cannot just be defined by a series of processes. It is also a living, breathing thing with beliefs, emotions and—sometimes—blind spots that its people demonstrate. Rebuilding or rejuvenating culture can be the first step to a better performing organization. And despite our current travails, if we learn as much as possible from past examples and apply the lessons to future challenges, a crisis can be an excellent opportunity to build a culture that is built for the long term.