Leaders Establish Corporate Culture


Leadership Skills

What can you learn about corporate culture by studying the mudslinging, vicious war of words between Donald Trump and Rosie O'Donnell?

What leaders of corporations and organisations say about others can play a powerful role in the culture that their company adopts.

In addition to actions, policies, and communications, companies reflect what their leaders say.

This can be revealing.

Donald Trump

Take Donald Trump, for example.

From all appearances, Trump seems to run a successful organisation.

The success of his companies, just as is the case with ANY company, has as much to do with the character of its leadership as its strategy.

This character, referred to as its culture, is much more powerful than its strategy.

It defines who the company is.

Strong Statment

When a leader uses phrases to describe other people including "fat", "slob", and "ugly", it makes a strong statement to the employees of the company.

This statement comes in two flavours.

One is the statement that is made to leaders of the company.

In most cases, the leadership of any group tends to emulate THE single leader.

Leaders want to be included in the plans of the key person and will tend to follow that person's culture via their actions and words.

Emulating The Leader

In other words, they want to impress that key leader and what better way is there than to be like them?

If the leader likes his or her self, they will certainly like others who are similar to them... right?

So it becomes easy to emulate that leader by talking like them.

If it's Ok for the leader to use these phrases, it must be Ok for his followers to use them.

The leaders who don't feel comfortable in this culture will find a way to separate themselves from this talk, often leaving the company.

Leadership Attitude

They will be replaced by others who "fit in" with this kind of leadership attitude.

This leads to the second leadership statement, which is made indirectly to the employees, especially employees who sense that they fit into the categories being described unflatteringly by the leaders.

These same employees, many of whom are probably of high value to their organisation, hear these comments which come from their leadership and begin to feel that THEY don't fit in the culture which the leaders are describing verbally.

Lack Of Inclusion

As they sense this lack of inclusion, they will similarly feel their lack of fitting in and separate themselves from others, again often leaving the company.

Can casual comments actually lead to such cultural changes?

You bet. Take a close look at the adoration of employees of a charismatic leader such as Donald Trump.

They watch every move, every comment, very closely, especially those with desire for upward mobility.

They want to impress this leader, be "like him".

Be Like The Leader

Others within the organisation want to be liked by their leaders.

Carefully study the heads of companies that you do business with or that you observe.

Listen to the words of these individuals, watch their leadership and actions.

You'll see that same attitude throughout the organisation, from top to bottom.

They will attract employees and managers with similar beliefs.

And if you like working for a name-calling, tough-talking company, I've got a suggestion for you.

This article was contributed by Ed Horrell

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