Workshop’s outcome
Executive Summary
This document consolidates a comprehensive workshop on building sustainable organizational culture. It focuses on long-term strategy and continuous improvement loops. The workshop also highlights leadership development. Additionally, it addresses embedding culture into talent management practices. The session emphasized practical frameworks, diagnostic tools, and real-world implementation challenges faced by leaders attempting cultural transformation.
Workshop Objectives and Structure
The session aimed to share practical long-term strategies for sustainable culture development through conversation, case studies, and theoretical frameworks. Key focus areas included:
- Exploring continuous improvement and innovation loops
- Aligning leadership development with cultural goals
- Embedding culture into talent management practices
- Understanding the role of leaders in cultural sustainability
The workshop format combined presentation, interactive discussion, and practical tool-sharing. Planned exercises (Kata) are scheduled every two weeks. These are for focused practice on specific cultural angles.
Understanding Sustainable Culture
Why Sustainable Culture Matters
Sustainable organizational culture drives long-term performance, retention, innovation, and reputation. Key benefits include:
- Reducing costs associated with poor decisions and talent loss
- Preventing culture drift as organizations grow or shift
- Enabling scalable, repeatable behaviors that support strategy
- Creating environments where people want to stay and contribute
Essential Elements of Sustainable Culture
Clear Values Translated into Observable Behaviors
Values must be explicit and understood uniformly across the organization. As emphasized in Kanban methodologies: “make everything implicit explicit and talk about it.” For example, if a company values “working together,” actual collaborative behaviors must be observable—not just stated commitments.
Continuous Feedback Loops and Learning Mechanisms
Organizations need structured post-mortems, post-incident reviews, and customer feedback loops. Regular retrospectives help teams discuss what happened and extract lessons learned. Proactive customer follow-up after delivery creates valuable connection points beyond “no news is good news” silence.
Leaders Who Model and Are Held Accountable for Cultural Behaviors
Leadership accountability is critical. Leaders must create self-organizing teams while being held responsible for cultural outcomes. Without accountability, leaders can operate without cultural constraints.
Reinforcing Processes, Rituals, and Systems
Rituals create belonging—a concept traced back to Confucius (Kong Zi). Regular ceremonies and symbols help establish cultural routines that bind teams together.
Long-Term Cultural Strategy Framework
Four-Part Framework for Sustainable Culture
| Component | Description |
| Strategic Anchors | Link cultural transformation to business strategy; articulate how cultural behaviors support strategic objectives |
| Governance | Measure cultural metrics through audits; track turnover rates (sustainable companies maintain <15% turnover) |
| Learning Improvement Loops | Root cause analysis and continuous learning; great leaders facilitate extensive learning time |
| Talent Architecture | People management deeply integrated into leadership activities; hiring, development, and offboarding protect culture |
Strategic Focus Areas
- Values Definition – Conduct workshops where teams collectively define shared values (sociocratic approach from agile methodologies)
- Decision-Making Frameworks – Transfer values into operational norms and decision principles
- Cultural Governance Model – Establish councils and cross-functional oversight
- Multi-Year Cultural Roadmap – Create flexible roadmaps that adapt as teams evolve (not rigid, written-in-stone documents)
Continuous Improvement: PDSA Cycle
The Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycle, also known as the Deming Loop, provides the foundation for continuous improvement:
- Plan – Define what needs to be tested
- Do – Execute the plan
- Study – Analyze outcomes and learn
- Act – Implement changes and prevent regression
The “Act” phase is critical—it blocks the boulder from rolling back down the hill (Sisyphus metaphor). Without this step, teams revert to old patterns.
Practical Implementation
Weekly reflection sessions (e.g., Friday 11:00-12:00) allow teams to:
- Reflect on the week’s work
- Identify what can be done better
- Decide what to stop, start, or continue
- Plan automation opportunities
- Unleash 10% of time for creative problem-solving
These sessions transform routine work by making it visible, revealing dependencies, and enabling cross-pollination of ideas between team members.
Tools for Continuous Improvement
- Pulse Surveys – Regular check-ins on team sentiment and engagement
- Weather Channel – Excel-based mood tracking (sun/cloud indicators) showing team trends over time
- Engagement Surveys – Gallup Q12-style assessments measuring connection and belonging
- Experiment Design Cards – Structured templates for testing cultural initiatives
- Learning Journals – Documentation of lessons and insights
- Innovation Sprints/Pilot Programs – Time-boxed experiments for new approaches
Leadership Development and Cultural Alignment
The Leader’s Dual Challenge
Leaders occupy an uncomfortable middle position, balancing two cultural demands:
- Supporting team culture to flourish organically
- Enforcing corporate culture mandates from above
This creates a “completely schizophrenic” situation where leaders must embrace and navigate two potentially conflicting cultures simultaneously.
Leadership Accountability
Effective leaders use structured approaches like balanced scorecards to:
- Link vision to measurable objectives
- Track customer satisfaction and process effectiveness
- Monitor team motivation and preparedness
- Set clear goals with regular touchpoints (not just annual reviews)
- Provide constructive feedback tied to development opportunities
Cultural Leadership in Practice: Real-World Example
Working with ProCredit Group (Quipu), cultural variations emerged across locations:
- Frankfurt headquarters – Diverse, internationally experienced staff working cohesively
- Pristina (Kosovo) – Dynamic team functioning well independently
- Skopje (Macedonia) – Junior-heavy team requiring more support
Recommendation: Rather than centralizing coaches at headquarters, distribute them regionally to understand local cultural nuances. One coach in Ukraine, one in Moldova, one in Romania—embedded to work with local teams who understand regional cultural impacts.
Embedding Culture into Talent Management
Hiring for Cultural Fit
Behavioral Interview Approaches
Move beyond CV evaluation to assess:
- Curiosity and learning orientation
- Ability to interact and communicate effectively
- Cultural alignment beyond technical skills
- Character and adaptability
The Voting Experiment
In Luxembourg, a candidate was hired through an open-space voting process. All 50 team members asked questions. They voted with thumbs up or down in front of the candidate. This transparent approach ensured team buy-in and cultural alignment from day one.
Onboarding for Cultural Integration
Five-Minute Onboarding Philosophy
“Jump in the water to get wet”—immerse new hires immediately rather than prolonged theoretical orientation. Learn by doing, with support available as needed.
Cultural Clarity from Day One
Make values, behaviors, and expectations explicit during Onboarding. Reinforce narrative, identity, and expectations through stories and rituals.
Performance Management and Development
Constructive Rating Approach
Start with the assumption everyone deserves top ratings, then provide clear feedback on what specific actions would earn that rating. Focus on “What can you do to get the five next time?” rather than justifying why someone didn’t achieve it.
Defending Your People
Leaders must advocate for their team members when their work merits recognition, even when facing organizational pushback or quota limitations.
Offboarding and Cultural Protection
Offboarding reviews are essential for:
- Team grieving process (part of culture is leaving)
- Learning why people depart
- Protecting external reputation
- Preventing toxic narratives (especially in small industries where “everybody knows each other”)
Companies with poor offboarding practices develop negative reputations quickly. These reputations spread through professional networks. Platforms like Glassdoor further amplify them, making future recruitment nearly impossible.
Cultural Diagnostic Checklist
Strategic Anchors Assessment
- Are all values translated into explicit, observable behaviors?
- Are decision principles clearly used in trade-offs?
- Do leaders model anchors consistently?
- Are anchors aligned with strategy and customer promises?
Governance and Measurement
- Are cultural metrics included in business reviews?
- Is there accountability and structure for cultural behaviors?
- Are leaders held accountable through defined frameworks (e.g., RACI matrices adapted for self-organizing teams)?
Learning and Improvement Loops
- Are continuous improvement routines established (daily stand-ups, weekly retrospectives)?
- Are failures and breakdowns analyzed for learning (post-incident reviews)?
- Is experimentation encouraged and celebrated?
Talent Architecture
- Are hiring criteria tied to values and behaviors?
- Does Onboarding reinforce narrative, identity, and expectations?
- Do development pathways support cultural goals?
- Does offboarding protect culture and reputation?
Real-World Challenges and Solutions
Challenge: Sustaining Momentum Over Time
Cultural initiatives often die after initial enthusiasm fades. Senior leadership shifts focus, and continuity is lost.
Solution: Embed culture as routine through rituals and ceremonies. Make it “the way we work” rather than a special initiative. Use Confucian wisdom—rituals and celebrations reinforce desired culture continuously.
Challenge: Measuring Culture
Unlike operational KPIs, cultural metrics are difficult to define and track consistently.
Solution: Focus on leading indicators like:
- Turnover rates (<15% for sustainable organizations)
- Engagement survey scores
- Time-to-productivity for new hires
- Customer satisfaction linked to team behaviors
- Frequency and quality of retrospectives
Challenge: Cultural Friction Across Departments
When one department implements new cultural practices, friction occurs with departments operating differently.
Solution: Don’t try to change everyone. Focus on your sphere of influence. Work so well that your approach becomes attractive rather than imposed. Build bridges that allow interaction without forcing conformity. Use “judo”—leverage the force of the environment rather than fighting it.
Practical Example: Create a dedicated zone in the company where teams operate with new practices. Give them critical projects. After 6 months of visible success, require new hires to spend 3 months in this zone. They should do this before choosing their permanent team assignment.
Challenge: Hiring for Culture in Quantity-Driven Environments
HR and recruitment systems often prioritize filling positions quickly over cultural fit, leading to misalignment and rapid turnover.
Solution:
- Managers must own hiring decisions, with HR supporting process compliance
- Use behavioral scoring rubrics beyond CV evaluation
- Involve teams in hiring processes (voting, peer interviews)
- Be willing to reject candidates who don’t fit, even if technically qualified
- Look for cultural potential, not just current cultural match
Challenge: Consulting and Third-Party Workers
Consultants and contractors often find themselves culturally isolated. They do not belong to their employer’s culture as they are rarely in the office. They are also not fully integrated into the client culture since they are marked as “external”.
Solution:
- Consultancies should acknowledge this reality
- Mission for consultants: be hired by your customer (transition from contractor to employee)
- Clients should consider integrating valuable consultants into permanent teams
- Leaders should recognize cultural isolation and provide support structures
Questions Asked by Audience and our Answers
Q: How do you understand “building a sustainable culture and long-term strategy?” What about “continuous improvement and innovation loops?” How do you view “leadership development and integrating culture into talent management?”
Pierre’s Answer (Summary):
Continuous improvement requires structured approaches beyond ad-hoc team efforts—Kata provides this structure. Innovation is challenging because teams are told to “be innovative” without clear definition of what that means. Embedding culture into talent management is rarely done effectively. These topics are often viewed skeptically because they lack concrete implementation frameworks.
Q: What’s the difference between adhering to corporate culture versus embracing diverse cultures in the room?
Pierre’s Answer:
These are “two different beasts.” Leaders are caught in the middle—required to help team culture flourish while also enforcing corporate mandates. This creates an uncomfortable, “schizophrenic” position where leaders must navigate both simultaneously without being able to fully commit to either.
Q: What about taking care of pronouns and DEI values?
Pierre’s Answer (Context):
DEI compliance can trigger strong reactions (example: board member fired for DEI violation, leading to company-wide 6-8 week mandatory training). The challenge is balancing inclusivity with freedom of expression. “If you’re inclusive, please include me as maybe an “asshole” when I’m okay with it.” This means diversity includes personality diversity, not just demographic diversity. Leaders should “let people be, people should be free to express themselves how they want.”
Q: What’s your take on the change from “Merry Christmas” to “Happy Winter Holidays” in France?
Chris’s Answer:
France’s multicultural mix has led to avoiding language that might upset anyone. The move from “Merry Christmas” with traditional decorations to generic “happy winter holidays” feels like denying Christianity. This shift challenges Christianity as part of French culture. It’s complicated—not wanting to adhere to religion but also uncomfortable rejecting this cultural heritage.
Pierre’s Commentary:
Christmas isn’t exclusively Christian—even in France, Jews and Muslims celebrate it. It’s become culturally universal like Chinese New Year. The key leadership principle: embrace diversity without forcing everyone to abandon their traditions. Give people choice rather than imposing uniformity.
Q: Is there a difference between Pulse Survey and Engagement Survey?
Pierre’s Answer:
They can be the same thing. Gallup Q12 is the standard employee engagement survey. Generic pulse surveys ask: How are you feeling? How is work? What do you want to focus on? Do you understand business goals? These lead to quarterly one-on-ones. In these sessions, you track progress. You ask about annual goals. You also document development needs in the performance system.
Q: Do you know the PDCA cycle (Plan Do Check Act)?
The PDSA (Plan Do Study Act) variation emphasizes “Study” over “Check” to reinforce learning orientation over mere verification.
Q: Your definition of Sisyphus is different from mine—can you clarify?
Dominic’s Original Understanding: “The ball keeps rolling back. You start from zero again.”
Pierre’s Clarification:
Sisyphus in continuous improvement context means climbing uphill step by step. The “Act” phase blocks the boulder with a stone so it doesn’t roll back. If you don’t make a stop and reflect, progress rolls back to you. In linear, reactive work like sales, accounting, and support, it is valuable to take one hour on Friday (11-12). Use this time to reflect on the week. This practice prevents the Sisyphus trap. This creates small improvements that accumulate rather than constant restarts.
Q: What tools do you use for pulse surveys and continuous improvement?
Pierre’s Answer:
- Weather Channel – Excel sheet tracking team mood (sun/cloud indicators) to show trends over time
- Niko Niko Calendar – Daily mood check-in application
- Engagement Surveys – Including questions like “Do you have a friend in the team?” to measure social connection
- Experiment Design Cards – Structured templates for testing cultural changes
- Learning Journals – Documentation of insights and lessons
- Innovation Sprints/Pilot Programs – Time-boxed cultural experiments
- Dashboard Highlighting Culture Metrics – Making cultural data visible
Q: Can you give concrete behavioral interview questions you would ask?
Pierre’s Answer:
Rather than specific questions, focus on behavioral signals:
- Ask: “How was your daily meeting?” (Look for real examples, not methodology recitation)
- Ask: “How was the review meeting? Where was the customer? Do you know the customer?” (Good: frequent customer interaction. Bad: “We don’t need the customer, they’re a distraction”)
- Watch for: Curiosity, desire to learn, ability to communicate, character
- Red flags: Too slimy/agreeable, just repeating methodology, lack of customer awareness
- Green flags: Smart but incomplete skillset (can be trained), strong interpersonal skills, genuine engagement
Provocative question for highly credentialed candidates: “Forget everything you know.” Watch their reaction to gauge adaptability and ego management.
Q: Do you use Balanced Scorecard at your level?
Dominic’s Answer:
“The real balanced scorecard is supposed to be for board level. We have a full automated BI solution for that. A lot of teams use it—sales, chief sales officer needs metrics, reporting weekly to the board.”
Pierre’s Context:
In IT, balanced scorecards are used weekly for portfolio management with green/amber/red/blue status indicators. If amber (risk), leaders must provide countermeasures. This tracks initiatives and ensures accountability.
Q: How do you navigate implementing cultural change when the rest of the organization isn’t on board? What if you’re a new senior director/VP wanting to implement this approach but other departments aren’t aligned?
Pierre’s Answer:
“I will give you a trick. The trick is simple.”
- Don’t try to convince everyone – “The best change is the way you’re working makes everything else obsolete”
- Focus on your sphere of influence – Change what you can control, not everything
- Work well and let others observe – Invite people to “come and meet the team, take a look, and then we can discuss”
- Let team members build bridges – Your team will naturally interact with other teams. They will explain: “This is how we’re working. Can we work together?” We won’t change our game, but there are bridges we can build
- Use judo, not force – “You’re using the force of your opponent” – work with the environment, not against it
- Avoid pride – Don’t announce “we are the best.” One day you’re best, next day you’re bad. “C’est la vie”
- Create a cultural zone – Recommend creating a dedicated area in the company where teams work the new way. Give them all critical projects (not simple ones). After 6 months of visible success, require new hires to work 3 months in that zone before joining other teams
Additional Strategy for Convincing Leadership:
For a private bank implementation, Pierre recommended: “Create a zone in your company. All teams working in this area, including meeting rooms, operate this way. Let them feel it. Test if it works for 6 months. If not, stop—it’s fine. But after 6 months, it will work.” Then integrate it into Onboarding.
Q: How do you handle the German “fail fast” culture issue?
Context: Germany struggles with failure acceptance despite agile rhetoric about “fail fast.”
Pierre’s Answer:
“It’s horrible. I asked Daimler at first contact: ‘What is your fail fast culture?’ Response: ‘We don’t fail at Daimler.’”
This reveals cultural misalignment. German culture fundamentally resists failure. The solution: “Usually they do it, but they call it differently.” Find language and framing that works within the existing culture rather than importing incompatible terminology.
Q: How do you handle cultural adaptation when working internationally?
Pierre’s Self-Reflection:
- Switzerland – “Still trying to understand the Swiss guys. They don’t take you seriously if you’re a foreigner. They favor people from their own region—won’t even listen to a Swiss guy from Romandie (French-speaking part). You’re treated as a servant. If you push back, they brand you arrogant.”
- Lebanon context – “We are transparent in conversation here. Now I understand women who told me they felt transparent” (invisible/dismissed)
- Adaptation insight – “After 6 months, you’re no longer Indian, you’re German. After longer, you’re not German, you’re Bavarian—you go one layer deeper”
- Professional approach – Use culturally appropriate team members for different contexts. For Middle East: Lebanese descent works in Beirut (seen as local), but North Africa sees “Monsieur Pierre” (distance/formality). Morocco requires Moroccan team members.
Dominic’s Asia-to-Europe Perspective:
“At the beginning was quite a big culture shock. Now if I go back to Asia, I’ll experience another culture shock. I’m not used to the culture in Asia anymore. I’m more used to the culture here.”
Silvio’s Distinction on Integration:
Two types of expatriates:
- Those on short-term assignments who don’t bother learning language or culture (“What do I care? I know English”)
- Those wanting to integrate and build a life (“You cannot live in a country for more than one year without being influenced. You’re gonna take something with you”)
Q: How does culture work for consultants who align more with client values than their own company?
Silvio’s Experience:
“I was more aligned with clients’ values than with Cognizant’s values. This happens a lot when you spend time on a project. When the contract ends, you find yourself out of values for everyone. You don’t align with your company anymore. You don’t align with the new client anymore.”
Pierre’s Analysis:
Consultants (McKinsey, Bain, BCG, Cognizant) are fundamentally alone:
- Proud of prestigious business cards, but family asks “Are you happy?” (forced to say yes)
- Never in office, so don’t know colleagues
- At client site, not acknowledged as team member because you’re external
- “You’re alone all the time”
- Advice to daughter: “Go to consulting company, but don’t stay too long. Your mission: be hired by your customer”
This structural isolation makes cultural belonging nearly impossible for consultants.
Q: Why do cultural initiatives die out after a certain time?
Dominic’s Observation:
“A lot of these things die out after a certain time. Senior leadership stops looking at this, needs to focus on what board is looking at. Culture takes really a long time to implement, not just training.”
Pierre’s Answer:
This is the “January 1st intention” problem—like buying a gym membership and never going. Book recommendation: Change or Die addresses this phenomenon.
Solution:
- Create routines, not intentions
- Build context that prevents backsliding
- Establish rituals and celebrations (Confucian wisdom—rituals reinforce culture)
- Make it “how we work” not “special initiative”
- Family example: Annual Christmas/Easter reunions create cultural continuity through ritual
Q: How do you measure culture? What KPIs work?
Chris’s Observation:
“I never saw any KPIs in the culture implementation of any of my companies. There is no follow up. You just guess, ‘Yeah, I have the feeling it’s okay.’ Everybody’s happy with the culture. But based on nothing.”
Dominic’s Agreement:
“It’s really tough to find metrics that really drive and move the needle, that are measurable over time.”
Pierre’s Answer:
Measurement must be continuous and evolve toward simplicity:
- Turnover rate – Sustainable companies: <15%. Switzerland often >20% (red flag for leadership quality)
- Don’t overcomplicate – Start with detailed metrics, but over time focus on core human values. Eventually reduces to: “Behave like a decent human being”
- Link to strategy – If you can’t link cultural work to strategy, you’ll be considered noise/distraction
- Track trends – Weather channel/mood tracking shows patterns over time
- Use for reinforcement – Metrics aren’t just for follow-up, they’re “the blocker for the Sisyphus wheel”—preventing regression
Q: What about feedback going both ways—teams giving feedback to leaders?
Chris’s Insight:
“Something I found very powerful in only one company: feedback both ways. The team also feedback the performance of their own leader. You need to be very open-minded. Being a real leader requires accepting feedback. Sometimes, feedback hurts.”
Linked to psychological safety—people must feel safe to give honest feedback to leaders, even if initially anonymous surveys.
Pierre’s Implicit Agreement:
This aligns with his philosophy of transparency and constructive feedback. Leaders who can’t accept upward feedback can’t create psychologically safe environments.
Q: What about offboarding—how important is it?
Chris’s Experience:
Some companies have bad culture. They forget to learn during offboarding. It’s important to listen to why people left and improve. But outside, they talk and spread: ‘It was a piece of shit in this company, the manager did that.’ It’s known very fast. I know companies not able to hire at all because of this. If you go on Glassdoor, you see that company doesn’t have much feedback—nobody wants to go there. To kill it and come back to the good side is going to be a lot of effort.
Pierre’s Context:
Offboarding is part of talent architecture. When someone leaves, it’s a grieving process for the team—part of culture is going away, new culture forms. In small industries (“everybody knows each other” like aerospace design), bad offboarding creates a toxic reputation. This reputation spreads rapidly. It destroys future recruitment ability.
Q: How do you handle hiring when HR uses templates instead of manager specifications?
Pierre’s Frustration:
Multi-month delays common. Example process:
- Manager requests specific profile
- HR uses their own templates (ignoring manager’s request)
- ATS system connects to recruitment company
- Recruitment company never talks to manager or HR, just sees opening
- After 3-6 months, manager gets first contact
- Candidate doesn’t have required skills because HR “polished” the requirements
Historical Better Practice:
Managers could hire and fire people directly. HR’s role: ensure procedure compliance and protect people. Managers had budget to hire external service providers (coaches, consultants) without procurement gatekeeping.
Current Problem:
Procurement automation leads to “not the best people” because ATS systems filter out qualified candidates.
Pierre’s Personal Experience:
“100% rejection in Switzerland, even on jobs where I’m an expert. Agile Coach, nevermind.” Recruiters struggle to understand roles and show CVs for wrong positions. “This happens a lot more in Switzerland than anywhere else.”
Contrast: BCG Hiring Process:
“50 minutes total. BCG Director from Australia calls: ‘We have this mission. Interested? Yes/no? Available tomorrow? Okay, I send flight ticket. Meeting 10 o’clock London. Join.’ Ending process took 2 minutes. Everything straight to the point.
Sometimes started mission after first hour, then: ‘Pierre, you have to leave. Architect disagrees with you. He doesn’t want you here because he believes you studied NLP.’ Done.”
Q: How do you handle hiring people who challenge or annoy you?
Pierre’s Provocative Advice:
“You have to hire the person that annoys you or maybe pisses you off. The one who scratches, who stresses you. Because you see in that person something you don’t like in yourself. This person will push you to become a better person.”
Diversity Imperative:
If I have a team of mid-age white males from Switzerland, you need to hire different people. Hiring only similar people will change nothing. I need young people, old people, men, women, in between, all the colors of the rainbow. I’ll feel more comfortable that maybe one will see from a different angle, which is maybe part of the solution.
Q: How did performance reviews work at Cognizant, and how did you improve them?
Silvio’s Reflection on Standard Process:
“The process wasn’t wrong. In the past, you would have reportees, you’d forget about them. End of year comes, reviews, you’re asked about direct reportees—what did they do, do they deserve raise, bonuses? You have no idea because one year passed, you never saw them. If you worked together in same project, you’d have feedback. But like Pierre and me working in totally different areas, he’d have no idea what I did. Having set checkpoints is nice, but it was very little.”
Pierre’s Enhancement Approach:
- Asked at beginning of year: “Silvio, what’s your plan for this year? What do you want to work on?”
- If response: “I want your position” → “All right, fine. Let’s take a look, what do you need to get there?”
- Documented everything in system (tracking progress)
- Rating approach: “For me, you all have five points [maximum]. Based on what you’re doing, maybe you don’t deserve five. What can you do to get the five next time? Please do it.”
- Gave constructive feedback with clear path to top rating
- Defended team members’ ratings to directors when merited
- Example: Colleague rated down by others. “I was really angry because it was based on work delivered and interactions during six months. Somebody said ‘it’s impossible, too much, you should not deserve it because it’s limited.’ Not my problem. He deserved this. You have to defend your people if you believe.”
Silvio’s Conclusion:
Pierre’s approach improved the process. It gave us the opportunity to set really clear goals. We could have exact checkpoints and something to measure against. If you discuss once every six months, that’s not good, not going to be enough.
Cultural Requirement:
“Culture needs to come from above. They need to trust that you’re doing a good job with your reportees. If they question how you did it, we have a problem. If you gave me a five and they question the five, we have a problem.”
Key Takeaways and Action Items
For Individual Leaders
- Link all cultural work to business strategy—or risk being dismissed as “noise”
- Establish weekly reflection routines (e.g., Friday 11-12) for continuous improvement
- Use behavioral interviews focused on curiosity, character, and communication
- Defend your team members when their work merits recognition
- Create bridges with other departments rather than forcing conformity
- Focus on your sphere of influence; make your approach attractive through results
For Organizations
- Embed culture into all talent processes: hiring, Onboarding, development, offboarding
- Measure what matters: turnover rates, engagement, time-to-productivity
- Create cultural zones where new practices can demonstrate value
- Give critical projects to high-functioning teams to showcase effectiveness
- Require new hires to experience best-practice teams during Onboarding
- Establish rituals and ceremonies that reinforce desired culture
Cultural Sustainability Principles
- Culture is an ongoing system, not a one-time initiative
- Simplify over time to core human values
- Use rituals to create belonging and continuity
- Make implicit expectations explicit
- Celebrate learning and wins (even small ones)
- Protect culture through thoughtful offboarding
- Adapt cultural approaches to local contexts
Conclusion
Building sustainable organizational culture requires patience, strategic alignment, leadership accountability, and systemic thinking. It cannot be imposed top-down or achieved through workshops alone. Culture emerges from daily practices, reinforced through rituals, measured through meaningful metrics, and protected through every talent management touchpoints.
The most effective approach is to focus on your sphere of influence. Work so well that your methods become attractive to others. Build bridges that allow collaboration without forcing conformity. As Pierre emphasized, “The best change is the way you’re working makes everything else obsolete.”
Culture work must connect to business strategy, or it will be dismissed as distraction. When done well, culture work requires clear values and continuous learning. It also involves accountable leadership and thoughtful talent practices. Sustainable culture becomes the foundation for long-term performance, innovation, and organizational resilience.
Next Steps
- Review diagnostic checklist and assess current state
- Implement weekly reflection routine (Kata every two weeks)
- Access shared documents and templates on Circle platform
- Plan 30-day commitment based on workshop insights
- Schedule follow-up session for practical game-based planning exercise using Miro

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