Thursday, July 2, 2020

Corporate Culture, not just ping pong and pool tables

Corporate Culture, not just ping pong and pool tables Corporate Culture This is Corporate Culture, and I am proud to work with them (actual photo of dev team) Corporate Culture Some companies care about corporate culture, some companies dont. Some VCs  care, some dont. I think that based on some of the recent sales of companies, culture is beginning  to play an ever-increasing  role. Every company  evangelizes  its corporate culture. Whether it is corporate America,  tech, industrial, or manufacturing they all say it is IMPORTANT. I get it.   As a company, employees need to believe in something. I just wonder,  do all of these companies  really believe that the employees buy into it? It is very easy to have a great culture when things are good, the company is profitable, and the deals are rolling in. It can be easy to create a culture based on ping-pong tables, dart boards, and beer available every day. I firmly believe that a great corporate culture will show itself when times are hard, times are tough, and times are lean. I recently left a top website as the Head of HR to work for a small startup. This new startup has no revenue, the desks are from  Ikea, and we just had an outage that lasted for 4 days. We were initially  told that the  data that we lost (some 46M rows) would be impossible to recover. It didnt stop the guys. They worked night and day, never gave up, and kept on plowing ahead. Warriors plain and simple. Those of us that arent technical tried to help out where we could by making food and coffee runs, trying to  keep the place tidy and keeping out of the tired bears way. In the end, we got everything back. Everything. A couple of things struck me through this ordeal. I saw a lot of folks reaching for their wallets  when food and coffee were brought in. Not once did I see any money trade hands. It was all unspoken between brothers. The guy who made the initial mistake fessed up quickly. When the mess was cleaned up, he approached the CEO and asked if he wanted to discuss  the situation, fully expecting to be let go. (he wasnt, we actually celebrated that he fessed up and the guy is almost a hero)  A stand-up guy. Not once did I hear anything about blame, whose fault, I  have to work late, all night, or what about my significant other / children. Not Once. The CEO sent out regular updates to the customers  admitting fault, taking the blame, and giving his personal contact info to  be yelled at or screamed to. (Yes, he wrote that) We hired a new guy 2 days before the outage  and he did everything he could to help out including staying all night. This to me is culture. Tough to articulate but any company would want this mentality in their teams. I know we are lucky to have it, but I also know that it didnt come by accident. These are guys I will fight with, fight for, and I know they will do the same for me. We all understand what the mission is, and everyone is pitching in. We arent a top website, we arent profitable and we dont have a big name. I do think we understand culture. I need to ask these guys in their own words why they did what they did. Why did they stay night and day? Why didnt they walk out? Maybe that  will shed some light on the word culture. I am glad I am here, and I think we have culture See you at the after party, HRNasty nasty: an unreal maneuver of incredible technique, something that is ridiculously good, tricky and manipulative but with a result that can’t help but be admired, a phrase used to describe someone who is good at something. “He has a nasty forkball. If you felt this post was valuable please subscribe here. I promise no spam,

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