You don’t need armor, a strong horse, or dragon-slaying skills to be this kind of champion. Anyone can be a culture champion. Chances are, you have some ready and waiting to be developed within your walls.
Culture drives everything you do and every decision that is made. It shapes how your people collaborate, which behaviors are rewarded, and who moves up the leadership ladder. It’s what makes you ‘you’. And it’s much bigger than just one leader.
Culture can be good or bad, positive, or toxic. Keeping every single person aligned around something consistent and engaged can be difficult, but it critically shapes the success of your business and talent strategies. That’s where your culture champions come in.
They’re not just in HR. They can come from all levels and functions.
A culture champion is a breathing, walking, talking example of your organization’s values.
Culture champions are highly engaged individuals who actively seek out ways to nurture and bring your culture to life in a way that inspires, energizes and rallies other employees around your mission and values. They work wonders in cultivating a positive workplace and inspire others to follow suit. They understand the concept of culture is a mirror of leadership.
The most effective culture champions:
“Organizational culture is the ‘water’ in the fishbowl. If the water is clean, nourishing and energizing, the fish will thrive and if the water is toxic, the fish will die, leaving the infrastructure value-less.” – Ranjan De Silva.
If you don’t champion culture in a company, it can create misalignment, confusion, and unhappiness in teams. Values alignment is how you succeed in the modern workplace.
Employees are 10.4 times more likely to leave a job because of toxic work culture than because of pay (MIT Sloan), and leadership consistently emerged as the biggest predictor of toxic culture (MIT Sloan).
92% of executives believe that improving culture will improve business value (Harvard).
When your leaders do champion culture in a company, it keeps people engaged, confident, passionate and on the same page. Highly aligned companies grow revenue 58% faster and are 72% more profitable while significantly outperforming their unaligned peers in terms of (LSA Global):
• Retaining customers 2.23-to-1
• Satisfying customers 3.2-to-1
• Effectively leading 8.71-to-1
• Engaging employees 16.8-to-1
What do culture champions actually do, day-to-day?
People are people, not robots. We’re talking about building an emotional connection, so it’s all about the soft skills that get the hard work done. It’s essential to provide training and support to equip people with those, so they become – and inspire others to become – cultural champions.
If you want to champion culture in a company, inviting an external keynote speaker is a great start.
They can provide guidance and inspiration, and coach leaders and teams in empathy, feedback techniques, coaching and mentoring, navigating difficult conversations, and overcoming biases. That speaker can help you to create a community of learning and support –the soil in which cultural champions grow.
Culture is a top-down initiative, and leaders must "own" it, instead of just talking about it or delegating it to others.
Our corporate culture keynote is a guide to understanding concepts such as 'cultural debt' and 'culture conning', and topics including social learning theory, and re-wiring primal biases for modern leadership in and out of the office. It’s a recipe for creating culture champions.
Alex Draper’s leadership keynotes can help to shape a positive, productive, and inclusive culture in your organization. They provide leaders with a toolbelt of practical skills and strategies that effectively embody and promote company values.
Using them every day will foster a healthy corporate culture that attracts – and keeps – the best people.
Culture champions are made, not simply born.
Get in touch to find out how Alex’s keynotes can help to develop every leader and team member into a superhero of the modern workplace; a culture champion, who understands how to influence, inspire, and instil confidence in others. Capes are optional.