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Ratna Morjaria, Lead Consultant here at Tribe Culture Change, explains.
You can only create a new culture by first understanding where you are right now.
Your management team can’t build a single vision, a single mission or a single culture without first gaining the trust of their employees and bringing them onside. It’s crucial for a successful culture change that you understand how ready your organisation is for change right now.
Your first step is to understand how the existing micro-cultures in your organisation came to be. Whether the silos are a result of geographically diverse workplaces, competition between managers, or are more structural, such as a poor induction process, the key to breaking down siloed thinking is going to be communication, as well as actively listening to your organisation.
Talking to the teams who have created a silo mentality will reveal the deeper reasons into how the new values and procedures came about and will help you avoid making the same mistakes again. A team that has previously raised issues but had them be ignored by management for example may have felt forced to create their own procedures as a result.
Once you have your baseline understanding of how your departments currently work, communicating openly and honestly with your workforce about the culture change process can in itself lead to greater cooperation across your organisation. Breaking down silos by actively listening and engaging with your teams and showing that everyone in the management team is invested in making things better is the first step in the organisation’s journey from “them and us” to just “us”.
Breaking down your silos by understanding the microcultures that created them increases buy in from your employees. It is key to helping people both understand the company they belong to and fostering a sense of belonging and togetherness. As leaders understand more about the organisation and why it does the things the way it does, it can reduce inefficiency, duplicated processes.
Facilitating face to face discussions between management and workers gives everyone a chance to share their individual stories in a safe space, which helps people discover common ground. Knowing you have more in common with your fellow workers than not helps challenge any outdated notions of hierarchy, or organisational stereotyping, which might not serve the needs of newer generations who are entering your workforce.
By acknowledging the silos in your workplace, encouraging open and effective communication between your teams, and creating genuine connections between your workers, you’re already taking the first real steps on your journey to a positive culture in your organisation. Tribe Culture Change is here to lend you a helping hand along the way.