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How to Build a Positive Company Culture That Attracts and Retains Talent

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10 min read
How to build a positive company culture that attracts and retains talent

We live in a world where 77% of workers consider company culture before applying for a role, and more than half think it’s more important than salary. Positive workplace culture isn’t just a ‘nice to have’; it’s essential for your attrition and retention.

In this article, we’ll explore building a positive company culture and why it’s essential for attracting and retaining talent.

What is Company Culture?

Workplace culture is a set of shared values, beliefs, attitudes, and practices that shape an organisation’s work environment. It’s the social order that represents the behaviour of the whole business.

Culture encompasses a company’s mission, vision, and goals and how they are communicated and lived out within their work environment, interactions, management styles, and values.

It’s important to remember that you can’t change culture overnight. It is described in behavioural science as consistent, observable patterns of behaviour – so by its very nature, it takes time for any changes to become commonplace.

employee satisfaction survey checklist

Why is Positive Company Culture Important?

A positive work culture drives many things, including:

Innovation

Perhaps the most convincing research on company culture came from the University of Minnesota who found that company culture is the most important factor in driving innovation. Innovative companies have a competitive advantage, increasing market share, producing larger revenues, and seeing improved customer satisfaction.

Performance

Workplace culture can improve employee engagement, employee wellbeing, productivity, and job satisfaction, which drive performance. The University of Warwick found happy employees are 12% more productive than their unhappy counterparts. Another study on strong and weak company cultures found that boots in productivity are down to employee motivation, which is significantly higher in organisations where their needs are met through a strong culture.

Profit

According to Deloitte, poor mental health costs UK employers up to £45 billion each year in absences and turnover. Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace: 2022 Report also found that companies with engaged employees had 41% lower absenteeism and 59% lower employee turnover rates.

A positive culture can reduce stress levels among employees whilst also increasing connection to the workplace and driving engagement, leading to lower rates of absenteeism and burnout – and the costs associated with them.

What is the Role of HR in Company Culture?

HR professionals are expected to take the lead in implementing workplace culture. They are responsible for the tangible actions behind developing a positive company culture, from executing learning and development programmes and driving employee recognition to ensuring recruitment strategies align with the core values.

However, HR’s role in company culture is often more nuanced than just affecting policy. They are also responsible for keeping leaders on track, reminding them that their actions directly impact the employee experience, championing work culture, and ensuring everyone else’s behaviour stays true to the company values.

How to Build a Positive Company Culture That Attracts and Retains Talent

10 Steps to Create a Positive Workplace Culture

Culture plays a significant role in attraction and employee retention. A positive workplace culture can attract high-quality candidates when they share the same values and beliefs, particularly as job seekers now look for more than just a paycheck. As many as 56% of job seekers cite company culture as the most important factor when considering a new job.

And once top talent is through the door, culture plays an integral part in employee loyalty, with positive company culture leading to lower turnover rates and better employee retention. Here’s how you can build a positive culture at your company:

1. Establish trust

Trust is the foundation of strong culture; much like culture, it isn’t something you can build overnight. Leaders must build trust through transparency, openness, and honesty and cultivate an environment where employees feel empowered to share their thoughts. Without a bedrock of trust, it would be almost impossible to effect any change in company culture. Start here!

2. Evaluate the Current Culture

This is to help you paint a clear, objective picture of the current state of your company culture. Your experience will be unique to you, and you need to get the perspective of other employees and understand how your culture reflects outside the business to improve workplace culture.

3. Do your research

Review the values, mission statement and vision, and any other documentation where your company describes itself. Do you have clear core values that align with the healthy workplace culture you’re trying to embed? What benefits do you offer? What are your HR policies? Are there any that are missing or could be improved?

4. Evaluate your online presence

Look at your website and what information is available externally. Is all of the relevant information about your business open to potential employees? Is it up to date? Look at your other social media sites too. Check how the culture is represented and how you engage with your customers or clients. Remember to have a look at employee review sites like Glassdoor too.

5. Observe the work environment

How do the teams dress in the office? How is the office laid out? Assess whether teams stay late and eat lunch at their desks or if they take their breaks and leave on time. What is the atmosphere like? Is there a positive feeling? Ascertain if it’s consistent or if it differs across different departments.

6. Ask questions

Speak to as many people in the business as possible about how they perceive and feel about the culture. Do they know the business’s core values? Speak to managers about how they manage their teams and speak to their groups about how that impacts them. Ensure you also get a complete picture from HR about how performance management, flexible working, and other policies are all managed.

7. Bring it all together

Compile a statement of your workplace culture from all the data you’ve collected and compare it to the current idea of your culture. Stress test your conclusion with other employees to see if they think it’s accurate. Once you’re happy with your research, you’ll have a baseline. Don’t be disheartened if the outcome of your work isn’t what you thought or hoped it would be; the first step to improving company culture is to find out where to start.

How to Build a Positive Company Culture That Attracts and Retains Talent

8. Define the ideal

Your evaluation should inform this stage. Using the information from speaking to your teams and engaging senior management, you should now define what you want the company culture to look like. Start small. What are you happy with? What would you like to see change? Then, prioritise.

9. Set expectations and goals

Once the overarching goals for the company culture have been set, you need to break them down into smaller steps. We all crave meaning and purpose, and everyone in the business should be a part of changing workplace culture. Bringing the company together in the movement will also drive engagement. Outline each team’s objectives and ensure they understand how their efforts form part of the company’s success.

Make sure to communicate clearly. Cultural change relies on behavioural change; without a drumbeat of effective communication to reinforce what’s expected, it is doomed from the start.

9. Develop an employee recognition programme

Employee recognition is the cornerstone of effective human resource management and is integral to building a positive company culture. A Great Place to Work survey found that recognition makes employees feel promotions are fair and spurs innovation and extra effort. The same report also linked recognition to higher job satisfaction.

The good news is, implementing an employee recognition programme doesn’t have to be complicated, and there are countless ways to show recognition. A two-year study by Deloitte showed that 75% of people felt recongised with a simple ‘thank you.’

Here are some ideas to get you started:

·         Employee of the month.

·         Length of service awards.

·         Small personal gifts.

·         Thank you cards.

·         Team lunches.

·         Bonuses.

·         Praise.

10. Formalise learning and professional development

Learning and development matter to employees. In a recent eLearning survey, 94% of employees listed ‘investment in training and career development’ as one of the top reasons they would stay in a role for longer.

How you implement your programme will depend on the needs of your business. These are some of the common L&D initiatives we see in organisations:

•         Professional qualifications and accreditation.

•         Coaching and mentoring schemes.

•         Encouraging social and collaborative learning between teams.

•         On-demand digital learning.

11. Measure your success

With any organisational shake-up, it can take time before everyone is aligned. It’s normal for things to move slowly as teams get used to the new ideas being presented to them. To monitor your progress, make sure you get feedback.

Any feedback is valuable, but build a regular formal feedback process for your calendar. Employee engagement surveys and quick pulse checks will keep you informed on how the change is being received and your progress. Employee Net Promoter Scores (eNPS) are another useful tool that can help you measure employee satisfaction and loyalty throughout the process.

How to Build a Positive Company Culture That Attracts and Retains Talent

Core Values to Consider

  • Be open and encourage transparency and communication between all levels of the business. Good communication is integral in the content and how your people speak to each other, which speaks volumes about your workplace culture. Encourage leaders to be open about the business’s goals and welcome questions from everyone. Make sure they answer truthfully and authentically. When appropriately executed, transparency and good communication breed trust between employees.
  • Build more flexibility in your policies. Working remotely or flexibly can promote a great work-life balance among your employees and boost team morale. According to Gartner, flexibility also increases productivity, with 43% of people surveyed for its Digital Worker Experience Survey saying that flexible hours made them more productive and 30% saying that less or no commuting made them more productive.
  • Promote respect within your teams. As important as creating a positive, inclusive, and welcoming environment where teams feel respected, it is creating one where they feel protected. A zero-tolerance stance on disrespect and behaviours that upset the balance cultivates an atmosphere where both can flourish.
  • Encourage and enable relationship development. Organise formal team building and less formal events for people to socialise. Remember to be inclusive, considering those who might not drink, have family commitments, or cannot participate in certain activities.
  • Promoting diversity and inclusion helps everyone in the business feel welcome and like they belong. Encourage the use of preferred pronouns, encourage the respectful discussion of different cultures, celebrate all religious holidays and important cultural days, and listen to your employees about how they want to be recognised and feel included.

5 Things We Can Learn From Working Culture in Other Countries

If you have spent much of your professional life working in the UK, you will be familiar with what makes our working culture distinctive. However, how many of us have ever thought about the unspoken rules and quirks governing our office environments? 

Here are five things we can learn from other working cultures and why they might help us.

Napping at Work – Japan

Let’s admit it. If you fall asleep during a meeting in the UK, it is seen as disrespectful to both the host and your colleagues. However, we also know that sleeping for less than 30 minutes improves productivity and restores energy levels. While it may be hard to execute, maybe we should take a leaf from the book on Japanese working culture. 

The practice of inemuri, or ‘being present while sleeping’, is well recognised in Japan and means that falling asleep while at work or even in a meeting is not seen as a bad thing but rather a badge of honour. You have worked so hard that you are momentarily exhausted by it and need to refuel. 

Falling asleep in a meeting might not be the best idea in a UK company but changing how we view daytime naps and how we physically take them opens up opportunities to restore ourselves. Making naps an acceptable part of an office culture and creating a ‘sleep room’ to facilitate them allows us to take the brief rest we may need. Recharged, we can improve the quality of our work and change how we communicate with our colleagues. If we see the daytime nap as a message that someone has been working too hard rather than a sign of weakness, we can put in place support and help avoid them avoid burnout.

man about to take a nap on his lunch break while working from home

The Right to Disconnect – France

Thanks to technological advances in the last 20 years, employees can feel permanently connected to their work, and switching off can be difficult (thank you, smartphones). If your company has a culture with the expectation of immediate responses, getting that elusive work-life balance can be more challenging. However, since 2017, the law in France has protected employees’ “right to disconnect”. While their employers can still contact them during non-work hours, employees cannot be penalised if they do not respond. 

By removing the need to respond to work requests when you are not supposed to be working, you can take a proper break, which allows you to reset psychologically and physically. Once reset, you are more motivated, more creative and more productive. 

We may not have the legal protection here in the UK for the “right to disconnect”, but we can take matters into our own hands. Use the Do Not Disturb function on your phone when you are out of office hours, move the app for work emails off your home screen for the weekend and leave your phone downstairs when you go to bed.

Fika, a Proper Coffee Break – Sweden

We all know the benefit of incidental chats with colleagues, sometimes called “water-cooler moments”. They help colleagues get to know each other, which builds connections between employees and leads to better collaboration and teamwork. However, in Sweden, these moments of connection are more formalised, with employees actively encouraged to stop their work, sit down with colleagues and have a coffee and pastry together. Fika roughly translates as “coffee and cake”, but it’s much more about the ritual, the making time for others and the socialising that comes with it.

While the natural inclination may be to feel that there is no time to sit and chat about non-work related subjects, these coffee breaks create a connection that helps individuals feel valued, supported and happier. And we all know that happier people are usually more engaged and productive with their work. 

two women going for a long coffee break together in workplace

Dress to Impress – Brazil 

How you dress is very much a personal preference and an expression of your identity. Dress codes can vary from place to place, ranging from super casual to very strict (for example, the well-known need for suits in the banking and legal sectors). There’s no doubt that it’s good to be comfortable while you work, but also making an effort with your appearance sends a signal that you respect yourself.

In Brazil, there may still be dress codes for particular roles and industries, but the emphasis is very much on showing your personality through your dress. “Dressing to impress” is not a message about power but rather how you feel about yourself, your environment, and your self-worth. Taking time to look after yourself and how you want to present to the world is a healthy investment in your self-esteem. 

Plus, there is also a benefit to changing clothes at the end of the working day and making that symbolic move from work to play.

Start Meetings With Compliments – UAE

In the UK, it is not uncommon to start a meeting with some brief small talk about the weather, but, in general, people are keen to get down to business and get through the agenda. While this is undoubtedly an efficient way of working, it can also cause stress and anxiety because there is little time to connect with each other. Employees can feel the immediate pressure to perform. 

In the UAE, relationship-building is an essential part of the working culture. Meetings start slowly, with time dedicated to welcoming everyone, sharing compliments and often enjoying food and drink provided by the host. It establishes a more personal connection from the get-go. This connection is thought to provide a solid foundation from which collaboration often happens more quickly, and disputes are usually easier to resolve.

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Jessie is an experienced content creator and copywriter specialising in technology and telecommunications. She comes to the HR technology space keen to exercise a passion for people and the human resources industry.

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