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How to create a company culture that makes people want to stay

By Carolyn LaWell


Smart Business Indianapolis | February 2009

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Andy Medley<BR> president, Trace Communications LLC
Andy Medley
president, Trace Communications LLC

Andy Medley has seen one too many executives model a culture after that of another company and then watch it fail because it didn’t fit the organization.

To eliminate that potential problem at his three companies, the president of Trace Communications LLC and his partner, Scott Hill, decided to separate their companies from under one roof. That transition left them with the challenge of redefining a culture for the 35 employees at the printing company, which helps newspaper customers generate revenue.

“The initial thing was looking at what are the things that are most important to us and what do we want to hold true,” Medley says.

Smart Business spoke with Medley about how to implement a corporate culture that will work for your company.

Q. How do you create a company culture?

Figure out what you want and figure out what you think is going to make the business do well. Make it a place where people are going to want to work.

The first step my partner and I did was sit down and say, ‘Let’s create an environment that, if we were in the marketplace looking for a job, we would pick this place. What types of things does that look like?’

After you decide that, it’s got to fit you. It needs to fit your personality. It needs to fit the strategy for what you’re trying to accomplish.

The easiest way is to look around your company and get a good sense of what motivates them and what they like about the company.

Empowering employees and educating them on how they can affect the company positively or negatively is the first place to start. One of the employees brought me research on dress codes, and basically he was trying to get me to change the dress code. We sat down and talked, and he gave me a proposal. I read it and said, ‘Yes, this makes 100 percent sense.’

This is where the fit comes in. He and I are agreeing that this dress code works.

But why does it work?

Let’s explore the reasons that we think that it’s OK for us to dress this particular way.

It’s something as simple as that.

Q. How do you implement a cultural change?

It’s little bitty steps that are slowly making change. If I came in and changed the way we did business and changed the way we interacted, it’s not going to work. People are going to come in and see it as fake.

You try and move as quickly as you can, but not so fast that people feel like it’s out of control or they don’t have any say in what’s getting done.

You can’t just step in front of people and say, ‘We’re going to change this, this and this.’

The one thing to recognize is that it wasn’t perfect at first.

You’ve got to be comfortable with the fact that when you go into it, you’re going to make some mistakes, and things aren’t going to be well received.

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