Companies with Fantastic Cultures
Companies with Fantastic Cultures
Every company has a culture that can heavily impact its productivity, employee morale and overall brand reputation.
Companies
with positive, vibrant cultures attract the best talent to their teams and
produce better products and services since their employees are more motivated
to give 100% daily. A stellar workplace culture leads to a better work
environment, improved employee engagement, and a better representation of a
company's mission.
In contrast,
poor company culture can negatively affect company performance and employee
results. Employees are more likely to leave companies with poor, draining
cultures and produce less than stellar products.
The bottom
line: it's critical to understand how to cultivate a strong company culture in
your enterprise, whether you run a small business or a larger firm.
There are
various initiatives you can consider to foster different types of cultures,
ranging from enhancing the onboarding employee experience to improving employee
satisfaction and mental health.
With so many
different types of companies with distinct sets of values and mission
statements, brainstorming the right kind of organization culture for your
business can be challenging.
Fortunately,
many world-renowned businesses offer excellent examples of company culture and
key takeaways you can implement into your organization.
By examining
these examples, you can live your company values and reinvent your corporate
culture to attract top talent and boost employee retention.
1. Zappos
Zappos has
become almost as well known for its culture as it is for the shoes that it
sells online. What does that culture look like?
It starts
with a cultural fit interview, which carries half
the weight of whether the candidate is hired. New employees are offered
$2,000 to quit after the first week of training if they decide the job isn't
for them. Ten core
values are instilled in every team member. Employee raises come from
workers who pass skills tests and exhibit increased capability, not from office
politics. Portions of the budget are dedicated to employee team building and
culture promotion.
Great
benefits and a workplace that is fun and dedicated to making customers happy
all fit in with the Zappos approach to
company culture -- when you get the company culture right, great customer
service and a great brand will happen on its own.
Takeaway: Zappos hires
according to cultural fit first and foremost. It has established what the
company culture is, and fitting into that culture is the most important thing
managers look for when hiring. This promotes the culture and happy employees,
which ultimately leads to happy customers.
2. Warby
Parker
Warby Parker has been making and
selling prescription glasses online since 2010. It designs its own glasses, and
sells directly to customers, cutting out the middleman and keeping prices low.
Company
culture at Warby Parker instigates "culture crushes," and one reason
for that level of success is a team dedicated to culture. That team means that
a positive culture is on the forefront, setting up fun lunches, events and
programs. The company makes sure that there is always an upcoming event so the
entire team has something to look forward to, and it uses methods to make sure
the entire team works well together by insisting everyone helps keep break
areas clean or sending random employees out to lunch together.
Takeaway: Warby Parker
has made company culture deliberate by creating a dedicated team tasked with
coming up with events and programs to promote community. Great company culture
doesn't happen on its own.
3. Southwest
Airlines
The airline
industry is often mocked for grumpy employees and poor customer service, but
Southwest Airlines bucks those trends. Customers loyal to Southwest often point
to happy and friendly employees who try hard to help.
Southwest
isn't new to the game. It's been in operation for 43 years. Yet somehow, during
all that time, the company has managed to communicate its goals and vision to
employees in a way that makes them a part of a unified team. Southwest also
gives employees "permission" to go that extra mile to make customers
happy, empowering them to do what they need to do to meet that vision.
Takeaway: Employees
who are convinced of a larger common goal are people who are excited to be part
of a larger purpose.
4. Twitter
While Twitter
used to be on the list for its incredible culture, it's unfortunately serving
as an example of how a culture change can change where a company stands in
the public eye.
Recent
developments in Twitter's ownership and management changed what Twitter once
was.
Before Elon
Musk, employees of Twitter couldn't stop
raving about the company's culture. Rooftop meetings, friendly coworkers
and a team-oriented environment in which each person was motivated by the
company's goals inspired that praise.
Employees of
Twitter could also expect free meals at the San Francisco headquarters, along
with yoga classes and unlimited vacations for some. These and many other perks
are not unheard of in the startup world. But what set Twitter apart?
Employees
couldn't stop talking about how they love working with other smart people.
Workers raved about being part of a company that was doing something that
matters in the world, and there was a sense that no one leaves until the work
gets done.
All of that
said, Elon Musk's Twitter takeover has led to adverse shifts in Twitter's
workplace culture, as revenue issues have led to mass firings, more intense
workloads, and cutbacks on the old employee amenities.
Takeaway: While these
changes may be temporary, the current state of Twitter HQ is not the tech oasis
it once was, and that culture change has led to a massive change in how the
public views (and feels) about the company as a whole.
5. Chevron
While oil and
gas companies are prime targets for a lot of negative PR and public ire,
Chevron employees responded favorably towards the company's culture. Employees
compared Chevron with other similar companies and pointed out "the Chevron way" as
being one dedicated to safety, supporting employees and team members looking
out for each other.
Chevron shows
it cares about employees by providing health
and fitness centers on site or through health-club memberships. It offers
other health-oriented programs such as massages and personal training. Chevron
insists employees take regular breaks. In other words, the company shows it
cares about the well-being of employees, and employees know that they are
valued.
Takeaway: Your company
culture doesn't have to be ping-pong tables and free beer. Simply providing
employees with a sense of safety and well-being and creating a policy where
everyone looks out for each other can easily suffice.
6.
SquareSpace
This
successful startup is regularly voted as one of the best
places to work in New York City. Its company culture is one that is
"flat, open and creative." A flat organization is one where there is
no (or very few) levels of management in between staff and executives. This
approach is more common among startups, and can be tricky to maintain as a
company grows larger, generally requiring groups to form.
SquareSpace
also offers robust benefits and perks, including 100 percent coverage of health
insurance premiums, flexible vacations, attractive office space, catered meals,
stocked kitchens, monthly celebrations, relaxation spaces and periodic guest
lecturers. Solid benefits such as these help a culture, but are not the sole
instigator of successful culture. Down-to-earth leaders and direct access to
management have a great deal of impact.
Takeaway: Employees
feel their voices can be heard when they aren't muffled under layers of
management. This level of freedom and empowerment creates confident employees
and improves morale.
7. Google
It would
almost seem wrong not to mention Google on a list of companies with great
culture. Google has been synonymous with culture for years, and sets the tone
for many of the perks and benefits startups are now known for. Free meals,
employee trips and parties, financial bonuses, open presentations by high-level
executives, gyms, a dog-friendly environment and so on. Googlers are known to
be driven, talented and among the best of the best.
As Google has
grown and the organization has expanded and spread out, keeping a uniform
culture has proven difficult between headquarters and satellite offices, as
well as among the different departments within the company. The larger a
company becomes, the more that culture has to reinvent itself to accommodate
more employees and the need for management.
While Google
still gets stellar reviews for pay, perks and advancement, some employees note growing pains that you'd expect from such a huge company, including
the stress associated with a competitive environment. Hiring and expecting the
best from employees can easily become a stressor if your culture doesn't allow
for good work-life balance.
Additionally,
for all the venerable aspects of company culture that Google offers, the
company is far from perfect. Many employees report an abundance
of overqualified workers, paired with many in managerial roles who lack the
skills required to lead teams.
As with many
other tech giants, many employees also report unreasonable
workloads and the regular cancellation of projects without adequate
rationale.
Moreover, reports
of sexual harassment, hate speech, and other patterns of workplace misconduct
have circled around Google for years.
Former
Google employees, including an anonymous executive, have reported that when
employees speak out about difficulties with a colleague, Google's HR officers
are expected to direct those employees to the 20 free therapy sessions offered
annually as a benefit by the company.
When dealing
with workplace harassment of any kind, this type of response is woefully
inadequete. One lesson you can take away from Google's culture issues is this:
offering benefits, no matter how competitive, is not a cure for a broken
culture.
Takeaway: Even the best
culture needs to revisit itself to meet a growing company's team. The most
successful company culture leads to successful business, and that requires an
evolving culture that can grow with it.
8. REI
For outdoor
enthusiasts, REI has long been the company to turn to for great gear. Employees
of REI, a cooperative where
profits benefit its member-owners, also agree that this is a place where
greatness happens, even beyond the beloved camping and outdoor products. REI's
mission is to equip both customers and employees for the outdoors, not just to
have fun but also in promoting stewardship of the environment.
REI says that
its employees give "life to their
purpose," firmly attributing company success to workers. The CEO of
REI has acknowledged that employees
can get benefits anywhere, but allowing outdoors-oriented employees to
immerse themselves in REI culture is what makes it unique. Employees can win
equipment through "challenge grants" where they submit a proposal for
an outdoor adventure that would be challenging. Regular townhall-style meetings
are held where employees can submit questions anonymously to help management
understand what's happening in the company.
Takeaway: When your
employees are completely immersed in the same interests as your company, the
culture propels itself forward almost on its own. Culture that is owned and
propelled by the same people puts value in their voices.
9. Meta
Just like
Google, Meta — formerly known as Facebook — is a company that has exploded in
growth as well as being synonymous with unique company culture.
Meta offers,
as do many similar companies, lots of food, stock options, open office space,
on-site laundry, a focus on teamwork and open communication, a competitive
atmosphere that fosters personal growth and learning and great benefits.
Yet, Meta has
the same struggles as similar companies: a highly competitive industry leads to
a sometimes stressful and competitive workplace. Additionally, a free and
organic organizational structure that worked for the smaller organization is
less successful for the larger one.
To meet these
challenges, Meta has created conference rooms, has separate buildings, lots of
outdoor roaming space for breaks and has management (even CEO Mark Zuckerberg)
working in the open office space alongside other employees. It's an attempt at
a flat organizational culture using the buildings and space itself to promote a
sense of equality among the competition.
Of course,
Meta has recently been in the headlines for its massive swath of layoffs. In
November 2022, Meta laid off 13% of its workforce (over 11,000 employees) in an
effort to cut costs. Starting in February, Meta began a steady decline that
continued throughout the year.
Perhaps the
core of company culture is a sense of job security, upon which a healthy
workplace environment can be cutlivated. In the face of enormous layoffs, it's
safe to say that Meta has a culture problem (to say nothing else of their
business woes).
Takeaway: When your
company depends on new hires who excel in a competitive field, your company
culture and any associated perks will likely be the tipping point for
applicants. You must stand out from other companies vying for attention.
10. Adobe
Adobe is a
company that goes out of its way to give employees challenging projects and
then provide the trust and support to help them meet those challenges
successfully. While it offers benefits and perks like any modern creative
company, Adobe's is a culture that avoids micromanaging in favor of trusting
employees to do their best.
Adobe
products are synonymous with creativity, and only through the avoidance of
micromanaging are the people who create those products truly free to create.
For example, Adobe doesn't use ratings to establish employee capabilities,
feeling that that inhibits creativity and harms how teams work. Managers take
on the role of a coach, more than anything, letting employees set goals and
determine how they should be assessed.
Employees are
also given stock options so that they know they have both a stake and reward in
the company's success. Continual training and culture that promotes risk taking
without fear of penalty are part of Adobe's open company culture.
Takeaway: Putting
trust in your employees goes a long way towards positive company culture,
because trust leads to independent employees who help your company grow.
How you can
create an excellent company culture
Many of these
companies offer similar perks and benefits, but those do not determine the
culture completely. The approach taken with how employees are treated and what
level of ownership and trust they are given is also a key part of company
culture.
One word of
caution: focusing on company culture to the exclusion of other workforce
considerations (safety, laws, regulations) can lead to abuses or create
situations where employees aren't comfortable. Even the best examples of
culture on this list have detractors.
Remember that
the best culture makes all employees feel safe and welcome, never excluded or
uncomfortable. Focusing on "culture fit" alone makes it difficult to
hire and welcome employees who are different than the prevailing culture, even
if they'd be an asset and great counterbalance at your company. Your company
culture needs adjustment if it causes you to end up with a homogenized team who
think and act the same.
References:
Sujan, P. (2023)
10 Excellent Company Culture Examples For Inspiration. [online] Available
from: https://www.entrepreneur.com/growing-a-business/10-examples-of-companies-with-fantastic-cultures/249174.
[Accessed 1 Apr. 2024].
Razetty, G. (2021) 11 Examples of Organizations with Awesome Workplace Cultures. [online] Available from: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/11-examples-organizations-awesome-workplace-cultures-gustavo. [Accessed 2 Apr. 2024].
This insightful perspective on company culture showcases a mature understanding of its complexities. Emphasizing inclusivity and acknowledging the need for balance between culture and other workforce considerations reflects wisdom beyond years. Your thoughtful approach is truly commendable and offers valuable guidance for fostering a workplace where every individual feels respected and valued. Keep shining with your wise insights
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words and appreciation of the perspective on company culture. I believe that inclusivity and finding the right balance between culture and other workforce considerations are essential for creating a positive and productive workplace environment.
DeleteTrue! the best culture makes all employees feel safe and welcome. personally, that is what an individual needs. This blog is really helpful
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you found the blog helpful! Creating a safe and welcoming culture is indeed crucial for employee well-being and engagement. When employees feel valued and supported, it enhances their overall experience and contributes to a positive work environment.
DeleteAbsolutely, you hit the nail on the head. While perks and benefits certainly contribute to the overall employee experience, they don't define a company's culture entirely. The way employees are treated, the level of ownership and trust they are given, and the overall approach to leadership and communication are equally, important aspects of shaping company culture.
ReplyDeleteYou're spot on! Company culture goes beyond perks and benefits—it's about how employees are valued, trusted, and empowered. Leadership style and communication play a crucial role in shaping a positive work environment and fostering a strong company culture.
DeleteInteresting read! Loved how you have used a balanced perspective emphasising the advantages of a healthy culture while also acknowledging the disadvantages, such as ignoring important elements like safety or focusing too much on "culture fit" at the price of diversity.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your thoughtful comment! It's essential to create a culture that promotes well-being, inclusivity, and innovation while addressing any areas that may hinder progress or create inequalities.
DeleteAgreed! Company culture plays a pivotal role in productivity, morale, and brand reputation, and these examples highlight the diverse approaches companies take to cultivate positive workplace environments.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely! Company culture impacts various aspects of the organization, from productivity and morale to its reputation. It's fascinating to see the different strategies companies use to nurture positive workplace environments that benefit both employees and the overall business.
DeleteAgreed! if you have positive working culture with all in positive aspect, employee will feel they will belongs to company and which will lead to employee more productive and motivated to work.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely! A positive working culture fosters a sense of belonging and ownership among employees, leading to increased productivity and motivation.
DeleteCompany culture is a most important factor for a employee to stay and their growth. Interesting article. Got to know lots of interesting facts.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your feedback! Indeed, company culture plays a vital role in employee retention and growth. I'm glad you found the article informative and insightful!.
DeleteFantastic article on - Companies with Fantastic Cultures. You make an excellent point about the fact that perks and benefits alone do not define a company's culture entirely. While such offerings are important factors in attracting and retaining talent, the true essence of a company's culture lies in how employees are treated.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your feedback! I'm glad you appreciated the focus on how employees are treated as the core of a company's culture. It's about creating an environment where people feel valued and supported.
DeleteOne of the most important factors is company culture. These businesses, which depend on teamwork, create cultures where enthusiasm and purpose collide, encouraging creativity and sincere communication. Hoping to see numerous companies in Sri Lanka adopt fantastic cultures to boost their business to new heights.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely! Company culture is a driving force behind teamwork, creativity, and effective communication. It's exciting to see businesses in Sri Lanka embracing fantastic cultures that fuel innovation and propel them to greater success.
DeleteVery educational article, and I like how you draw examples from various companies like Zappos, Warby Parker, Southwest Airlines and Google to name a few on an exploration of company culture. These are very good examples to pinpoint how diverse approaches help to maintain a positive work environment. Well done ! To add to this, I'd say it would be good to add that legal and compliance need to be addressed in terms of company culture too as topics like anti-discrimination policies, workplace safety laws, data privacy legalities are critical to ensure a fair and lawful work environment.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your insightful comment! Indeed, highlighting examples from companies like Zappos, Warby Parker, Southwest Airlines, and Google showcases the diversity of approaches that contribute to a positive work environment. Integrating legal and compliance considerations, such as anti-discrimination policies and workplace safety laws, is crucial for maintaining a fair and lawful workplace.
Delete**Company culture goes beyond perks: **
ReplyDeleteThis comment is right on target! While perks and benefits are attractive, employee treatment, ownership, and trust are fundamental to a strong company culture.
Culture shouldn't overshadow core needs:
Focusing solely on culture can be risky. Safety, legal compliance, and regulations must always be top priorities.
Inclusion matters most:
The best cultures make everyone feel safe and welcome. Hiring solely for "culture fit" can limit diversity and miss out on valuable talent.
You're absolutely right! Balancing culture with safety, legal compliance, and inclusivity is essential for a thriving workplace. Prioritizing inclusion ensures diverse perspectives and talent contribute to a strong company culture.
DeleteOrganizational culture is a powerful dynamic in your company. It cements employees’ confidence in their work, and keeps them motivated and inspired to do their best. Culture is a set of beliefs and attitudes about the way things are done in your workplace. It may not be discussed every day, but culture is always there in the background, affecting every bit of work that gets done – or doesn’t. It’s the human factor
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely! Organizational culture is the backbone of employee confidence, motivation, and inspiration. It's the unseen force that shapes how work is done and influences every aspect of the workplace.
DeleteCulture matters because it boosts productivity, agility, employee engagement, and innovation. A strong, positive workplace culture precedes business results (Razzetti,2021).
ReplyDeleteCulture is indeed the driving force behind productivity, engagement, and innovation. A positive workplace culture lays the foundation for success and business excellence. Thank you so much for your insight.
DeleteThere's a strong correlation between workplace culture, satisfied and engaged employees, and business productivity and profits. When an organization's culture is toxic, everyone loses.
ReplyDeleteToxic workplaces are a primary reason why workers quit their jobs. Employees in toxic cultures dread going to work; don't feel that they can be honest with their managers; and are more likely to witness or experience sexual harassment, age discrimination or political-affiliation bias. They often hold their managers responsible for creating the toxicity, which cannot be ignored. Poor managers and toxic workplaces lead to dysfunctional work cultures.
Absolutely, workplace culture directly impacts employee satisfaction, engagement, and ultimately, business outcomes. Toxic cultures not only drive employees away but also contribute to various workplace issues. Addressing toxicity and fostering a positive culture is crucial for organizational success.
Delete