Culture Risk

As a risk professional working with strategic risk in the private sector, it is my responsibility to understand existing risks and emerging risks that may have a negative impact upon my business. There is a risk that has recently taken the forefront. This risk has always existed, but now leaders are being challenged to grasp it. This risk is culture risk. What is culture risk? It is the threat or potential harm that takes place when there’s misalignment between an organization’s values and leader actions, employee behaviors, or organizational systems. What’s my definition of culture risk? It is the risk of damage when leaders fail to practice what they preach, allow inappropriate behavior to remain prevalent within the environment they lead, or allow systems and processes to become dysfunctional. It also relates when systems and processes are misaligned.

Why is culture risk appearing on everyone’s radar? Culture risk is a hot topic because it is the silent killer of any organization or effort. Over the past few years we have seen in the news breakdowns within all types of organizations because toxicity was allowed to exist within the culture. In hindsight individuals raised their hands and stated that there were problems related to culture. A breakdown in culture can expose an organization to all types of negative consequences including disengaged members, stunted growth, reputational damage, and even dissolution. Poor culture affects the bottom line. This concept of culture is not just applicable to Fortune 500 Companies or large institutions. This applies to small businesses, non-profits, religious institutions, and even familial relationships.

There’s a saying from Song of Songs that states, “its the small foxes that destroy the vine.” What does that mean? A fox is is not a ferocious animal. A fox is very unassuming but to a well producing vineyard, the fox is a destructive animal. Even a small fox has the ability to destroy a valuable vineyard. In context, small overlooked behaviors, habits, and ways of being impact culture and culture impacts the end goal you are seeking to achieve.

So why am I blogging about this topic? As leaders, whether we are leading at home, in business, charity, religious institutions, sports, schools, the military, or in the community, we must understand the impact of culture and the atmospheres created around us. We can not afford to become blind or turn our heads to matters or behaviors that exist around us. Brilliant leaders understand culture. Brilliant leaders guard culture. Brilliant leaders steward and drive culture. What are the things that you promote to ensure that your culture is positive? What are the things that you have failed to consider? What are the things that you are afraid to address? Do you have your finger on the pulse of your organization or the effort that you are leading? Do you have a way to identify, monitor, and manage what’s going on related to culture? How do you gain comfort that what you think of your environment is the reality? If someone raised their hand, would you listen and give them comfort to speak without retaliation? These are few questions to ponder when you are considering culture.

2020 is about building. Whatever you build, eventually a culture will evolve. A healthy culture shapes for healthy outcomes. Brilliant ones, lets stay alert as we are building and keep those beautiful vineyards from invading foxes that wreak destruction.

Synergy

Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis.

Batman and Robin.

Shaq and Kobe.

Regis and Kelly.

Joshua and Caleb.

Will and Jada.

Elijah and Elisha.

The list goes on and on. Each of the aforementioned represent unique duos or trios that have captured our attention by their talent, skill, authority, expertise, and mega success. Though each of the individuals are dynamic alone, I am convinced that they stepped to another level of impact due to mastering one thing: synergy. The combined effect of the duos and trios have proven greater than the sum of their separate efforts.

We are wired in western civilization to strive at times for individual success. There is nothing wrong with individual success and some efforts are best achieved individually.  I am an advocate for being a self starter and taking responsibility for one’s talent and purpose.  We should soar beyond the mountain tops as individuals. However, there are opportunities as a leader, partner, entrepreneur, friend, team member, coach, boss, ministry leader, or even employee, where if you are able to connect and build synergy, there is combustion. Great things happen. Productivity becomes exponential. If you consider the duos and trios mentioned, many of them have spent the majority of their assignments working with the same partner(s) and achieved an optimization that they couldn’t achieve by themselves. They stepped into the zone called synergy.

What really is needed to achieve synergy is a healthy understanding of what you have to offer and how that coupled with what someone else has to offer produces another level of effect. Insecurity is the killer of synergy. Pride and selfishness are also killers of a vision and synergy.

I do realize that we are in the age where we must discern connections. Fakers, haters, and everything in between have us throwing up the peace sign and saying “I’m good” as we journey to build. Sometimes we must walk alone, but I also know that a massive vision is never carried out solo. One can put a thousand to flight. Two, ten thousand to flight. Something happens when we connect with the right people.

Put it on your list of goals for 2020. Where there is an opportunity to build synergy, strive for it. Nurture it. Then move forward and produce exponentially.

The Refiner: Failure

It is exciting to watch babies grow to the point where they start learning how to walk.   We observe their efforts, curiosity, and eagerness. The baby attempts to stand up, typically big-eyed and drooling, holding on to objects, bumping into things, and falling on their bum. There is a tenacity with a baby that is interesting to watch. They don’t give up. They press in.  They push their way and eventually they are walking. No one ever mentions to the baby, “hey, you have fallen 652 times, so you won’t ever walk.” Somehow, within their inner being, they keep trying.

Another happy moment is when a child is learning to ride a bike.  The child, who is fully decked in a helmet and knee pads, wobbles on a bike until they are able to ride it with full balance, control, and no training wheels.  Never is failure discussed in most cases or even considered though there are falls and half-successful attempts. It’s apart of the process.

Somewhere in our growth process as we add age, education, and other accomplishments,  we develop a layer of pride where the sense of failing or not getting attempts right becomes more tangible and the pain of not accomplishing the end goal more excruciating. We grow ashamed to admit that it has happened and “failing” is equated to some end of who we are as a person or our worth.  What I have come to understand is that failure is necessary. 

Just like the baby that presses beyond the countless falls to learn to walk or the child that has to keep pressing to ride a bike, life presents circumstances where we fail. I have a new perspective on failure.   Failure never defines you but refines you.

I have failed. I know what it looks like. I know what it feels like but I wouldn’t have the wisdom, character, strength, or be able to move in another dimension without failure. I am able to say with full confidence that failure is necessary for shaping and forming of any brilliant leader.  Embrace your story which includes falling down. It includes failure.  Do you want to shine?  Let failure buff and refine.