What Is Organisational Culture? u2014 A Practical Guide for Leaders

Organisational culture is not soft. It’s not vague. And it’s not something you can afford to ignore.

Yet most leaders treat it like it is.

I’ve spent the better part of two decades advising senior teams on culture change, and I can tell you what I’ve seen: leaders who understand organisational culture as a strategic asset move faster, retain talent better, and adapt more effectively to change. Those who don’t? They end up fighting fires, losing good people, and scratching their heads wondering why their strategy isn’t landing.

The problem isn’t that organisational culture is hard to define. It’s that too many leaders dismiss it as “the way we do things” and call it a day. That’s like saying your computer’s operating system is just “the stuff that makes it work.” True, but useless.

So let’s be direct: organisational culture is your business operating system. It’s the invisible architecture that shapes every decision, interaction, and outcome in your organisation. Get it right, and it multiplies your strategy. Get it wrong, and it destroys it—no matter how brilliant your strategy is.

Why Organisational Culture Actually Matters

Here’s a question I ask every leadership team I work with: How much of your strategy fails because of culture, not because the strategy itself was wrong?

Most leaders pause. They’ve felt it. They’ve watched brilliant initiatives flatline. They’ve seen talented executives leave because “the culture wasn’t right.” They’ve observed teams saying yes to change while actually resisting it.

That’s culture at work.

Organisational culture is the filter through which every message, every initiative, and every decision gets interpreted. It’s what determines whether your people will innovate or protect their turf. Whether they’ll speak up or go silent. Whether they’ll see setbacks as learning opportunities or career threats.

In my experience, this is where the gap between intention and reality lives. A leader announces a new strategy on a Monday. By Friday, it’s been interpreted through the lens of existing culture, repackaged, and sometimes reversed. The same words mean entirely different things depending on what your culture says about change, trust, and accountability.

That’s not a communication problem. That’s a culture problem.

The Three Components of Organisational Culture

When we’re talking about organisational culture, we’re really talking about three overlapping systems:

Values and beliefs. These are the stated and unstated principles that guide behaviour. What does your organisation truly value? Not what the mission statement says—what does your hiring, promotion, and discipline actually reward? In my experience, that gap between espoused values and enacted values is where most culture problems hide.

Behaviour and norms. This is what people actually do, day to day. How do people communicate? Who speaks in meetings, and who stays silent? How are conflicts handled? What happens when someone challenges the status quo? The norms are the unwritten rules. And they’re powerful.

Systems and structures. These are the formal mechanisms—how you hire, how you develop people, how you measure success, who has authority, how decisions get made. Culture lives in these structures. You can’t separate them.

Most organisations try to fix culture by changing the espoused values—new mission statements, new posters on the wall. But if you don’t change the behaviour and the systems, nothing shifts. You just get a shiny new lie.

There are many examples of this that you may be familiar with. You may have experience working with or being a customer of one of these organisations. Creating values that are something people aspire to and actively work toward is one thing. Creating espoused values and throwing them up on the wall because you think that is what people expect you to do, without putting in the work to move toward them, doesn’t fool anyone.

What Shapes Organisational Culture?

Organisational culture isn’t magic. It’s built, deliberately or by default.

It starts at the top. Not because senior leaders need to be perfect, but because they set the tone. What gets rewarded? What gets called out? How do they talk about failure? How do they treat people who disagree with them? That’s the culture blueprint right there.

It gets reinforced through hiring. You can say you value collaboration, but if you hire individual contributors who hoard information, your culture will reward information hoarding. Hiring is where culture either strengthens or weakens.

It gets embedded in daily processes. How long does it take to make a decision? Who needs to sign off? What happens when someone admits a mistake? These routines become invisible. And they shape behaviour.

It persists through storytelling. Every organisation has stories about heroes and cautionary tales. What stories do people tell about your organisation? Are they stories about courage, or stories about politics? In my experience, the stories people tell about their workplace are the most honest measure of culture you’ll find.

The Cost of Getting Organisational Culture Wrong

I’ll be blunt: weak organisational culture costs you money.

It costs you in turnover. Good people leave bad cultures. They might not say that in their exit interview, but it’s the primary reason. According to SHRM research, workers in positive organisational cultures are almost four times more likely to stay with their current employer. Among employees who rate their culture poorly, 57% are actively looking for the exit. And 67% of employees cite organisational culture as a primary reason for their decision to stay or leave.

It costs you in productivity. When people are focused on office politics instead of delivering value, your organisation slows down. Gallup research shows that organisations with high numbers of disengaged employees—a direct symptom of weak culture—have 18% lower productivity and 15% lower profitability. Conversely, organisations with strong cultures see up to 72% higher employee engagement and 21% greater profitability.

It costs you in execution. Strategy without culture is just wishful thinking. In reality, even the most sound strategy is set up to struggle or fail if the culture does not support and reinforce the behaviours required to execute on it. Plain and simple—yet a mistake that business leaders make and remake all the time.

And it costs you in recruitment. In a tight talent market, word gets out. If your organisational culture is toxic, you won’t attract good people. You’ll end up hiring whoever will take the job, and that compounds the culture problem.

How to Intentionally Shape Your Organisational Culture

So what do you do if you’ve diagnosed a culture problem?

First, be honest about what your culture actually is, not what you want it to be. That means looking at your data: Who stays? Who leaves? What gets rewarded? What gets punished? What stories do people tell? Get brutally clear on the gap between your espoused culture and your actual organisational culture.

Second, start with behaviour, not values. Pick one or two specific behaviours you want to shift. Not “be more collaborative.” More specific: “Before you escalate a conflict, you’ll have a one-on-one conversation.” That’s specific. That’s measurable. That changes organisational culture because it changes what people actually do.

Third, align your systems. If you want your organisational culture to reward innovation, don’t measure people solely on short-term delivery. If you want accountability, don’t hide failures. Make sure your hiring, evaluation, and promotion systems reinforce the culture you’re building.

Fourth, model it relentlessly. You can’t ask for a culture you don’t embody. Leaders set the tone. If you want trust in your organisation, be trustworthy. If you want candour, be candid. Your team watches you more closely than any communication strategy can reach.

The Payoff

Organisations with strong, intentional organisational culture outperform those without it. They move faster. They retain talent longer. They innovate more effectively. They adapt better when conditions change. The research backs this up: Kotter and Heskett’s landmark study of over 200 companies across 22 industries found that organisations with adaptive, performance-oriented cultures dramatically outperformed those without—in revenue growth, stock price, and net income—over an 11-year period.

Why? Because everyone’s pulling in the same direction. Not because they’re forced to, but because the culture makes it clear what matters, how to behave, and how decisions get made.

The reverse is also true. Weak organisational culture is a silent tax on everything you’re trying to build.

So here’s my challenge: Stop treating organisational culture as something that happens to you. Stop waiting for a team offsite to “fix it.” Stop hoping that a new set of values will change behaviour.

Instead, ask yourself: What’s one specific behaviour I want to shift in my organisational culture? Not a value. A behaviour. And what system am I going to change to make that behaviour the easier choice?

That’s how you build organisational culture that actually works. Not through speeches or posters. Through clear intention, aligned systems, and relentless modelling.

The question isn’t whether your organisational culture exists. It does. The question is whether you’re going to shape it, or let it shape you.