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by
Joe Skorupa, RIS Group-Editor-In-Chief
The dominant theme at the recent
Retail Executive Summit in Las Vegas was corporate culture -
what it means, how it works, where leaders fit into it and, ultimately,
the impact it has on the success of the organization. Several
speakers hit home runs with this topic, including former Wal-Mart
executive Michael Bergdahl, Best Buy SVP John Thompson and Tractor
Supply CEO Joe Scarlett.
Joe Skorupa
RIS Group-Editor-In-Chief
 |
Several other speakers also
scored well with attendees at the three-day event hosted by RIS.
But the speaker that hit a grand
slam was Marty Allen, CEO and President of Party America, who
last year completed a turn-around and sale of Party America to
Berkshire Partners, which in 2005 also purchased the chain's
main rival Party City.
Allen is not your typical number-crunching
Wall Street-obsessed CEO. He's a straight-talking people person
who understands that corporate success depends on people. "Your
company isn't a products company," Allen says,
"It's a human company selling products. The pivot point
on which any strategic success rests is the discretionary effort
of your human organization."
By corporate culture, Allen
means "your employees' shared beliefs about survival and
prosperity." And he also notes that it means their survival
and prosperity and not yours. "You're not part of their
culture," Allen explains. "You're management selling
something to them. No matter how friendly you are and no matter
how closely you work with them, don't ever make the mistake of
thinking you're a member of their culture."
"You're
not part of the culture. You're management selling
something to them. - Marty Allen |
So while you can't stop a culture
from existing and you can't tell people what their culture should
be, you can work the culture to make sure it supports your strategy.
And if this happens, if the culture adopts your strategy as a
key to their survival and prosperity, then they give their all
to make it happen.
Allen offers several tips to
executives who want to influence their corporate culture. Create
corporate legends where the retelling reinforces important company
values; sell new strategies like a consumer product to each segment
of your employee population; convert your managers into leaders;
bring your core values to work; create a better place for your
people to work; inspire trust through consistency and passion;
embrace mistakes; know that the successful battle is fought for
your employee's hearts and not their pockets; and finally, promote
values instead of strategies and learn the difference between
the two.
Allen's presentation was filled
with takeaways, too many to list here. Look for a deeper dive
into his talking points in next issue's Insider's Insight Column.