A company or a
business unit culture is a set of group norms, behaviors and underlying shared values
that help keep these norms in place according to the renowned management guru
Kotter (www.kotterinternational.com). The leaders and managers in an
organization play a very vital role in setting examples for either undesirable
or good behavior. Some very common place undesirable behaviors have to be
called out which in itself is a reflection of one aspect of the culture! I
want to highlight one example using the context of problem solving.
It is usual during
project execution, we encounter technical problems. In Japanese tradition and
culture, technical problem solving is strongly linked to 5 Whys. To describe it
in simple terms, it is an approach where the team drills down to a root cause by
asking why such a problem occurred. Usually if one drills down by asking 5
times, one can get to the root of the problem. Then there is 3 legged 5 Why
approach which looks at immediate problem being solved, how such a problem
slipped through the verification process and how such a slippage can be
prevented in the future by making a systemic change. The above is a
desirable process and hence a good culture.
However in the same
context, what can be an undesirable manager behavior and hence the culture? In
simple terms when 1 Who replaced 5 Whys !
Many times managers
want a “scape goat” and hence the “1 Who”. It is common manager behavior when
problems come up to immediately start asking “who” messed it up instead of 5
whys. There are several problems with this culture. As you can imagine it most
often would be that one junior engineer at the bottom of the food chain who
gets punished. “1 who” invariably makes it personal and thus losing an
opportunity to be objective and tackle the issue at hand. Manager behavior
gets repeated by others in the team for issues in the future. Not to mention
how that engineer grows up to be a manager. The ultimate damage is to the
organization because the problem solving capability gets stunted and hence it
remains mediocre.
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