Tags
Administration
Benefits
Communication
Communication Programs
Compensation
Conflict & Dispute Resolution
Developing & Coaching Others
Employee Satisfaction/Engagement
Executive Coaching
HR Metrics & Measurement
HR Outsourcing
HRIS/ERP
Human Resources Management
Internal Corporate Communications
Labor Relations
Labor Trends
Leadership
Leadership Training & Development
Leading Others
Legal
Management
Motivating
Motivation
Organizational Development
Pay Strategies
Performance Management
Present Trends
Recognition
Retention
Staffing
Staffing and Recruitment
Structure & Organization
Talent
The HR Practitioner
Training
Training and Development
Trends
U.S. Based Legal Issues
Vision, Values & Mission
Work-Life Programs & Employee Assistance Programs - EAP
Workforce Acquisition
Workforce Management
Workforce Planning
Workplace Regulations
corporate learning
employee engagement
interpersonal communications
leadership competencies
leadership development
legislation
News
Onboarding Best Practices
Good Guy = Bad Manager :: Bad Guy = Good Manager. Is it a Myth?
Five Interview Tips for Winning Your First $100K+ Job
Base Pay Increases Remain Steady in 2007, Mercer Survey Finds
Online Overload: The Perfect Candidates Are Out There - If You Can Find Them
Cartus Global Survey Shows Trend to Shorter-Term International Relocation Assignments
New Survey Indicates Majority Plan to Postpone Retirement
What do You Mean My Company’s A Stepping Stone?
Rewards, Vacation and Perks Are Passé; Canadians Care Most About Cash
Do’s and Don’ts of Offshoring
Error: No such template "/hrDesign/network_profileHeader"!
Blogs / Send feedback
Help us to understand what's happening?
Reason
It's a fake news story
It's misleading, offensive or inappropriate
It should not be published here
It is spam
Your comment
More information
Security Code
Thoughts That Make You Go Hmmm…on Living Organizational Values
Created by
Jim Clemmer
Content
<p>I often poll my audiences to see how many work in or lead an organization that has published a statement of values. Usually about ¾ of the group raises their hands. I then ask a rhetorical question (not asking for hands to be raised) about whether those values have a “high snicker factor” throughout the organization. The CLEMMER Group’s survey and assessment work inside dozens of organizations helping them with leadership development and culture change shows that in about ¾ of the organizations with value statements, they are ignored, snickered at, or boost cynicism and disengagement.</p>
<p><em>“Like the money in a bank’s vault, values are the company’s treasure. Values reflect what the leader holds worthy, what the organization assigns worth. They are the ideals, principles, and philosophy at the center of the enterprise. They are protected and revered. They reveal the company’s heart and soul. They energize the covenant. Unlike stacks of $100 bills or gold ingots, these valuables are intangible. From them, however, flows the company’s life. Their force and spirit permeate the company at every level, and they become palpable in decisions and behavior.”</em><br />
- Leonard L. Berry, <em>Discovering the Soul of Service. The Nine Drivers of Sustainable Business Success</em></p>
<p><em>A lawyer had a jury trial in a very difficult litigation. The client who had attended the trial was out of town when the jury came back with its decision, which was for the lawyer and his client. The lawyer immediately sent a message to his client, reading “Justice has triumphed!” The client responded, “Appeal at once!” </em><br />
- An old legal joke</p>
<p><em>“Trust is the conviction that the leader means what he says. It is a belief in something very old-fashioned, called ‘integrity.’ A leader’s actions and a leader’s professed beliefs must be congruent, or at least compatible. Effective leadership – and again this is very old wisdom – is not based on being clever; it is based primarily on being consistent.”</em><br />
- Peter Drucker, <em>The Essential Drucker</em></p>
<p><em>“The way to gain a good reputation is to endeavor to be what you desire to appear.” </em><br />
- Socrates, Classical Greek philosopher considered one of the founders of Western philosophy</p>
<p><em>“This was one of the most paradoxical findings from Built to Last –<br />
core values are essential for enduring greatness, but it doesn’t seem to matter what those core values are. The point is not what core values you have, but that you have core values at all, that you know what they are, that you build them explicitly into the organization, and that you preserve them over time.”</em><br />
- Jim Collins, <em>Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap… and Others Don’t.</em></p>
<p><em>“One organization put 500 of their top-level managers through a six-week executive program. But the vice presidents and the managing directors didn’t go through the program. So even though the president talks this great game, everyone in the organization looks up, they see these very senior managers behaving inconsistently, and they say this executive program is a joke.”</em><br />
- Charles O’Reilly, author of <em>Hidden Value: How Great Companies Achieve Extraordinary Results with Ordinary People</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.jimclemmer.com/vision-values-and-purpose.php">CLICK HERE</a> to review my selection of short articles on organizational Vision, Values, and Purpose. <a href="http://www.jimclemmer.com/content/view/931/">CLICK HERE</a> to review articles on the role of core values in Culture Change.</p>
<p><strong>Complimentary Weekly Podcast of <a href="http://www.jimclemmer.com/content/view/732/9"><em>Firing on all Cylinders</em></a> Excerpts Now Available (No Charge)</strong></p>
<p>Just after <a href="http://www.jimclemmer.com/firing-on-all-cylinders.php"><em>Firing on All Cylinders: The Service/Quality System for High-Powered Corporate Performance</em></a> was published (now over 100,000 copies sold), I recorded an audio series reading excerpts from the book. We are now making these freely available in a weekly podcast series. <a href="http://www.jimclemmer.com/foac/podcast.xml">CLICK HERE</a> to access the installments as they are posted. We’ll be posting all 10 segments over the next 10 weeks. On this page you can sign up to be notified whenever the next segment is available.</p>
<p>You can learn more about this series and look at an overview of the audio on the <a href="../../content/view/733/">Firing on all Cylinders audio CD</a> web site page.</p>
Copyright © 1999-2025 by
HR.com - Maximizing Human Potential
. All rights reserved.