試す 金 - 無料
Building Culture From the Middle Out
MIT Sloan Management Review
|Spring 2024
Midlevel leaders are critical to fostering an organizational culture that’s healthy and vibrant.
WE HAVE ASKED THOUSANDS OF executives from around the world the same simple question: “Who is responsible for culture in your organization?” Hands go up and, almost to a person, the response is, “Everyone.”
We then ask a follow-up: “If everyone is responsible for culture in your organization, what do you do to manage it?”
Hands go down. Gazes divert. The most common answers are uninspiring: “Keep an open-door policy.” “Provide good performance reviews.” “Check in with employees.” While each of these actions may be helpful, not one is specific to culture. They are simply generic management habits — that is, none are practices specific to translating a company’s unique set of values into a lived experience for the people who work there.
Organizational culture is the set of shared values that guide how work gets done. There used to be a debate about whether culture predicts high performance or whether high performance affords leaders a strong and cohesive culture. Evidence now overwhelmingly supports the former.¹ But for a business to harness the power of culture, it needs midlevel leaders across the organization — the managers and team leaders — to go beyond believing that they are responsible for culture to actively building it.
このストーリーは、MIT Sloan Management Review の Spring 2024 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
MIT Sloan Management Review からのその他のストーリー
MIT Sloan Management Review
A Smarter Approach to Measuring Customer Experience
Many companies collect more customer experience data points than they need or can use effectively. Here's how to focus on the metrics that matter.
10 mins
Spring 2026
MIT Sloan Management Review
Why Digital Dexterity Is Key to Transformation
To make headway with digital transformation, executives are redefining the challenge: Build a workforce to take advantage of new technologies.
17 mins
Spring 2026
MIT Sloan Management Review
Ask Sanyin: What Makes a 'Listening Tour' Meaningful?
I've just stepped into a new leadership role and was advised to embark on a \"listening tour.\"
2 mins
Spring 2026
MIT Sloan Management Review
Build Business Advantage With Real-Time Decision-Making
Stop running your business on yesterday's data. Real-time data, empowered employees, and agile systems can lead to higher margins.
11 mins
Spring 2026
MIT Sloan Management Review
Balancing Innovation and Risk in the Age of AI
Monica Caldas is executive vice president and global CIO of Liberty Mutual Insurance.
2 mins
Spring 2026
MIT Sloan Management Review
Turn Customer Complaints Into Innovation Blueprints
You can reframe client grievances as an opportunity instead of a burden. At one Swiss hospital, complaints have become a pipeline for improvements to the customer experience.
6 mins
Spring 2026
MIT Sloan Management Review
The Eight Core Principles of Strategic Innovation
A company's future depends on the new directions it explores and develops today — and that requires different structures and capabilities from incremental innovation.
14 mins
Spring 2026
MIT Sloan Management Review
What AI Can Teach Us About Designing Better KPIs
Machine learning research offers four proven strategies to prevent people from gaming measures of organizational performance.
12 mins
Spring 2026
MIT Sloan Management Review
THREE THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT Learning by Hiring
LEADERS WHO RECOGNIZE THAT OUT-siders can be major drivers of innovation often seek to bring new knowledge into their organizations by making external hires.
2 mins
Spring 2026
MIT Sloan Management Review
Validating LLM Output? Prepare to Be ‘Persuasion Bombed’
Research demonstrates how generative AI ramps up the rhetorical pressure on users who question the AI's output.
8 mins
Spring 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

