Winning Teams, Winning Cultures
By Larry Senn, Jim Hart

Human Factors Impact Business Results
A shortfall in business results is rarely due to technical or operational issues. It’s always the result of human issues.
Cultural Barriers to Success
- Internal competition
- Lack of responsiveness
- Hierarchy or boss-driven leadership
- Bureaucracy
- Observer critics, shoot down ideas
- Entitlement mindset
- Lack of accountability
- Trust deficit
- Inability to promote diversity of ideas and people
- Conflict avoidance, passive aggressive behaviour of teams
Change Requires Agility and Openness
Openness, agility and resilience are needed when major structural changes, quick market changes or innovation is needed in an organization.
Accountability Is a Must
High levels of accountability are needed when safety, reliability and quality are paramount.
The essence of performance value is accountability.
Listen Deeply
We all have mood states. The higher mood state includes listening deeply, hearing hidden meanings, having wisdom, focus on the big picture, and influencing effectively.
Set the Precedent
People at lower levels in the organization don't change because "our bosses don’t change".
Organizations tend to take on the characteristics of their leaders. Of course, there are ghosts of past leaders present in the culture.
Leaders Build the Culture
The most important shadow comes from the leadership team at the top.
Children are never good at listening to elders but they never fail to imitate elders.
8 Requirements of a Healthy, High Performance Team
- Do they make team decisions unselfishly?
- Is the team seen as aligned on goals and priorities?
- Do team members assume best intention in other team members?
- Do they openly discuss issues?
- When a decision is made, does everyone support it fully?
- Do all walk the talk?
- Are they aware as a management team of the impact of their shadows?
- Do they fully participate in all initiatives of the company?
The Young and the Restless
Younger organizations have a greater sense of urgency.
Coaching, Feedback are Often Low Priority
Coaching and feedback always score lower on culture audits in every company we survey.
Walk the Talk
Shifting organizational habits is not easy; talking about it isn't enough.
Typical Diversion Tactics for Poor Results
A victim mindset is always a diversion for poor accountability and poor results.
Organizations lacking accountability have an entitlement mindset. Too much time is spent on explaining why numbers are missed and why "it's not my fault".
Change Leadership Involves Four Dimensions
- Being open to continuous self examination, introspection and change.
- The ability to be an effective change agent.
- Seeing possibilities in new ideas.
- Coaching and feedback.
Limiting Beliefs in Organizations and People
- It is safest to do what you are told.
- You cannot admit mistakes in this company.
- Just worry about your own goals.
- The legal department’s only job is to avoid risk.
- There is more pain for failing than succeeding here.
- Finance and Control only police expenses.
- Business units should resist pressure from headquarters.
People Tend to Have a Limited View
In life we tend to see a small portion of what's in front of us. The one dimension that's obvious to us and only a few aspects of the culture.
The Young Are Dynamic
When we are young, we are like a flowing river and then we freeze.
Focusing Just on High Performers Does Not Shape Culture
Leadership development in organizations focuses on 'high performers'. While this is good for developing individuals, it doesn't shape the culture.
Getting Around Blind Spots
Coaching top leaders is important since they have many blind spots and no one tells them the truth.
A Helping Hand
Do top leaders feel the need to help another teammate succeed?
The Science of Healthy Meetings
Teams that master the science of healthy meetings invariably deliver high performance results.
Team dynamics improve when people listen to each other, they are present in every meeting, they focus on the discussion and issues are resolved.
What a Successful Organization's Culture Looks Like
- Managers are like coaches, not like bosses.
- Managers use influence, not authority.
- Continuous education is a basic in the organization.
- Managers are promoted for their ability to train and build people.
- Fewer functional departments, more process teams.
- Team-oriented incentives.
Winning Teams, Winning Cultures
By Larry Senn and Jim Hart