Creating and maintaining a high performance culture

By Mike Morrison - Last updated: Thursday, June 11, 2009 - Save & Share - 9 Comments

A High Performance Culture is something many organizations strive to achieve. Many have achieved it in their own unique and distinctive ways. However, certain fundamental common factors need to exist without which a “High Performance Culture” will not be created.

In difficult economic time this can be difficult to justify – however now is the time to prepare the organization for the future. Organizational development strategies take time to formulate, develop and deploy – and that is before the returns start to generate. Wait for the “good times” and your competitors will beat you. Start now and the culture will be in place ready for the next shift in the economy. Whatever the case – being a high performance organization is just as important in difficult times as it is good time – many would argue it is more important.

The five principles or ‘flows’ are:

PLOWS

Purpose- A shared purpose is the necessary focus for the performance of any task or activity in a high performing culture.

Learning – individual, collective and organisational. Such organisations understand change and its impact and quickly work out what needs to be done and what capabilities they need to survive and succeed.

Opportunity – recognising, seeking, creating and taking opportunities to change and improve capability, effectiveness, efficiency and performance.

Worth- understanding the value and worth of the work being done, the people who are doing it and the outcomes being delivered – and communicating it widely to all interested parties.

Support- from management and colleagues in the shape of resources, information, encouragement etc. so everyone feels able to the best job they possibly can.

 

Some practitioners add:

Engagement, Energy or Empowerment and Relationships

Engagement- the enthusiasm, drive and oomph that individuals deliver which is above and beyond – discretionary effort

Relationships- there is nothing more powerful than a team who respect, trust, recognise each others strengths, complement those, challenge and stretch each other.

Changing Purpose to Focus provides us with a more memorable mnemonic(s):

This creates the FLOWERS model to high performance cultures or as I prefer to call it the High performance Culture REFLOWS© model:

Note – check out Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi work on FLOW

About Mike Morrison


Mike Morrison is a consultant and change agent specialising in developing skills in senior people to increase organizational performance. Mike is also founder & director of RapidBI, an organizational effectiveness consultancy.


RapidBI is an organizational effectiveness consultancy based in the UK but working internationally.
© RapidBI & Mike Morrison 2011 - this article/ page is free to copy and use on the condition that an active link back and reference is made to this site and page. Thank you for your understanding and co-operation.

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5 Responses to “Creating and maintaining a high performance culture”

Comment from MLM LeadershipCourse
Time June 11, 2009 at 12:16

Creating and maintaining a high performance culture | Management …

Comment from Martin Camden
Time June 11, 2009 at 14:51

Creating and maintaining a high performance culture | Management …

Comment from theLBSS
Time June 18, 2011 at 23:45

Useful Blog post: http://rapidbi.com/management/creating-and-maintaining-a-high-performance-culture/ #rapidbi

Comment from theLBSS
Time November 6, 2011 at 10:15

Useful Blog post: http://t.co/7BAvMH0f #biz

Comment from Brand Connect Media
Time November 6, 2011 at 11:00

Creating and maintaining a high performance culture http://t.co/1bflnIsR

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