How to Measure Company Culture

The health of a company can be directly connected to the health of their employee base. And one of the ways you can maintain an environment which keeps your workforce healthy, happy, and motivated is by developing and managing a strong company culture.

The internal values and employee behaviors that are facilitated by an organization contribute heavily not only to the wellbeing of a company’s workforce, but to the wellbeing of the business as a whole. A positive and meaningful working environment has been proven to boost energy and morale, leading to a higher ROI and increased productivity. Organizational culture is less about what gets done, and more about how things get done.

But maintaining a collaborative and healthy company culture comes with its own set of challenges — it requires upkeep, monitoring, and no small amount of effort. In this article you will find methods to utilize and metrics to watch that will help you stay on top of your internal working environment.

How to Define and Measure Company Culture

Data-driven analysis of your organizational culture can provide immense insight into the human health of your business. But, because we’re all human, and because company cultures are incredibly nuanced, measuring company culture will require some qualitative observations including speaking to your employees, and observing trends in internal behavior.

Company Culture Metrics to Observe and Track

  1. Environment. Humans need to feel safe, comfortable, and taken care of in order to be at their best in any activity. This doesn’t mean that your office needs to look like a West Elm showroom, but little things like temperature, lighting, even airflow in your workspace can affect productivity. We spend a lot of time at work, and having a comfortable and beautiful space to work in can have a huge impact on what we are able to do, and how we feel about doing it.
  2. Communication. Cross-hierarchical conversation should be easy. In a company with a positive dialogical approach, employees should feel that they are able to communicate thoughts, suggestions, concerns, etc. to leadership; and trust that their communications will be listened to respectfully and appropriately considered. As well, leadership should be able to communicate critical operation information to employees. Avenues for communication should be clear, easy to understand, and available to everyone, and should enable easy dialog across departments.
  3. Employee agility. Whatever industry you operate in, employees at your organization should be able to react quickly to changes in the marketplace and pursue new opportunities for growth as they arise. And, they should feel comfortable and able to adapt to new changes both external and internal to the business itself. Leadership should ensure that whatever shifts happen at the corporate level aren’t negatively affecting those lower down the chain.
  4. Diversity. Workforce diversity is one way to not only measure culture, but also the quality of your hiring tactics. A diverse team will indicate that you are invested in creating a workforce that prioritizes personal skill and experience. Unfortunately, it can be easy to let unconscious biases drive hiring practices, but it is absolutely vital to the wellbeing of a business that we are aware of them, and actively work against them to create an inclusive company culture which celebrates diversity. Equitable opportunities should be created for all employees, regardless of race, gender identity, nationality, sexual orientation, religion, or ethnicity.
  5. Courtesy and accountability. Interpersonal interactions between employees and personal responsibility taken may be a useful diagnostic tool for the rest of your company culture. Some questions you might ask: Are my employees willing to work collaboratively? Do they seek input from coworkers, without prioritizing their own needs and voice? Are my employees willing to listen to criticism, guidance, and feedback, and do they implement it into their professional behavior? Employees who feel supported by a company-facilitated work environment will be eager to support the business in return, and thus will be more invested in cultivating professional relationships, and self improvement.

Measuring Methods, Data Points and Trends to Keep in Mind

  1. Leveraging exit interviews. Employee turnover can sometimes be a direct result of problems in the work environment. Much of what you can find out about company culture will be gleaned directly from the employees themselves, and an exit interview or survey is a great way to garner honest feedback from your workforce about possible areas of improvement. You can use automated tools to gain collective intelligence and actionable data on employee turnover.If you’re interested in heading off involuntary turnover from the get go, read our recent paper that discusses the direct correlation between number of references checked and a decreased risk in employee turnover. Find out the magic number of references to check here.
  2. Distributing job satisfaction / performance surveys. You should be regularly asking your employees for feedback on their met expectations, personal productivity, team dynamics and corporate culture. You’ll be able to determine what the company is doing right, and how you can keep employees engaged and loyal to the organization. Why are these employees sticking around, and what would they like to see more of? What’s missing or who is a flight risk?
  3. Watch for signs of a toxic culture. It’s easy to promote a positive working environment, but it’s just as easy to let it fall through the cracks if it is not maintained properly. Signs that your internal culture might not be going so well can include:
    – obsession over titles and hierarchies among employees.
    – a lack of friendly chat or development of interpersonal relationships.
    – a communication barrier between staff and leadership.
    If you notice any of these factors popping up in your organization, it may be time to step back and reevaluate (and reinvent) your company culture processes.
  4. Find great-fit candidates from the start. Company cultures are dependent on the employees you hire. Each employee has the ability to strengthen or weaken your culture. That’s why it’s important that you implement predictive and objective pre-hire assessments to help improve quality of hire and to match candidates to roles based on job fit. Harver’s suite of talent assessments are based on decades of science to help your organization identify the best fit possible for any role.

Final Thoughts: How to Measure Company Culture

The foundation of any outstanding business is its workforce, which is kept healthy and happy by the cultivation of a strong company culture. By maintaining and checking in on the critical factors of any effective organizational culture, using the right tools to do so, your business will thrive.

To learn more about how to improve quality of hire and diversity to enable greater productivity and innovation among your workforce, schedule a call with Harver’s experts today.

Picture of Harver Team
Harver Team
Posted on:
August 1, 2023

Recommended Articles

Nominate Your Colleagues for a 2024 LIFT Award

HR
Posted on:
May 28, 2024

Ask the Experts: How Can Talent Teams Get Started with Data?

Recruitment
Updated on:
July 23, 2024

Unpacking Gartner’s Top 5 Priorities for HR Leaders in 2024

Recruitment Automation
Updated on:
July 23, 2024

4 Top HR Trends & Predictions for 2024

Recruitment Inspiration
Updated on:
July 23, 2024

Learning more about making better talent decisions faster?

Get the answers you need to optimize
your TA and TM processes and results.

Outmatch is now part of Harver

Ready to serve you with our full suite of talent solutions and a fresh look!