I am Charles Schwartz Show - Culture That Fuels Revenue
Episode Date: January 22, 2025Chris Dyer joins this episode to share his transformative journey from a self-proclaimed “crap boss” to a renowned expert in building exceptional company cultures. With decades of experience leadi...ng teams and consulting for top organizations, Chris offers invaluable insights for leaders looking to create workplaces where employees thrive. Through candid stories and research-backed strategies, Chris reveals the pitfalls that leaders often face when trying to improve culture and provides actionable solutions to foster collaboration, innovation, and engagement. He explains why culture isn’t just about slogans or perks but about intentional leadership and aligning organizational values with daily actions. Chris breaks down his Seven Pillars of Culture framework, detailing how transparency, recognition, and positive leadership can turn any workplace into a powerhouse of productivity and growth. His no-nonsense approach demystifies the process of cultural transformation, empowering leaders to address challenges and drive lasting change. Whether you’re a leader looking to turn around your company’s culture or an entrepreneur aiming to build a thriving organization from the ground up, this episode is packed with actionable takeaways. Chris’s practical wisdom and relatable delivery will inspire you to rethink your approach to leadership and culture. Key Takeaways: * The Seven Pillars of Culture and how to implement them effectively. * Why transparency is a game-changer for engagement and performance. * How to cultivate buy-in from employees at every level. * Real-world examples of turning culture into a competitive advantage. Head over to podcast.iamcharlesschwartz.com to download your exclusive companion guide, designed to guide you step-by-step in implementing the strategies revealed in this episode. KEY POINTS: 2:01 - Common Culture Mistakes: Chris explains the most frequent culture-related errors leaders make, including assuming culture is strong without evidence and neglecting to align actions with values. 4:14 - Employee Buy-In: Chris discusses the critical role of involving employees in shaping culture, highlighting strategies to engage them in defining shared values and goals. 9:54 - Weekly Employee Surveys: Chris introduces the concept of replacing outdated annual surveys with weekly one-question check-ins to gain real-time insights and foster a culture of continuous feedback. 14:39 - Seven Pillar Framework: Chris breaks down his Seven Pillars of Culture framework, detailing how transparency, recognition, and positivity can transform organizational culture into a competitive advantage. 17:03 - The Power of Recognition: Chris emphasizes the profound psychological impact of recognition in the workplace, showcasing how celebrating achievements boosts morale and engagement. 19:57 - Sharing Financials with Teams: Chris outlines how radical transparency in sharing financial performance with employees can reduce anxiety, foster trust, and encourage collaborative problem-solving. 22:14 - Creating a Positive Environment: Chris explains why positivity is essential for innovation and productivity, debunking myths about “toxic positivity” and showing how supportive workplaces drive success.
Transcript
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Welcome to the I Am Charles Schwartz show.
In this episode, we explore the foundational elements
of building exceptional company culture with Chris.
As a seasoned entrepreneur and culture expert,
Chris shares hard-earned lessons
from managing thousands of employees
and reshaping workplaces into thriving hubs
of collaboration and productivity.
From ditching outdated annual surveys
to implementing weekly one-question check-ins,
Chris uncovers actionable steps leaders can take
to foster a workplace where employees feel heard,
valued, and inspired.
We delve into the science-backed framework
of the seven pillars of culture,
transparency, positive leadership,
recognition, and more, that drive profitability,
innovation, and employee engagement.
If you've ever wondered how to align your team,
amplify productivity, and unlock the full potential
of your workforce, this conversation is for you.
Be prepared to challenge conventional thinking
about leadership and discover strategies
that transform workplaces from the ground up.
Grab a notebook because you'll want to revisit
these insights long after the episode ends.
The show starts now.
Welcome to the I Am Charles Schwartz Show,
where we don't just discuss success.
We show you how to create it. On every episode, we uncover the strategies and tactics that turn everyday entrepreneurs into unstoppable powerhouses in their businesses and their lives.
Whether your goal is to transform your life or hit that elusive seven, eight or nine figure mark,
we've got the blueprint to get you there. The show starts now.
Hi, everybody. Welcome back to the show.
Chris, I'm ecstatic for you to be here with me.
Thank you so much for joining.
Hey, thanks for having me, man.
Absolutely.
So we were talking about a couple of different things
about businesses and how to scale them,
but one of the things you do better
than everybody else is culture.
So for the people who don't know you,
which I can't imagine there's many that don't,
for those who don't know you,
can you give us a little bit of debrief on who you are
and what you do better than everyone else?
So I'm a serial entrepreneur who, you know, had a big company that I sold at the end of 2021.
And along the way, during my journey in managing thousands of people, I realized I was a crap boss
and doing culture totally wrong and had to figure out what we were actually supposed to do.
I thought I was doing it great,
and then one day you look in the mirror and you're like,
it's like saying, oh, I'm really healthy,
and then you look in the mirror and you're fat,
and it's like, huh, I need to change,
what I'm saying and what I'm doing are two different things,
and so I realized I needed to change culture,
and we did it, we did it really successfully.
I worked with a lot of other big organizations
to take it to them.
And now I spend my time speaking and writing
and helping companies make work not suck for people.
So when you go into that and people,
hey, I'm actually not as healthy I am,
I shouldn't probably be eating McDonald's and fast food.
What are some of the things in culture
that are the McDonald's fast food version of that?
It's just catastrophic mistakes that people are making.
Yeah, I mean, one of their really big mistakes
that they make is that, first of all,
believing they have good culture just because they say so.
Right, that's not how it works.
You can't manifest a great culture.
You can manifest many things in our lives,
but I think you have to be far more intentional about culture.
That's the first one.
The second one is that they believe
that if they just tell people,
that that is enough.
We need people to be a part of this process.
It's great for the CEO or the senior leaders
to create the vision and to ultimately say people like us do things
like this and don't do things like that.
You know, what was it?
Google's theme used to be don't be evil, right?
That was sort of like a baseline thing.
But beyond that, we need like our people to be a part of that process.
And so usually companies leave them out. Right? Right. They completely
ignore. They just say, this is what our culture is and you are lucky to be here. And that doesn't
work. So a lot of that happens because of buy-in, right? And getting your, the people underneath
your command or the people above your command, wherever you are in the chain, having that buy-in
because simply writing down core values is not effective. So how do you, if you're going into this and you're starting to redesign your culture,
what are some of the ways that you can get your employees or you get the people you work
within your culture to buy into everything that's going on?
Well, first step is to ask them, ask them what they care about, ask them what they value,
ask them, you know, when you do that, you start to pick up on themes and things that
obviously overlap and connect. You're not going to get 100% agreement on anything.
But if you're saying, hey, we really need to do X and you're asking your employees, well, what do
you think? And they're generally saying X or mostly X. I mean, you're fine ways to connect the dots to
make them see and understand that what you care about and what you want this company to be is ultimately aligned with what they're saying they want.
Or sometimes you don't just ask, what do you want?
What do you think a great company culture looks like?
What is it in your mind?
If we had the best culture in the world, what does that look like?
What will we be doing?
And they ultimately will start telling you things that maybe they're not doing yet.
Again, we can go back to the exercise.
What's healthy?
Well, healthy is I would be working out every day, I'd be eating good food and you're like,
we know you're not doing that right now.
So right, but you're getting that alignment on we all agree what good looks like.
And so we can start to work towards that.
That's kind of a really good step one.
Step two is, there's this really interesting correlation
between understanding and actually getting people to change.
Yes.
And so usually what leaders do
is they just try to convince, convince, convince,
and they try to push and beg, borrow, steal, you know, yell, scream, whatever it is to
get them to comply and to change. And all of that is a complete waste of time. All you need to do
is to help people understand more and more and more about why it's important, why we're doing this,
why it's good for them, why it's good for the company.
Assuming it's a good idea, more understanding
will result in more change and people being willing
to do more of that.
And eventually finding some people I call champions
of change, people who really love the idea
and are really enthusiastic and will go carry,
will go out into the world with their virtual sword and shield and help you, right?
Do more of that. That's super important.
So we have to ask and then we have to really help inform people, not just once, but constantly, right?
Getting them to understanding.
I think there's two things that people don't talk about is, you know, why is culture so important?
And then why is it important to them individually? Because they don't have a good grasp of human behavior.
So first off, why is culture so important? And then we'll go into the second part.
Well, culture is how we get things done. It's the norms, it's the behaviors. And so if you, if we think about what's the most
efficient, what's the best way to get things done?
I think most people would say, I want a collaborative company, I want people who speak up, I want people to give ideas.
I mean, we talk about all these things we would want from people.
And yet, if your culture is one where it's shut up and don't talk, don't speak at a turn, the senior leaders get to talk and you have to sit here and be quiet. Um, you know, we don't, we don't really care about ideas or, you know, if you give a good
idea the senior leader is going to steal it for their own.
I mean, like there is what the reality of culture is and then there's like what we think
we want.
And so culture is so important because we have, this has been studied.
I could give people, I could send them a hundred studies right now if they wanted them that would
You know, we know that when you have a great culture you have higher profits
We know when you have a great culture you have higher performance
And we know when you have a great culture you have higher productivity
Tell give me the senior leader. Give me the business owner who doesn't care about those three things.
Right. And I think that goes to the human needs, right? Because if we go in and say, hey,
yes, I'm going to sell you this and it's going to feel foo foo and it's culture,
they're probably not going to listen to that. If you go down to a C level individual or senior leader
and say, listen, this is going to increase productivity, it's going to make your life easier,
it's going to increase profits, and everything's going to be more efficient. Whenever rolling out culture, they're like, oh
wait, okay, this is now I want to pay attention to
it. Maybe I do want to listen to Susie in the
mailroom, or I want to listen to Bobby the janitor
or whatever it is.
Maybe I do actually want to hear their voice
because at the end of the day, it's a win for me.
And a lot of people don't understand that on a
human needs level.
So when it goes into this and you are evaluating
this and you're talking to each individual employee and you're having these conversations and you go when you work with
your clients, how much does human needs play into it, understanding where they go from
and then also what are the things that you've used to kind of amplify that when you discover
their needs?
Well their needs are everything. Everyone is always out to figure out what's in it
for them. I mean people are only working for you, essentially,
because they want fulfillment.
They want to feel like they're part of something great,
but they also need the money.
They need to feed their families and all of that.
So there's this basic contract in the beginning
that I'm here because I need something from you,
business owner, as the employee.
Now, I'm here and I would much rather enjoy my time here.
I'd much rather feel fulfilled and to do something meaningful with this work.
Or else I could just go work at the local burger place and flip burgers and just not care.
Right. And so there is that shift there.
We need to think about they're not just showing up altruistically. That may
happen in a volunteer organization, but we're talking about work, right? That is huge. So
what have we done? I used to send out a one question survey to all of my employees every
single week. We ditched the annual survey, which I think is dumb and stupid.
And if you're doing it, you probably belong back in the 1940s.
It doesn't work. It never really worked, but it definitely doesn't work today.
Instead, ask people one question every week.
What's going great? Where are you struggling? Who's killing it for you?
What client's driving you crazy? What resource don't you have?
If you had a magic wand, what would you fix?
What would you change in our software?
You start asking people these things
and they start sharing with you
and you get great ideas, you get great insight
on what they're dealing with,
what's happening in their lives.
And then, before you ask the next question the next week,
you come back to them as their boss and say,
this is what I heard and this is what I'm gonna do about it. And at the end of the month,
I would say these were the four questions or five questions we asked this month.
Again, this is what I heard. Again, this is the update in progress and what we've done about it.
And sometimes it was something good. You all said that Steve was the best employee ever this month.
He's been helping everybody out.
Like we said, you know, Steve, go get a massage and gave him a day off.
Like we did something cool for him or you're all telling me this one client is killing you.
They are half of our tickets.
They call constantly.
They're driving you nuts.
We've already interacted, you know, conversations with them to figure out how we can better
service them without them filling up our, you know, resources away.
So like, and then they feel heard.
And we're actually solving their problems and we're making work better for them.
Right?
That's how you do it.
Because you mentioned, you know, Bob and the, Bob the janitor or Susie in the mail room,
like what's the mechanism to actually hear from them?
Because you may not ever actually as the senior leader,
you may never cross paths with that person.
And so how do you extrapolate that knowledge and data
and things from them, sometimes directly,
sometimes through their bosses,
or the leadership in between you to actually enact change.
There's a great study on this that says if you pay someone
a certain amount of money, their happiness goes up.
But sooner or later, you're going to pay so much money
that that happiness correlation, that ramp, that incline
just doesn't happen anymore.
And I think the same thing happens with employees as well.
At some point, they need to be seen that they have
some sort of control of their destiny. There needs to be some sort of, there's studies about this, as you mentioned before, tons of these some point they need to be seen that they have some sort of control of their destiny.
There needs to be some sort of studies about this, as you mentioned before, tons of these
where they need to feel like, hey, I'm not just coming in and punching a clock and sure
you're paying me great money, but that's not going to increase efficiency.
That's not going to increase the bottom line.
That's not going to increase productivity.
They have to feel like they're hurt.
And I think for so many people, they fail to do this across the board in relationships or in business or
just across the board. If the person doesn't seen, isn't
seen, doesn't feel heard, or doesn't see it appreciated, it's
important. And I think one of the things you said that was
vital is if Suzy, whoever it is comes in and says, Hey, this
client's an issue, I'm having problems. And you don't
immediately address it that week before you ask
another question.
Her chances of speaking up again are now
diminished, just like in a regular relationship.
If your partner says, Hey, I really don't like it
when you don't put the toilet seat down and you
go, okay, great.
And then you don't put the toilet seat down.
Probably going to have some issues because that
person doesn't seem seen and heard, which by the
way, completely side note, it's never about the
toilet seat.
It's always about being seen and heard and note, it's never about the toilet seat. It's always about being seen and heard and appreciated.
It's never about the toilet seat.
So for those of you who are listening, if the Mrs.
Or anyone else is complaining about the toilet seat, screwing up somewhere else.
I'm just saying, it is what it is.
So when people go into this and you meet with cultures and you meet with senior leaders
and they're like, okay, our cultures or we're not productivity.
We're not having any productivity.
We want to increase our bottom line.
We want to increase revenue. You have this our cultures or we're not productivity. We're not having any productivity. We want to increase our bottom line. We want to increase revenue.
You have this weird culture thing you're talking about.
And sure, it's backed by tons of science.
How do you get them to buy in?
Because that's a hard part.
Because even if you have tons of science, like, hey, guess what?
The earth isn't flat.
There's still people you have to get them to kind of pivot over on that one.
How do you get senior leaders to kind of come to you and say,
hey, culture is important.
This matters. Let's talk about it. How do you get senior leaders to kind of come to you and say, hey, culture's important, this matters,
let's talk about it.
How do you get that buy-in from them first?
Yeah, I mean, they usually come to me
for one of two reasons.
One, they've got a giant headache,
so they're looking for an aspirin, right?
So that's one kind of client,
and we have one approach for them.
And then the other kind of client is like, listen,
I know we're doing well, but I wanna be next level.
And so they're looking for a vitamin.
They're looking for what are the activities
and things I can do to continue to be healthy
and sustain this growth or this company,
whatever it is for the long term.
So the answer for both is I have a seven pillar framework
and we've proven that there are these seven things
that if you do them well
you can have a great culture in fact you probably will have a great culture and you you can move
towards being a market leader um a lot of good cultures and good companies do some of these
pillars well but you have to do all seven in order to be great. So usually what I do is we look at the seven, I talk to them about the seven, and they begin
to self-identify where they feel like they're doing well.
That's really important.
Where are we doing well?
Because we don't want to stop doing that.
And then where are we doing okay?
And ultimately, where is this like you heard you heard me say that and you were like uncomfortable
in your seat.
You're like, I know that is not what we're doing well.
And then the struggle is they've got to go
and fix the one that's the worst.
That has to be the first thing we do.
So what are the seven pillars when you talk about
that there's seven pillars of culture,
what are the seven pillars?
Sure.
So in no particular order, but I always say this one first, but transparency is pillar
one.
Positive leadership, positive, having positivity in the organization is number two.
Then we have uniqueness, which is celebrating what makes us unique, understanding our unique
value proposition.
So it's people and DE&I and it's marketing
and it's like, you know,
but uniqueness is a really important one.
And we have how you deal with mistakes.
And, you know, are you yellowers and screamers
or are you, hey, let's learn from this.
Let's figure out how we get better.
Let's innovate.
Measurement, measuring what matters,
listening, and then
finally recognition. So you have to have a great recognition program in your company
in order to be great. So those are the seven. I can tell you which ones people typically
are terrible at, but it's not universal. Like I've gone into companies and like you guys
do all these great things, but you're not, you don't have a recognition program. Like
what do you, what? It's amazing how small it's,
and people don't understand how important recognition is.
In military operations, if I give you a little metal thing
on your chest, you're willing to go get shot for it.
And people are like, wait, really? That's it?
I'm like, yeah, if I give you this little stupid metal,
you're gonna willing to lose a limb.
Recognition is huge in the human psyche.
It just, it is what it is.
Now I'm surprised that you said, you know, when, when you handle problems,
the answer isn't just to yell and scream and punch people that, that doesn't,
that doesn't work.
That's not how you deal with it.
No, I just thought, all right.
So it might make you feel better, but it doesn't actually work.
It's the end of your business really, really quickly.
And what I love about this is, you know, people are going to listen to this
and they're going to be like, Oh my God, that's so Fufu.
That's so this, that's that.
I'm like, okay, cool.
Here's the science. Go look at the science and
come back to me after you. So if you shut the, it's just because this is a science. This is what
works. Yeah. Culture is a science. It is not an art. Yeah, this is absolutely. And it's measurable.
And there's, again, that's why I like you have seven pillars. You didn't just invent these because
you were bored one day. These are what science is. So what are the ones that most people get?
They're like, okay, we're pretty decent on this.
And then what are the ones that people universally, they just screw up.
Just like, wow, you're just, wow, okay.
Usually people have some mechanism for listening and usually they're okay at listening, but
they don't, they could do better, right?
We could do a question a week versus doing the annual survey we could you know be surveying
our clients more often than what we're doing now I mean there's usually some
way they could get better but they tend to be doing something it's pretty rare
for people to be doing nothing I think the one they struggle with the most that
when we start talking about what transparency really means people get
uncomfortable and they're like oh I don't know if we can do that, like, right? And yet I would say when we
got radically transparent with my organization and everyone I've ever
consulted with or I ever had, getting radically transparent has made all the
difference in the world. Because when I know a part of a story and then that part of that story worries me
or puts me in a fear mode, I immediately will make up the rest of the story. I will fill in the gaps.
And what do I fill in the gaps with? What I know from history. What I know it's happening in the
news. What I know from my own previous negative experiences. Right? All the negative stuff I know from history, what I know it's happening in the news, what I know from my own previous negative experiences, right?
All the negative stuff I know my brain will go up.
So today, my boss Bob came in and he didn't look at me and he didn't talk to me and he's been a little weird the last week.
And I know our numbers are down.
I must be getting fired.
I must be getting laid like immediately like you go to
Yeah, right
Instead if we're radically transparent and my boss shows up and says here's our P&L. Here's what's happening
Here's what we're doing about it, right? Here's our plan. Oh
Okay, now my anxiety level goes down and I can begin to help immediately. Ah, okay. You want to do this thing? You think that's gonna help us save the business? I can help you do that. Like I can go and do, right? So
showing up with our P&Ls every month is something I highly encourage companies to do.
Delivering the detailed part of the P&L that makes sense to different business units so they can really get dialed in into costs.
Understanding where synergies can happen, where we can merge vendors or figure out ways
to save money.
When we did this, within a year, we had saved 35% on our total operating expenses.
Without me ever telling anyone you had to cut anything, we're doing a cost thing, you
know, we didn't like lay anybody off
I just said here's our stuff, right?
Anyone has any thoughts has ideas. I'm here talk to your boss talk to me and people started saying hey
I didn't know we spent money on you know, we could do this instead
Mm-hmm, right like they they understood and therefore they could come up with better ideas because they were closer to it
Well, not only that they were bought into that they're like, hey, this is what's going on
There's this there's this great video where it shows there's a there's a woman sitting where they're shrink and she's like, you know
I know he's cheating on me hundred percent. He's cheating on me
He goes and he disappears in the garage and he's on the phone and he crawls into bed
He doesn't talk to me. He's clearly cheating on me. My husband is an SOB. And then, okay.
And then the husband comes in the room and said, Hey, what's going on?
I said, you know what?
I have been on these phone calls, trying to find this missing part from my motorcycle.
And I keep calling people and I keep calling people and I can't find this
missing part for my motorcycle.
So it's that fiddling in the blank of the story.
We go to our lowest, we go to our worst side of us, which is the fear and the
anxiety and the doubt versus, Hey, this is what's going on.
And if the employees and the people with you that are working on this are bought
into it, and that's part of your culture, if they're bought in, they're like, Oh,
wait, you're using this.
That doesn't make any sense.
You should be doing this.
And it's, it happens even on an IT level.
When I used to run IT, I would sit there and I'd show them like, okay, what are
you guys spending on email?
I'm like, that's what we're spending in-house?
You do realize for like $3 a mailbox,
we could cut our costs by a bazillion dollars.
Like, really?
Yes, so, okay, so that's transparency.
What's the next one?
Because you've done it really well,
but dividing this up, and again, I get it.
You didn't invent these, this is science.
Love it, thank you for using things that are proven.
What is number two that people run into
that you have found that like, you know what?
This is this is where you guys mess up on.
I wish you guys would do better.
Yeah, I think they struggle with the positivity part.
So being a positive leader, creating positivity
in the organization now, I know there's someone out there
right now
who thinks I'm talking about toxic positivity,
and I am not.
I am not talking about showing up
and saying everything is great.
No, it is a mind shift to do two things.
One, if we create positive environments,
we create environments where people feel supported,
they feel like their ideas are being validated,
they're being heard, whatever. They can be innovative. Like we know it is impossible
for a group of people to innovate if they are literally in this thing and they feel threatened
and they feel like their things are negative, right? I mean you can survive but it's really
hard to get innovative. So we want innovation to occur. We have to create these environments where people feel like they can succeed.
But more importantly, we want to remove this sort of like badge of honor of I'm a problem solver, right?
Because that means you're ultimately walking around the office looking for problems to solve. Instead, you should be really curious and walking around the office or talking to people,
whatever your environment looks like, and trying to find what's working.
And getting curious about why, why does Suzy get her work done in half the time as Bob?
Why is Suzy twice as efficient as Bob?
They're both about the same thing, they're both,
and why does Jason outsell everybody else?
Why is he the only person who made his quota this quarter?
You should be getting curious about that
and go and talk to Jason and try to help figure out
what is it that Jason's doing?
And can Jason take any of that
and share it with the rest of the team?
And not me saying, oh, well,
oh, clearly Jason makes 200 phone calls.
And then I go to everyone and say,
you have to make 200 phone calls a day.
No, do not do that.
That is dumb.
What you need to do is like, okay,
well, Jason clearly making a lot of calls is working for you.
And can you go back and teach the team
about what your strategy is,
why you do that mini call?
And then people can take from that what they think will work for them.
Right.
Right.
Because one size fits one.
Right?
Well, if it works for one person, it may not work for somebody else.
And when somebody else teaches you how to do something better,
like your peer, your coworker, you're like, oh, that's cool. I want to try that. That's interesting.
When your boss says, hey, Jason does 200 phone calls and now you need to make 200 calls, you're like, screw you, dude. I'm looking for a new job.
This is not...
It's a competitive between you and Jason.
Right. You're now in a resistance mode, right? As opposed to, I'm cooperative, I'm walking alongside Jason, he's telling me what he's doing, and I'm going,
that's cool buddy, high five, I'm gonna go try that. Versus your boss coming in, now we're
both pushing up against each other, we're resisting each other, right? And I'm saying,
you need to start making 200 phone calls, you're like, I'm not ever making 200 phone calls,
that's ridiculous! That's not how I sell. Right? We tell this with kids, we're like, you know,
go brush your teeth, and they resist, like, okay, you win. Which's not how I sell. Right? We tell this with kids, we're like, you know, go brush your teeth and they resist.
And like, okay, you win.
Which one do you want to do first?
You can either brush your teeth or you can,
you could go to the bathroom.
I don't care.
You win.
And then I go, I'm going to go to the bathroom first.
Or I'm going to take a bath before I do it.
So it's simple human behavior.
And we sit there and what we,
I love how you start about looking at what matters.
And we talked about this where they did a study
where they changed the lights in a factory. They're like, it's not going to increase
productivity and they lowered the lights
and productivity went up.
They're like, well, maybe if we increase the lights,
productivity will change as well.
Maybe it will go down.
They increased the lights and productivity
went up even again.
They're like, what the hell?
And so then they turned all the lights off
and productivity went up again.
They're like, what the hell?
It's like, what your monitoring matters.
They realized that this was mattering.
They realized that this was going on.
So if you have the opportunity to monitor
something that's positive and encourage. They realize that this was going on. So if you have the opportunity to monitor something
that's positive and encourage again, culture
that they share with each other and they help each other.
I love that you talked about that,
that you went after looking at the work.
And so out of that study, I was reminds me
of this really simple saying that I,
mine leaders have all the time, what you focus on grows.
Yes. They were focused on productivity in that particular plant I remind leaders of all the time, what you focus on grows.
They were focused on productivity in that particular plant
and looking at that and guess what?
Even though they didn't really do anything monumental,
they made some changes in the lights
is an interesting correlation,
but everyone knew they were being studied,
they were being looked at and the focus was on them
and on productivity and that grew.
To your point, focus on what's not a problem solver, but what's working.
So focus on, as you said, really articulately, focus on, Hey, this is working.
This is what I'm going to start focusing on.
And then having them share it as a unit.
And I think when most people think, Hey, be a positive person, they're going to
think like, hi, everything's wonderful.
I was like, no, that's not what we're talking about.
This isn't Fufu.
This is science.
This is what works.
What is the one that no one gets?
Like you go into every one of your organizations
and you're just like, oh, wow, they just,
holy Moses, every single time.
What is the one that people collectively fail?
You know, uniqueness is hard for people to get.
And so uniqueness, again, goes in a couple different ways. On the business side, uniqueness is hard for people to get. And so uniqueness, again, goes in a couple different ways.
On the business side, uniqueness is what is our value proposition,
what are our features and benefits, how is it we do our product or service differently than our competitors.
I mean, really good companies get that right so that they can market correctly.
It's amazing how many you know fairly
successful companies don't figure that out to the point where they could be
market leaders by just articulating right. I mean this may piss some people
off but is the iPhone that much better than like the Samsung Galaxy?
You know the top phones are they that much? No but but Apple's marketing is
amazingly better.
It articulates the culture.
Exactly.
Remember the commercials, I mean,
you might not be old enough for this,
but they used to have commercials like,
I'm a Mac, I'm a PC.
And there was this whole thing where like,
oh, I don't want to be a PC.
PCs are dorks and they're losers and oh, it's gross.
They built it a whole identity around it.
It's kind of like, if you go to the motorcycle
world, there are significantly better motorcycles than
Harley Davidson's.
Sorry guys, I've been riding for years.
There are motorcycles that are just light years better
than Harley's, but I'm not going to go be on one of
those bikes because it's not a Harley and it's so
moronic, but it's built in that uniqueness that
you're talking about.
Yeah, that culture, the uniqueness.
And so, you know, that's one part of it, but the
uniqueness pillar also goes into
what makes our people unique.
Because often what we do is we say,
well, what makes us all the same?
They all show up in a meeting and it's like,
oh, well, we all like the bears,
or we all like the angels, I don't know, whatever.
It's like, whatever stupid thing,
we're trying to find commonalities all the time
to create connection.
And instead, we need to get really interested about what makes us all different.
And what are the different qualities? What are the different skills?
What are the different abilities that we can bring to the organization?
And so I don't really care that you and I maybe both are really good, let's say, writers.
Right? I want to know what is it that you can do that I can't do,
so that you can help me when I need it,
and I can tell you what I'm really good at,
so I can help you when you need it, right?
There's an area that you just aren't that strong in.
So for teammates, us really understanding
what makes us unique is important,
and that creates diversity of thought.
And that will, and this has become very politicized more lately,
and certainly there's been some changes happening.
If you really want to have a diverse workforce,
whatever that means to you,
whether that's diversity of thought,
diversity in how people look or who they are,
the way to do that is to celebrate what makes people unique.
Because if you are ultimately reinforcing this idea that we care about, you know, Tom is the most amazing salesperson.
Let's go find five more Toms.
Well, Toms, you know, let's just say Toms, you know, whatever his demographics are, but he's from this particular school,
and he's from this particular part of the country, and you end up hiring like five versions of Tom,
that doesn't mean you're going to be successful.
I mean, my top five salespeople could not have looked, acted, spoke differently,
worked completely different, approached sales completely differently.
And that was a huge value to us because one did all their sales in the golf course,
and the other one was like way into partnerships,
and the other one like made 500 phone calls a day and we just you know knew everybody like having that skill set in many
different people was sort of very very valuable so i kind of find that people get this like a little
mixed up sometimes um in the book i could tell you a quick story if you want an example of how
to do this um we had everyone in the company take the StrengthsFinders, the Gallup StrengthsFinders test.
You get your top five strengths.
I think that's all you need.
You don't need the other, sorry Gallup, I don't think you need to pay the extra money for the other 34 or 37 or whatever it is.
You need the top five.
And we asked everyone to take it.
We took their top five and I put them out on just because I was curious
And I we put them all the strengths up top and we put all their names down this side on the excel sheet
And then we just filled in the box wherever they had strengths
And what was fascinating was we had so many people with overlapping strengths
I mean I I want my entire operation and research team all had responsibility in their top five,
which makes a lot of sense because they have to be responsible.
They were doing work that was really, really important and they were irresponsible people
like sex offenders get jobs at daycares and stuff.
I mean, it was like they had to be that kind of type of person.
But what's also interesting to me was we had all of these gaps. We had, I think something like 12 or 14 strengths that we had nobody.
Talking thousands of people, I have nobody.
Oh, that's terrifying.
With these strengths.
And I was like like that's a problem
Yeah for us right and we had been trying
To reach some particular goals with diversity to you know to create more diversity in the organization and we had hit a ceiling
We kind of hit hadn't really gotten any better. We didn't really know what to do. We were certainly committed to it, but like
You know, we didn't know what to do
So I just said this off the top, you know pull this out of my butt certainly committed to it, but like, you know, we didn't know what to do.
So I just said this at the top, you know, pull this out of my butt. I was like, hey guys, um,
the next time you, you're going to hire somebody, I'm not going to take a final interview and I will not hire them unless one of their top five strengths includes one that we don't have right now.
Yes. That's it. That was my only requirement.
And it's a, and it's a game changer. It's kind of like saying, Hey,
we have a thousand eggs in our fridge, go to the store and buy more eggs.
That's not going to make the damn cake.
It's not diversity based on geographic or, or, or.
Belief race or gender or sexual preference. Nothing. I just, right.
I just said, give me people who are different than the people we have now.
Like just by one strength,
they can have the other four that are the same.
So they're going to connect still with the organization.
The people I started getting at the interviews and I gave no other instructions.
The people were acted different, they spoke different,
they had different backgrounds, they looked different,
they talked different, everything was different about them
in a wonderfully positive way.
And the organization, and it was like a snowball.
As soon as we suddenly had this new injection
of fresh ideas and different perspectives,
we never had to like think about diversity again.
Because we were now already, it was just going, it was like the momentum was there, right?
And we weren't trying to like solve all of society's ills by inside of our organization.
We were just trying to get people there that could think differently and have different perspectives so that we could
argue more in a very collaborative and constructive way about how to solve real-life issues
I don't think people are doing that
I don't think because they get stopped at the political side of this which is just not the conversation we're having at all
It's a bit like going to go get sushi and then people are arguing about what we're gonna get for dessert
It's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about sushi in this case. We're talking
about skill sets. We're talking about how it helps out the culture. And I love that you brought in
for your people underneath your command that you were working with. You're like, Hey,
this is all I want. You decide everything else. I'm empowering you to do that. So again,
you're going back to the idea that they have control. They've got influence. They're deciding
not only who's going to be in their org, but the people that they have control, they've got influence, they're deciding not only who's gonna be in their org,
but the people they're gonna be working with
every single day.
It's like, I only just wanna help,
this is my one requirement.
You didn't get in their face without anything else
because if not, you just get a wall of the same thing
and that's not gonna create different results.
You mentioned your book, what's the name of the book?
The book, my most recent book is called
The Power of Company Culture, That's the second edition.
And it's filled with, it's really a three part book.
Part one is like, what do you got to do not to suck?
What's the bare minimum you got to do to have a company culture, right?
And then the middle is, how do you be great?
And then it gives you a breakdown of those seven pillars. And I've got case studies with NASA, Neiman Marcus, Gary Vanderchuk's company,
lots of different organizations in there to be able to help give good examples,
not just my companies, not just my experiences,
but what are they doing with those particular pillars that's really interesting.
And then the third part is, and this is I think really interesting for anybody on any topic, culture aside, third part is like, how do you actually do change? So it's a it's my little mini guide book of, you know, change management. So if you have a big change management issue, and right now your culture is fine, you could literally buy the book and just open up the last third. And that's going to give you the framework on how to get people to change and not drag
their feet and make it harder on you to really create that momentum you need to create.
You mentioned some case studies in there, you know, Neiman Marcus, I'm so used to saying
Needless Markup, but Neiman Marcus, and you have all these ones. What is it? What is a
case study that didn't make the book that you're like, yeah, I haven't told the story,
I wanna tell this one,
because this would be something that the audience were like,
okay, yeah, okay, that's cool.
So what is one that isn't in the book as well?
I was gonna do a case study on Uber
because they really screwed up diversity.
Okay, how so?
They had a lot of problems for a while.
Now they ended up riding that ship
and they brought in some really key people
to help them deal with this.
But I mean, they had a young boys club essentially, right?
They had sort of this like tech bro thing going on
for a period of time and they had some real problems
and they had some lawsuits and they had some real,
you know, legitimate concerns for people
that didn't fit that, you know, this was years ago.
And I remember like, I remember people like wouldn't drive with Uber, they would only drive
with Lyft because they had heard about some of these real problems. I had kind of wanted to do
a case study on them on like how that, what was going on with that. I, you know, shockingly,
I couldn't get them to want to really talk about. They had done some real, I wanted to kind of show
what their growth had been and show like what they had done to try to right that ship. They
weren't interested in, I guess, bring some of that because they had kind of gotten over
that PR hump, I think. So I think that would have been really, really interesting to have
learned and see what they learned and what they actually ended up doing.
I understand they didn't want to, you know, open up the scab, you know, peel the scab away
and re-injure the wound.
I think my favorite example of how you have to listen
to everybody that goes through,
because you can't just have all the tech bros,
is when they did, so there's a great movie,
it's called Zero Dark Hundred,
it's about when they went after Bin Laden, and they got that great movie. It's called zero dark hundred. It's about when they
went after Bin Laden. And they got that and they're, they're,
they're going and they're doing the mockups and they've done
this a bunch of times. And the lowest seal that was on command
it goes, well, what happens if the helicopter crashes? They're
like, what do you mean? They're like, this helicopter has never
crashed on any mission ever. They're like, yeah, but what
happens if it does? I don't know, you guys asked for
something outside the box. And they were like, okay, it's never to have, you know what the rules are. We're going to have to role play.
What do we do? How to prepare for it. And they adjusted how much C4 they brought. They did all
this. And of course, sure as enough, you know, they went in and they put the helicopter above it. And
that created a wind tunnel because of the walls and smashed it immediately right down on it.
And it's amazing that this, the youngest seal, the most inexperienced brought it up. And he was like, Oh, no, no.
What about this? So being able to your point, having those
those those things, those diversifications in there to get
that when you're talking about change, and you're talking
about serious change, how do people do that? Because I get
I think most people know at this point, if you haven't at
this point, you already know that, hey, you're screwing up
and I haven't even touched the seven pillars. I think most
people have listened to this one and listen to what you've done and going, well,
shit, I need to change the ballgames. And then they get the
rough idea of a seven pillars. But change is hard. You know,
we were experiencing that collectively as a society right
now. Some things are changing in one way that doesn't resonate
with people and some things are changing in ways that we wish it
would resonate with people. It's about as political as I'm going
to get on this call.
So when you go into this and you're trying to implement change,
what are the things that actually are sustainable when you're trying to
implement change?
Well, is it good change? That's number one, right? So is it a good idea?
This is always my terrible example, but if I came to you and said, Hey,
we should start selling meth, right?
No matter how much I try to get you to change your mind and you're like,
listen, Chris, I'm not getting into the meth business.
No, thank you.
I'm like, but listen, we can make a lot of money.
I'm not much.
I convince you.
You're going to be like, no, because if it's a bad idea, you're going to get
resistance no matter what you do.
So that's kind of like the first litmus test of like, is it a good idea?
And are you certain that the change in the thing that you want to do is the right decision?
And it is a good idea and is good for everyone that's involved in all of that.
Right. So that's like given baseline.
And then we talked about a little bit earlier, helping people understand, deeply understand.
So if I open a door and it's totally pitch dark in there
and I'm a stranger, you don't know me,
and you're happy to be walking past and say,
oh, excuse me, can you walk in that room?
You're gonna be like hell to the no.
Right.
Because I don't know who you are,
I don't know what's in there.
I mean, it could be
a million dollars. It could also be, you know, a monster that's going to eat you. Like,
I don't know anything. My answer should be no. And that is the answer at work. I don't understand
what you want me to do. I don't understand what is this. No. That's my baseline is no. So I help you understand a little bit. Now you're aware.
Hey, can you help me find the light switch in this room?
I can't find it.
I don't have, I forgot my glasses.
I can't.
And now all of a sudden you have a little information.
Oh, you're asking me for help.
Well, I can reach my hand in there and probably find the switch without being in real danger.
Right?
So now I've given you a little information.
Now you're willing to do a little bit more.
Right? Now it's, Hey, I need given you a little information. Now you're willing to do a little bit more. Right?
Now it's, hey, I need to find the light switch.
I don't have my glasses.
My grandson is lost in this room.
Right?
I need to, now all of a sudden.
It's a different conversation.
Right.
Now, so you're getting more and more and more information.
I'm asking you to do this thing
that might be weird or scary, but like,
and so the more you move up that ladder, up that X, you know, Y axis, anyway, whatever it is,
the X axis, Y, up the axis, suddenly blanked on my X and Ys and forgotten all my geometry,
the, as you go up the X axis, the, which is more and more understanding and more and more training more and more of them deeply
getting it and some people are going to stop at
They get it some people are going to go all the way up to like expert level. They want to know everything
right
Some people understand what chat gpt is and how to prompt it
Some people are using it to like deeply program and go like Like there's a spectrum of what people understand about that.
But as they go up, then again, it has to be a good idea,
they begin to move along that y-axis to I'm going to do something,
I will change, I will help you get other people to change,
I will be a champion of change, I will reinforce and like literally help you
find the people that are doing that.
So that's sort of one tactic that leaders can take.
The second tactic is I realized when we were going
through this change that I had a group of people
that were my champions of change, that wanted to change.
They were good to go.
And everyone was like trying to convince the people
in the middle to change, to go along with this,
to why it was good for them.
And I kind of was like, you know what?
I don't think we need to worry about the middle group.
And I've actually seen this work over and over
and over again.
The middle group essentially gets pushed by the bottom group.
And the middle group actually ends up pulling the bottom group.
And the champions of change kind of pull everyone along too.
So I got the champions, the people who really got it, to go and have lunch and go have coffee
and go have side conversations with the people
who were like, no, I don't like change,
I don't wanna do this.
I used to call them the flip phone crowd,
like the people who had those old flip phones.
Never like the buttons were falling off
and there was no way they were gonna go to an iPhone.
They were never gonna give that thing up
until finally it like a broke and there was no more
warranty and they
finally had to go to the Steve Jobs mafia, right? So like
But when I got those people that really got it took I have these like
peer conversations about what are you worried about? What's going on? What do you what do you fearful about?
You know, let me tell you what I think is going to happen.
Like I know Chris has got all these crazy ideas, but like I actually think these are
good ideas.
And let me tell you why as your coworker, as your peer, right?
I'm not telling you how to do it, but I think this is going to work.
I think this is great.
I think we're going to end up being happier.
And when those people were like, oh, okay.
Then they just started pushing the middle people forward.
Cause if you're in the middle and you're like, well, I'll go along with what
everybody else is doing. If that's, if that's your,
as far as the middle, intuitively who you are and, and,
and Steve who like doesn't ever do any change is suddenly going, yeah,
I'll do that. And you're like, oh, well,
I guess it must be an amazing idea. Steve's on. Don't worry.
Right. So that you say, Steve, I've got an uncle Steve who literally has a flip phone
and his flip phone literally just died.
And I was like, I'll send you a smartphone.
I've got extra iPhones.
I will send it to you.
He's like, I just bought a new flip phone.
I was like, mother,
shout out to my uncle, Stevie.
We love you, but dear God, man.
So, okay. So actually with that in mind,
what do you do when you have those people like,
no, I'm not changing.
That's adorable.
I'm still gonna use a dot matrix.
I'm gonna use an abacus.
I don't care if you give me a calculator.
It ain't happening.
How do you deal with that in a culture
or is that toxic to that?
Well, I mean, listen, sometimes having people who are resistant to change is a good thing.
They help protect us.
They help us from running, you know, off a cliff because we see some shiny object and
we want to run after it.
I mean, we need these people in our lives too for different reasons.
They usually hold institutional knowledge.
They help ground us in tradition
And so those people aren't all bad
It's just that when we find a good idea and we need them to come along we want them to be a part of that journey
We've just got to figure out how to you know, put it in their terms and help them
So they're not fearful and so that they understand why it's important and they ultimately ultimately decide it's good for them too, to come along.
I think there's so much in culture
that we just don't understand.
And that we're slowly getting into it
and we're finally getting beyond the woo woo.
But there's so much more that needs to do that.
So there's so many more conversations,
there's so many more questions that I wanna ask,
but it means you'll be here for another seven hours,
which would not be fair to you.
What is the best way for people to track you down?
What is the best way for people to connect with you? You mentioned your book. What is the best way for people to track you down? What is the best way for people to connect with you?
You mentioned your book.
What is the best way that someone says, Hey, listen, my culture shot.
And I don't want to do this for Fufu reasons.
I want to do this to increase productivity.
I want to do this to increase efficiency and increase ultimately my bottom
line so that I can do that.
If I'm trying to build a bulletproof culture that's built on the seven peers.
How do I do that?
How do they, someone get a hold of you to actually implement those things?
First, if you are in the US and you want to text 33777 and just put my name Chris as the message,
I'll send you off some ideas about how to change your meetings.
I'll send you 25 starter questions for that one question survey a week,
and that'll get you on my newsletter so you can you know get additional content. As of the 16th here today in January, TikTok is still up and running. I'm on
TikTok. I do lots of content there but I also do a lot of Instagram reels, YouTube, happy to connect
on LinkedIn. You can also go to my website chrisdyer.com but wherever you hang out on social
media I'm probably there if you want to connect.
And then there's lots of stuff that you can digest.
Certainly, my book is really set up to be not woo-woo and not foofy.
And it's meant to be really, this is how you actually do it.
And it comes from me having to go through it myself and all of the other people that I've been able to learn from along the way that I know have had to go through that same journey.
So the good news is you can make small incremental changes.
You don't have to make a radical change tomorrow.
Working on your culture doesn't mean you, you know, go back, we go back to this health
example.
It doesn't mean you have to start starving yourself. It doesn't mean you have to start starving yourself doesn't mean to go through this painful thing
You can start doing small incremental things a little bit at a time
That will over time have a huge huge impact on
Your company on your bottom line on your happiness as a leader and the happiness of your people
And I love everything is based on what's been proven.
These aren't things that have made up.
These are things that not only you've experienced,
but science backs it.
And you've also done it with all of your clients.
Chris, I appreciate you for being on the show
and for being able to give out and have people get access
to it and write a book and spend the time with us.
I really appreciate you being here.
Thanks so much for having me.
Thank you for tuning into this transformative conversation
with Chris Dyer.
We hope his insights have sparked new ideas for redefining culture in your organization
and inspired you to take meaningful action.
A heartfelt thank you to Chris for sharing his powerful strategies and frameworks for
creating workplaces where people thrive.
His ability to turn challenges into opportunities and cultures into competitive advantages is
a testament to his expertise
and passion for helping businesses succeed.
To all the leaders, innovators, and change makers listening,
your dedication to building better organizations
is why we do what we do.
Ready to put Chris's strategies into action?
We've crafted a comprehensive guide
summarizing the seven pillars of culture,
complete with actionable tips and techniques
to create a workplace where collaboration and innovation flourish. Download it now
at podcast.iamcharlesschwarz.com. Remember, as Chris emphasized, great
culture isn't a luxury, it's the foundation for extraordinary results. Now
go elevate your organization and build a culture that inspires greatness. Your
journey to leadership mastery starts today.