How to Lead With Your Values, Regardless of IndustryYour company's values are the foundation upon which everything else is built, so properly defining them is a critical first step.

ByVictoria Maitland

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

What are your company's most basic ethical and societal principles? If you can rattle them off without checking your website, well done. Even if you can't, what matters far more is whether or not you are actuallyleadingwith them. But is that even possible to do all of the time? My experience has indicated that the answer is a resounding "Yes", and I can tell you how.

First principles

The ability to lead with values starts, not surprisingly, when you conceptualize and formalize them. If they are fundamentally aligned with those of your company's leadership team, then you are in the right place. If not, then you need to ask yourself some deeper questions. Authentic business values aren't created around what youthinkpeople want or the type of place at which youimaginegood talent would want to work — they represent the fundamental belief system of the founders, created around what sort of place they want and need to work in every day. In my company, they are respect, flexibility, autonomy and commitment. What are yours?

Related:The 8 Values Every Company Should Live By

Build them out, and stick to them

If you truly want to lead by your values, then policies must reflect them. We can't claim flexibility as a tenet, for example, then force team members to work 9 to 5 in an assigned cubicle, regardless of whether or not that works for their situation. Other businesses may claim honesty as a bedrock principle, and even have policies built to support it, but when an employee has a valid concern to raise, she or he is invalidated or worse, hushed. If you're serious about leading with values as a guiding star, it will never be inconvenient to apply them.

Rethink the top-down culture

Although business values tend to work best when they're based upon corollary personal principles, a culture set in them is not going to develop if the attempt is to convert people to your way of thinking. This is not a conditioning exercise; you have to find people who already share the same outlook. That's how good business environments develop. Rather than taking on the role of culture police, become culturecarriers, and there is a fine but definite line separating the two. If policies represent shared company beliefs, then it shouldn't be difficult.

Related:Building a Successful Company Culture, From the Inside Out

Where I work now, our team ethos is, in part, to find a way to embrace flexibility. Team members notice this, and tend to thrive in it. But the observe also applies; if you have a staff member who is more prone to enforcing arbitrary policies rather than guarding your company's essential beliefs, it may be time for a change, and it's critical to not drag your feet in doing so.

Recognize people at all levels

Rewarding guardianship of company values is especially valuable to team members at an executive level, as they often don't get the same degree of recognition as other employees. And for the rest of the team, just witnessing someone at an executive level be recognized for such contributions can be a game-changer. Suddenly, they see, values aren't just slogans, but lived-out qualities represented by human beings standing in front of them. Very simply put, it's positive reinforcement.

Related:Winning Includes Putting People First in Your Business. This is How You Do It.

Avoid the, "My industry is different" excuse

I can hear some of you saying, "But my industry doesn't work like that." You'll say, perhaps, that real estate or healthcare or a certain type of manufacturing is unique, and that these policies won't work the same there.

They will.

Values are values, no matter what product you're selling or who you're selling it to, because it's about how you conduct yourself in that act, not the act itself.

Victoria Maitland

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® Contributor

Head of People, North America at CI&T

Victoria Maitland is a passionate, collaborative, high-growth leader with over 20 years of experience envisioning, building and driving innovation within organizations and creating values-based cultures where people are purpose-driven, empowered and happy to contribute to making a better tomorrow.

编辑器的选择

Related Topics

领导

When He Tried to Buy and Develop a Distressed Shopping Center in Baltimore, He Found an 80-Year-Old Legal Covenant That Banned Black Ownership. Here's What He Did Next.

Lyneir Richardson, co-founder and CEO of Chicago TREND Corporation, discusses the company's efforts to accelerate economic development in urban neighborhoods.

Business News

Armed Delta Co-Pilot Indicted After Threatening to Shoot Captain 'Multiple Times' Mid-Flight

Jonathan Dunn was indicted on October 18 by a Utah grand jury.

Business News

A New Report Suggests the Retail Theft Narrative Is 'Overexaggerated' — Here's Why

"We have to acknowledge potentially ulterior, more opportunistic motives," the analysts wrote.

Business News

Billionaire CEO Flies Over 1,000 Employees and Their Families to Tokyo Disneyland for Concerts, Parties, and Park Access

Citadel and Citadel Securities founder Ken Griffin treated 1,200 employees in the Asia-Pacific Division to a delayed celebration for the company's 20th and 30th anniversaries.

领导

How to Manage These 6 Different Workplace Personality Types

The ideal of treating all your employees equally doesn't always lead to optimal outcomes. Instead, cater your management style to individual personality types — then watch your staff blossom!

Collaboration

Demolish Your Company's Silos to Unlock Organizational Efficiency – Here's How.

Here are several actionable steps to breaking down silos within your own organization to unlock the agility and strength that come from collaborative ecosystems.