Company Culture

Tools for Improving Company Culture

Raphael Crawford-Marks
March 9, 2015
0min

After reading Tomer Tagrin’s excellent post, “How can you measure your company culture?”, you’re now measuring e-churn, right? (We are: it’s 0 percent.)

The great thing about Tomer’s post is that it introduces a Key Performance Indicator (KPI) for your company culture. And once you can measure something, you can improve it. The question is: how?

Why employees quit

Here's the naive view of reducing e-churn: Entice employees to stay with money, i.e., big salaries, big bonuses, big perks. Unfortunately for many startups, it’s simply impossible to pay as much as the Googles and Amazons of the world. Luckily, money isn't the answer to the e-churn problem: the median tenure at Google is among the lowest in the country.

It turns out that the way employees feel about their job matters a lot more than money. Study after study shows that the reason workers leave is because they feel underappreciated, underrecognized, and undervalued. In fact, behavioral economist Dan Ariely has found that there are two things that make us love our jobs: a sense of purpose, and a sense of progress.

We feel a sense of purpose when we get feedback that our job matters and makes a difference: to fellow colleagues, to customers, to the world. We feel a sense of progress when we get feedback on our own performance, and see ourselves improving toward eventual mastery. Efforts to build a great company culture should then focus on creating an environment where both of these things happen on a regular basis.

Tools for improving company culture

Founders are always looking for better, easier, cheaper tools that will move the needle on different KPIs. I devour posts about the tools that other founders use. But where are the tools for improving company culture or the culture-building activities?

For too long, building a great company culture has been thought of as a “dark art.” Some leaders can do it, others can’t. How it’s done is shrouded in mystery.

This is reminiscent of how marketing was done about 10 years ago. Driven by personality and gut, not data. Thankfully, marketing is now a data-driven profession, as we’ve learned how to measure, predict, and drive growth, and built toolsets around it (with Hubspot, Buffer, etc.).

The same is beginning to happen for company culture. At Bonusly, we’ve built one of the first SaaS tools for improving your company culture. Along the way, we’ve gotten to know a handful of other great companies that are also working toward the same goal, albeit from different angles. Here’s a preliminary founder's tool belt for reducing e-churn and improving culture:

Small Improvements

In addition to annual performance reviews, conduct frequent, smaller, reviews that help your employees make small improvements every day.

iDoneThis

List out your daily accomplishments. In the words of Baremetrics' Josh Pigford, “Warm Fuzzies as a Service.”

Time Doctor

Time Doctor is a time tracking tool that helps increase productivity by 22% with features like powerful customizable reports that include web and app usage, optional screenshot monitoring, and more.

Hypercontext

Hypercontext makes 1:1s more productive, fun, and insightful by offering over 500 conversation starters that will keep the meetings feeling energizing instead of tiring. 

Guru

Information that your employees need to succeed should be easily accessible (and searchable). Bonusly has a Guru card from everything from our time off policy to how to create a new blog post. If employees are asking questions, there is probably a Guru card for that! 

Water Cooler Trivia

Each week, our team looks forward to a fresh new trivia quiz and celebrating the trivia champ in Slack. Water Cooler Trivia helps us stay connected no matter where we're working. Plus, the team has learned a lot of fun, albeit useless, facts together! 

Donut

Donut automatically prompts employees to discuss fun questions every day! We've seen everything from "What is your go-to sandwich order?" to "What beautiful place do you want to visit or have you visited?  Share a picture!" Donut offers a great way for teams to connect, even when they aren't working in an office together. 

Bonusly

Bonuses that actually work. Instead of giving out big bonuses at the end of the year, or asking managers to dole out spot bonuses, you can use Bonusly to harness the wisdom of the crowd.

With Bonusly, employees can give each other small bonuses for the daily wins that add up to big successes over time. Our analytics tools help you learn more about the strengths, relationships, and accomplishments of your team.

That's a wrap! Do you have any tools that you think should be on this list? Let us know in the comments.

 

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After reading Tomer Tagrin’s excellent post, “How can you measure your company culture?”, you’re now measuring e-churn, right? (We are: it’s 0 percent.)

The great thing about Tomer’s post is that it introduces a Key Performance Indicator (KPI) for your company culture. And once you can measure something, you can improve it. The question is: how?

Why employees quit

Here's the naive view of reducing e-churn: Entice employees to stay with money, i.e., big salaries, big bonuses, big perks. Unfortunately for many startups, it’s simply impossible to pay as much as the Googles and Amazons of the world. Luckily, money isn't the answer to the e-churn problem: the median tenure at Google is among the lowest in the country.

It turns out that the way employees feel about their job matters a lot more than money. Study after study shows that the reason workers leave is because they feel underappreciated, underrecognized, and undervalued. In fact, behavioral economist Dan Ariely has found that there are two things that make us love our jobs: a sense of purpose, and a sense of progress.

We feel a sense of purpose when we get feedback that our job matters and makes a difference: to fellow colleagues, to customers, to the world. We feel a sense of progress when we get feedback on our own performance, and see ourselves improving toward eventual mastery. Efforts to build a great company culture should then focus on creating an environment where both of these things happen on a regular basis.

Tools for improving company culture

Founders are always looking for better, easier, cheaper tools that will move the needle on different KPIs. I devour posts about the tools that other founders use. But where are the tools for improving company culture or the culture-building activities?

For too long, building a great company culture has been thought of as a “dark art.” Some leaders can do it, others can’t. How it’s done is shrouded in mystery.

This is reminiscent of how marketing was done about 10 years ago. Driven by personality and gut, not data. Thankfully, marketing is now a data-driven profession, as we’ve learned how to measure, predict, and drive growth, and built toolsets around it (with Hubspot, Buffer, etc.).

The same is beginning to happen for company culture. At Bonusly, we’ve built one of the first SaaS tools for improving your company culture. Along the way, we’ve gotten to know a handful of other great companies that are also working toward the same goal, albeit from different angles. Here’s a preliminary founder's tool belt for reducing e-churn and improving culture:

Small Improvements

In addition to annual performance reviews, conduct frequent, smaller, reviews that help your employees make small improvements every day.

iDoneThis

List out your daily accomplishments. In the words of Baremetrics' Josh Pigford, “Warm Fuzzies as a Service.”

Time Doctor

Time Doctor is a time tracking tool that helps increase productivity by 22% with features like powerful customizable reports that include web and app usage, optional screenshot monitoring, and more.

Hypercontext

Hypercontext makes 1:1s more productive, fun, and insightful by offering over 500 conversation starters that will keep the meetings feeling energizing instead of tiring. 

Guru

Information that your employees need to succeed should be easily accessible (and searchable). Bonusly has a Guru card from everything from our time off policy to how to create a new blog post. If employees are asking questions, there is probably a Guru card for that! 

Water Cooler Trivia

Each week, our team looks forward to a fresh new trivia quiz and celebrating the trivia champ in Slack. Water Cooler Trivia helps us stay connected no matter where we're working. Plus, the team has learned a lot of fun, albeit useless, facts together! 

Donut

Donut automatically prompts employees to discuss fun questions every day! We've seen everything from "What is your go-to sandwich order?" to "What beautiful place do you want to visit or have you visited?  Share a picture!" Donut offers a great way for teams to connect, even when they aren't working in an office together. 

Bonusly

Bonuses that actually work. Instead of giving out big bonuses at the end of the year, or asking managers to dole out spot bonuses, you can use Bonusly to harness the wisdom of the crowd.

With Bonusly, employees can give each other small bonuses for the daily wins that add up to big successes over time. Our analytics tools help you learn more about the strengths, relationships, and accomplishments of your team.

That's a wrap! Do you have any tools that you think should be on this list? Let us know in the comments.

 

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