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Speed of Change is the C-Suite’s Biggest Concern

 Speed of Change is the C-Suite’s Biggest Concern
For years, the number one concern of CEOs has been recruiting and retaining talent. At this year’s Great Place to Work Conference, several CEOs said that the speed of change was keeping them up at night.

For years, the number one concern of CEOs has been recruiting and retaining talent. At this year’s Great Place To Work Conference, several CEOs said that the speed of change was keeping them up at night.

This isn’t a signal that recruiting and retention aren’t important anymore. In fact, recruiting and retention are a given. Like profits. They have been and always will be a priority.

Speed of change, though, is something new. Never has business moved so rapidly. As a result, an increasing number of companies are rethinking the value of long-term vision statements because their organizational vision needs to be more fluid.
Companies are redefining what short-term and long-term mean for the purposes of strategic and operational planning.

From a talent perspective, speed of change manifests itself in hiring too quickly. Several CEOs mentioned their concerns about hiring experts who aren’t culture fits because the company needs to fill positions. At one specific session, Arden Hoffman, vice president of people at Dropbox, talked about how her company is keeping their culture intact during this period of rapid growth and change.

5 Activities for Maintaining Company Culture During Rapid Change

Dropbox is a file hosting service, headquartered in San Francisco, that offers cloud storage, file synchronization, personal cloud, and client software. As of March 2016, they have 500 million users. Hoffman shared that the company has grown seven-fold and this prompted the senior management team to ask, “How do we keep Dropbox ‘Dropbox-y’?” A very fair and essential question.

Hoffman shared that the company realized that the key to keeping up with change was to have a clearly defined culture. Company culture doesn’t just happen. It takes deliberate action to create it and to maintain it.

1. TRUST. It starts here. Employees need to have someone they can trust as well as confide in. Especially during times of great change. Even when managers are giving clear and transparent answers. Change isn’t always easy, even when it’s welcomed.

2. DETAILS. Measure what you treasure. At Dropbox, managers are held accountable for attrition, hiring, diversity, engagement, etc. Not only what they do but how they do it. So, results are important, but methods are equally important.

3. AIM HIGHER. Dropbox employees succeed by being genuine, humble, passionate, audacious, and thoughtful. During performance reviews, employees get credit for contributing to the company culture. The focus is on “how” things get done versus “what” gets done.

4. “WE”. As Dropbox was growing and expanding, they wanted to make sure the company culture wasn’t lost in new locations. So, they relocated a senior level employee to help with the office opening. It allowed them to hire lots of new people with many different values while at the same time preserving the company culture.

5. CUPCAKE. This one is both fun and very hard to describe. Cupcake is defined as innovation and an element of surprise. For example, Dropbox sends a cupcake with every job offer. Employees are then asked during orientation how they can implement cupcake in their jobs.

Focus on Things You Can Maintain Long-term

Talent Economy Magazine recently published an article that implied organizations are moving away from long-term compensation structures because technology is moving too fast. If that’s true, then the way to manage the speed of change is by focusing on those things that can withstand massive amounts of change. Company culture must be one of those things.


Sharlyn Lauby