8 Questions to assess your organisational culture

Organisational culture (also referred to as company culture) is the set of values, behaviours, practices, attitudes that the employees of a given company share. It informs the way they interact with each other and with customers, and it can make or break even the strongest business models.

In this article, we’ll discuss why organisational culture is important, and give you 8 sample questions for an organisational culture assessment. 

These questions cover different factors that influence and make up your company culture, and will give you a detailed overview of it.

Let’s dive in. 

Why is organisational culture important? 

While organisational culture is a broad and elusive concept, its impact is actually quantifiable. A 2020 report revealed that the cost of turnover because of a toxic workplace culture exceeded $223 billion for the past 5 years in the US alone. These are the direct losses that employers needed to bear because of failing to create a workplace environment where employees could feel heard and respected, and that was motivating for them. Job satisfaction is tightly related to both what your company culture is and how you’re communicating it to your employees. Conflicting messages will erode your employees’ trust while acting with integrity will foster loyalty and openness. 

Creating and nurturing a strong organisational culture will help you in several ways. It’ll help you: 

  • Improve performance and productivity
  • Attract the best talent
  • Reduce turnover rates and retain employees
  • Be more competitive. 

For that reason, it’s essential to assess your company culture regularly (for example every year), in order to be able to bridge the gap between your ideal and your real culture. 

Performing a culture assessment is the first step to figuring out if your real organizational culture is in line with your stated values, and will allow you to map out different ways to improve it. 

Let’s now look at the sample questions for a cultural assessment, and the rationale behind each one. 

The first question to ask would be about your organisational structure. In it, you can include the following subtopics and clarifying questions:

How is your organization structured?

  • How many levels of leadership are there? 
  • Do you have a big (and diverse) leadership team, or are just a few people responsible for the key decisions at your organization?
  • Is the structure of your organization formal or informal? 
  • Do you need to go through official channels, or is it ok for people to bypass authority sometimes?

Based on the answers to these questions, you’d be able to assess the hierarchical structure of your organization:

  • Highly hierarchical structure: 

If your company is highly hierarchical, you probably have a well-defined formal structure with a few different levels of leadership. 

  • Moderately hierarchical structure: 

A moderate level of hierarchy means that people have well-defined roles with specific degrees of authority assigned to each role, but that it’s ok to question authority and work outside of the hierarchical framework sometimes.

  • Flat hierarchical structure: 

For companies with a low degree of hierarchy (also known as flat hierarchy), this means that employees can bypass and challenge authority, and that roles aren’t strictly defined. 

Does your organization embody its mission? 

If you asked 10 employees what the mission of your organization is, would you get 10 similar responses or 10 different ones? 

The culture of an organization should align with its mission, which, in turn, should be clearly communicated to both your employees and clients. If your employees struggle to define your mission, or if you’re getting answers that vary a lot, it’s a good idea to look into the reasons for this. 

You cannot artificially create a specific company culture you’d like to have: your culture is what you do, not what you say. Maybe you have never explicitly defined the principles that inform your actions, but these principles still exist and are real. Your mission should be one of the cornerstones defining your organisational culture.

A people-oriented organization focuses on the motivation of its employees in order to maintain productivity and perform well. 

Is your organization people-oriented or task-oriented? 

A task-oriented organization focuses more on efficiency and puts tasks, processes and workflows first. 

Task-oriented companies are often more formal and hierarchical in structure, while in people-oriented organisations, employees have a higher degree of independence and autonomy. 

To further assess this, consider the following question: 

Does your organisation’s orientation make sense, considering your industry and mission? 

A large multinational bank will probably operate differently than a small advertising agency, and that’s normal.

There isn’t a right or a wrong answer, but whatever the answer is, it needs to be in line with what you’re communicating, both externally and internally. “People first” is one value many companies communicate to the outside world, but not all of them actually live by it, and a misalignment between the desired and the real organisational culture will create bitterness and distrust. 

What motivates employees? 

Motivation is highly personal, and will inevitably vary from person to person, but if you’re able to pinpoint what motivates your employees, you’ll probably notice a pattern. So, what motivates your employees most? It could be a number of things, such as: 

  • A sense of mission
  • Opportunities for growth and development
  • Challenges and goals
  • Recognition (external or internal)
  • Benefits and compensation

Alternatively, it might also be a fear of under performing (and its consequences), in which case you probably need to inspect its sources and address them.       

Motivation can be considered from another point of view as well: we could differentiate between intrinsic versus extrinsic motivation. Let’s look into that further: 

  • If your employees are motivated intrinsically, this means they are working because they find satisfaction and fulfilment from within. 
  • If they are motivated extrinsically, they are working for external rewards (recognition, benefits, etc.).

Intrinsic motivation is key to long-term employee satisfaction and productivity, and employees whose values align with those of their company are more likely to be intrinsically motivated to do the best work they can. You can assess potential employees for culture compatibility with our culture add test,or also with a personality test.

How is failure addressed? 

Every company and every employee will inevitably fail at some point. Of course, major failure is never ideal, and most organisations will strive to prevent it, as it can cost them clients, money, and even their reputation. 

However, the way you address failure is crucial to your culture: 

  • Is failure viewed as an opportunity to strengthen bonds within the organization and as a lesson to learn from and grow? 
  • Or do moments of failure divide the organization and lower morale? 

When an organisational culture is one where employees fear failure, this leaves less room for innovation and experimentation. In this case, tried-and-true methods prevail, and there’s a high degree of predictability of the outcomes. Some organisations, such as Netflix, Amazon, and Coca-Cola, actively seek to learn from failure: if you want to experiment and innovate, this implies that you’re taking risks, in which case the occasional failure is inevitable. However, the way you handle failure might sometimes heavily depend on your sector or industry as well.

Would your organization benefit more from collaboration between team members or competition between team members?

When assessing whether your company is competitive or collaborative, you need to keep in mind that neither is right nor wrong, but that one of them is simply a better fit for your organization. 

Organisations with a strong competitive culture are often fast-paced and they benefit from employees who put in extra effort and achieve specific results, which are often closely tied to profits, market share, volume of sales, response times, etc. When a competitive culture goes wrong though, it can lead to ethical compromises like with Wells Fargo, which has paid a $3 billion settlement for using fraudulent sales practices (which resulted from, among other factors, their high-pressure work environment).

Is your company collaborative or competitive?

One way to check if a competitive work environment is positive or toxic is to identify whether employees feel anxious or excited in their work environment, and especially when you’re announcing the next goals and performance targets, according to Harvard Business Review. You could use anonymized surveys to check that. 

Collaborative organisational culture is important for organisations where coordinated group effort is necessary to get the best results. One of its biggest pluses is the high rate of employee satisfaction and retention. A dysfunctional collaborative culture can lead to high performers feeling weighed down by a disorganised team, however.

What does leadership look like in your company? 

Leadership represents your company culture more than almost anything else. Your leadership has a direct impact on how employees feel and perform, and whether they’re likely to stay. 6 out of 10 people who have left a job, have taken this decision because of their managers and the toxic workplace environment they create.

For this part of your organisational culture assessment, you could ask the following questions:

  • Do managers lead by example?
  • Do they delegate tasks efficiently?
  • Are there any power struggles within the leadership team? 
  • Is there a positive dynamic between leaders and their teams? 

Besides this, you could assess the diversity of your leadership, and how it’s affecting both your performance and your company culture. According to a 2020 report by McKinsey, companies that have more diverse leadership are more successful and have a better chance of outperforming their competitors.  

Are there any organisational subcultures?

If your organization has specialised teams and/or multiple locations, it’s likely that subcultures will develop within it. A subculture in this context refers to the fact that each team or location has a slightly different way of doing things. 

It’s important to analyse whether the subcultures within your organization are compatible and consistent with your overall organisational culture: 

  • A compatible subculture is beneficial to your organization and means that different teams and levels can communicate easily and work together smoothly. 
  • If a subculture is incompatible with your organisational culture, this might create conflict between teams, or be detrimental to morale. If there are parts of an organization that don’t work together well, this may be a culture clash issue.

Of course, different locations or teams might function differently simply because of the nature of their work or because of cultural specifics. You need to address this proactively and define how you’d like to handle this. 

Conclusion: A cultural assessment will help you develop a strong company culture 

Assessing your company’s organisational culture is the first step to creating a stimulating work environment where your employees feel heard, appreciated, respected, and safe, and where they’re productive and efficient. 

Company culture has a direct impact on how well your company will perform in the future. It also needs to evolve constantly in order to support your objectives, which is now more urgent than ever.



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