Changing an organization's culture is hard. But as Peter Drucker famously said, "Culture eats strategy for breakfast." A counter-cultural strategy will fail every time. It may look like your new strategy is gaining traction early on, but sooner or later culture will always win. This is why a new strategy may require a culture change.
When Trace Devanny joined TriZetto as CEO in 2010, he saw a huge opportunity and a huge problem.
The opportunity for this healthcare information technology company resulted from the implementation of massive healthcare reforms in the U. S, aimed at increasing efficiency, reducing costs and improving outcomes. As Devanny explained to me, the U.S. healthcare system represents 18 percent of the GDP, and is highly inefficient and unsustainable. The reforms are vital, and in pursuing them, Devanny said, "He who has the data wins." TriZetto provides its customers with the tools they need to collect and manage the data.
The problem Devanny saw was that TriZetto's people had a "comfortable mentality." They were used to serving the insurance companies. Devanny said that for any new healthcare system to work, the payers and the healthcare providers "must collaborate and get along." TriZetto had to change its attitude to lead the way to the new reality. Instinctively, Devanny knew he must change the organization's strategy, posture and culture (for more on this framework, see my previous article "Want to Change the World? Define Your Organization's Attitude").
The solution started with a focus on attitude, driving people to "listen, align and act on client input." Devanny put a major effort on strategic business reviews with key customers. He brought a more demanding, provider perspective. He drove accountability and urgency around outcomes, both financial and administrative, through several changes:
- Made everyone understand that the client is most important
- Changed the market-facing approach to be more customer-focused
- Drove an increased pipeline of end-to-end products, and integrated them with TriZetto's services, including hosting, consulting and business management services
These changes helped move the organization from product-focused to solution-focused, and from payer-focused to healthcare-focused.
Not all TriZetto's executives could make the turn. The company had "lost its edge" and gotten too comfortable with being "a nice place to work." Those who did make the turn shared Devanny's "intense belief that we have the greatest healthcare system in the world - and it's broken." Like Devanny, they believed they could have an impact on this national crisis and change lives. That's a very different attitude indeed.
How to Change Your Culture
Look at what Devanny did in the context of the BRAVE leadership framework:
Environment -- Devanny leveraged changes in the environment as a platform for change in his organization. The answer to the question "Where play?" changed everything else.
- Start with the environment.
Values - It's not so much that Devanny changed the organization's values but, rather, that he reapplied the same values against the new reality. What matters to TriZetto stayed similar but the route changed.
- Build on existing strengths.
Attitude - This was Devanny's pivot point. He set out to change the organization's attitude and its view of how TriZetto was going to win.
Relationships - Devanny lived his model, listening to customers and employees first and establishing relationships before making any changes. He strengthened relationships where he could and made leadership changes where necessary.
- Be strategic about relationships.
Behaviors - The fundamental change here is the focus on outcomes. At TriZetto what people do is no longer more important than what they get done.
This is a good example of step two of
The New Leader's Playbook: Engage the Culture and Your New Colleagues in the Right Context:
Be careful about how you engage with the organization's existing business context and culture. Crossing the need for change based on the context and the cultural readiness for change can help you decide whether to Assimilate, Converge and Evolve (fast or slow), or Shock
-------------------------------------------------------------
includes the 10 steps that executive onboarding group
uses to help new leaders and their teams get done in 100-days what would normally take six to twelve months.
is PrimeGenesis' managing director, and co-author of
(Wiley, 3rd edition 2011) and the freemium iPad app New Leader Smart Tools. Follow him at or on
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