Title: Building a Performance Culture
1Building a Performance Culture
CONFIDENTIAL
The Pharma, Biotech And Device Colloquium Michael
Rennie
June 8th 2004
This report is solely for the use of client
personnel. No part of it may be circulated,
quoted, or reproduced for distribution outside
the client organisation without prior written
approval from McKinsey Company. This material
was used by McKinsey Company during an oral
presentation it is not a complete record of the
discussion.
2PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT REQUIRES AN INTEGRATED
APPROACH
Formal context structure, systems and processes
Have to operate above and below the surface to
create powerful transformation
- Individual
- Aspirations
- Worldviews
- Identities
Social context behaviors and group interactions
Mental context mindsets and beliefs
3PEOPLE DEVELOPMENT AS A CORE VALUE
- From
- Occasional development reviews
- Evaluation often put off
- To
- 6-monthly development discussion
- Annual evaluation with real dialogue
Formal
Social (behaviors)
Mental (Mindsets and beliefs)
- From
- Im a boss not a counsellor
- To
- Counselling and coaching grows talent and
capability
- From
- Fear of being honest about anothers strengths
and weaknesses so avoid it - Critical tone
- To
- Ability to be honestdont avoid it
- Speak from a place of trust and support
4ENERGY CO CASE
Percent ranking of top values (of 100)
YR1 Organisational values
YR2 Organisational values
Employee safety
63
Employee safety
34
Bureaucracy
Leadership devt
31
Corporate growth
Shareholder value
29
Achievement
Caution
29
Teamwork
Limiting values
New top ranked values
Professionalism
Performance
26
Corporate growth
26
Being the best
Continuous improvement
26
Empire building
26
Shareholder value
Process orientation
23
Competence
Performance
23
Integrity
Competence
Only remaining limiting value
23
Professionalism
Environmental protection
23
Bureaucracy
Caution
5
Empire building
0
5PEOPLE VERY SIGNIFICANT IMPROVEMENT
42 30 25 36
71 78 91 79
YR 1
YR 2
- People review processes rigorous
- Personal development plans
- 360-degree feedback
- Informal coaching and feedback
6VALUES COMPARISON LARGE BANK
Year 1
Year 2
Values out in Year 2
1. Cost reduction 2. Shareholder
value 3. Results orientation 4. Profit 5. Goals
orientation 6. Bureaucracy 7. Hierarchy 8. Sho
rt-term focus 9. Control 10. Risk
averse 11. Internal competition
1. Cost reduction 2. Shareholder
value 3. Accountability 4. Achievement 5. Resul
ts orientation 6. Customer focus 7. Profit 8. C
ontinuous improvement 9. Risk averse 10. Perform
or out 11. Goals orientation
- Bureaucracy
- Hierarchy
- Control
- Short-term focus
- Internal Competition
Values new in Year 2
- Accountability
- Achievement
- Customer focus
- Continuous improvement
- Perform or out
7LEADERSHIP CULTURE IMPROVING
Percent respondents agree
Year 1
Year 2
My business retains its high performers
We have a can-do culture, we say yes more often
than not
Meetings in our department are productive and
outcome focused
There is extensive communication and interaction
between organisational departments
Group members are honest with each other
8WITH STRONG COST AND BOTTOM LINE PERFORMANCE
NPAT Millions
Cost Income Ratio
CAGR 16.2
9PERFORMANCE VS BEHAVIORS AND MINDSETS
Behaviors
Mindsets
Results
Focus on internal power Egoic needs Fear of loss
Focus on customer needs Welcoming change
We have a can do attitude, we say yes more often
than not
Silo based behaviors Non collaborative No cross
fertilisation
Collaborative
Its not my business They (other department) is
the enemy
We are one Firm
There is extensive communication and interaction
between departments
Say yes in meeting, then dont do it
HonestDeliver
Ive got my own agenda
One Firm Peer responsibility
Group members are honest with each other
104 LEVERS FOR SITUATIONAL CHANGE
Lever categories
Lever categories
- Leadership actions
- Alignment
- Stories
- Language and rituals
Fostering understanding and conviction
Role modelling
I will change my mindset and behavior if
- Systems
- Evaluation reward
- Right people
- Technical skills
- Leadership skills
Reinforcing with formal mechanisms
Developing talent and skills
11SOME KEY LEARNINGS
- Identify the few behaviors and underlying
mindsets - Situational and personal behavior change together
creates the reinforcing cycle - 80/20 does not apply to the situational levers
- Critical mass of community required quickly
12SITUATIONAL PHARMA SALES
- Distinct managers, VPs, CEOs
- Right sale not sale at all costs
- Refuse to tolerate misleading ads
- Why
- What does it mean for me
- Celebrate the new stories!
Story Telling
Role modelling
I will change my mindset and behavior if
- More fixed, less variable comp.
- Principles ( and values) based, not rules
- Violating principles has consequences
- Compliance values (principles) engagement
- Cant take to the baseball now what?
Formal
Skills
Footnote Source Source
13A LANGUAGE FOR VALUES
Characteristic values and culture
Barrett
- Service to humanity and future
7. Society
6. Community
- Internal connectedness across divisions or
geography
5. Organisation
- People development, trust and participation
- Vision and values
4. Transformation(open and trusting)
3. Best practice(performance ethic)
- Market driven performance
- Loyalty to group, tribalism
2. Relationship
1. Survival
14SIGNIFICANT RETURN ON INVESTMENT
Interventions increase sales per sales person
improves profit per sales person
and ROI
B2B sales people
470
After workshop and embedding
After workshop
44,800
22,400
227
12
6
After-workshop
Improved ROI with embedding
After-workshop
Additional profit w/ embedding