“Cultural magic” is the feeling that comes from a well-balanced relationship between the employer and the employee. It’s no illusion—cultural magic is real. However, it only exists when leaders carefully consider employees’ needs and sync them with business goals. HR executives must intentionally align the inescapable imperative of profit with the need to attract and retain the very best people.
Just like stage magic, cultural magic is explainable, which means anyone can learn how to become a magician by paying attention, following the steps, and using the right elements.
Reconcile Business and People Imperatives
First, let’s talk about how to align your imperatives. Though people and business imperatives often go hand in hand, the left and right hands fail to communicate with each other at times. Leaders often get the balance wrong, to the detriment of their organization’s employer culture.
This can be amplified whenever the going gets tough and leaders need to shore up profits during lean times. For example, the pressure to streamline operations can result in layoffs, which often come across to employees as a lack of empathy. More often than not, the sole criterion behind who is laid off comes down to the cost of total compensation. The impact on employees who remain receives very little or no consideration.
We all know that viewing an employee’s value solely as a cost to contain is antithetical to building and supporting a healthy employer culture. There’s no magic in that. It is magical thinking, however, to believe this approach will leave the organization in a better place.
As Heather McGowan, a well-known keynote speaker and author in human capital management, wrote in Forbes, “Humans [are still seen] as a cost to contain, even as humans increasingly create value.” We left the dawn of the industrial age centuries ago. For all but the most rote of roles, we hire people for the future value they’ll create for the organization. Today, the rationale behind employing people leads them to stay or leave and work for the competition.
Here are some tips for reconciling business and people imperatives:
Center the Pendulum Between Cost and Retention. As an HR leader, your role often operates like a pendulum, shifting between the perspectives driving the organization and the perspectives enabling the organization. You must balance the two business imperatives of containing the cost of employing people and unleashing the ability to attract and retain the very best people, who create future value. When there is balance, the center is stable and strong. Here, business needs and wants are perpetually reconciled with those of the workforce. Cultural magic is the resulting expression of this balance and centeredness.
Leverage Technology to Automate Complex Tasks. Becoming a strategic partner is central to cultural magic, and today, HR departments are well-positioned to achieve this. Leveraging AI-driven human capital management software and other technology can help automate complex tasks, freeing HR to focus on its strategic mission. Access to data and advanced people analytics provides insights that HR can bring to decision-making, fostering alignment and sparking cultural magic.
Prioritize Adaptive Resilience. Balancing imperatives requires HR to adapt swiftly without losing employee trust. Build resilience by preparing for shifts in economic or operational needs. Flexible policies and “what-if” planning enable HR to anticipate impacts on business and employee morale, protecting culture and engagement through change.
Apply the Elements of Cultural Magic
Unlike a rabbit that a magician appears to pull out of a hat, a rock-solid employee experience doesn’t pop out of nowhere. A positive culture manifests for a reason, usually because employees recognize that leadership values their potential and the unique contributions they bring to an organization.
There are eight clear elements for fostering cultural magic:
- Exercise strong leadership and vision. Cultural magic begins with leaders who have a penchant and a know-how for practicing it. They inspire employees and set the tone for a positive culture. Leaders who communicate a clear vision, model company values, and make employees feel heard and supported can transform a workplace culture. This element is critical for success.
- Create a clear and shared mission. Though seemingly obvious, company mission statements are rife with fluff, emptiness, and “corporate speak.” Really think your organization’s mission through. A clear, shared mission your workforce can identify with gives them a purpose beyond day-to-day tasks; it engages and motivates them, helping individual contributors feel that they’re part of something bigger than themselves.
- Exercise transparency and communication. Transparency builds trust, a pillar of any positive employer culture. Open, honest communication—whether in leadership announcements, decision-making processes, or feedback channels—ensures that employees feel valued and included. Explain the “why” early and often. What does this look like day to day? Weekly updates, Q&A sessions, and regular town halls can foster such an environment of openness. Don’t underestimate what might necessitate transparency and communication, such as the company’s paid-time-off policy. Have you thought about the culture around your PTO, for example? These minutiae of employment together constitute a big reflection of your culture and warrant transparent communication to the workforce.
- Provide opportunities for growth and development. Create a culture of learning. You’ll be thankful you did so: The dividends are innovation and loyalty. Employees look for organizations that invest in their personal and professional growth. According to LinkedIn’s 2024 Workplace Learning Report, 7 in 10 employees say work-related learning improves their connection to their organization, and 8 in 10 say it adds purpose to their work. A culture that emphasizes career development—whether through training programs, mentorship opportunities, or clear career pathways—shows commitment to employee success and encourages retention.
- Recognize and appreciate a job well done. Recognizing employee contributions cultivates loyalty and morale. Recognition programs can be as straightforward as giving regular shoutouts. They might involve awards or bonuses. Whatever they entail, they show appreciation for hard work and dedication, enhancing the overall work culture.
- Promote work/life balance. According to a recent survey, the top challenges facing today’s workforce include increasing levels of burnout and heightened job mobility. Studies consistently show that balance boosts productivity and reduces burnout. Promoting a healthy work/life balance and respecting employees’ boundaries builds trust and a sense of safety. Consider offering flexible work hours or options for remote work and resist badly hatched return-to-office mandates or other one-size-fits-all initiatives that encroach on employees’ autonomy. Develop and communicate clear policies around the need for employees to disconnect after work hours.
- Embrace and champion inclusion and diversity (I&D). Cut through the noise and announce your organization’s dedication to I&D. Doing so communicates a sense of safety to many contingents of your workforce. A culture that values I&D fosters a sense of belonging, the main desired outcome of a strong company culture, and is essential to employee well-being and productivity. I&D initiatives should be visible in hiring practices, internal promotions, and overall workplace policies. It needs to be self-evident to your workforce that you embrace I&D.
- Remember employee well-being. Programs that support physical, mental, and financial well-being show the organization cares about its employees as individuals. Initiatives such as wellness days, mental health resources, and financial wellness planning assistance all contribute to a supportive culture.
Mastering the Craft of Cultural Magic
Setting the stage for innovation, loyalty, and productivity, a good culture is the organization’s most valuable asset. A positive employer culture feels magical. It takes practice and ongoing commitment to make the workplace more collaborative, engaging, and satisfying for everyone involved. There is a craft to bring about cultural magic. Master it, and you will witness it unfold.
Amy Mosher is chief people officer at isolved.
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