What Is Organizational Culture And Why PhDs Must Understand It To Get An Industry Job
It was my first industry interview.
And not just for any company, but a Fortune 500 pharmaceutical company.
I had passed the initial phone interview and was asked to come in for a full-day assessment.
I would meet the CEO, members of my potential team, and get a tour of the facilities.
I had no clue as to what to expect.
One part of me expected professionally-dressed, articulate individuals and a somewhat conservative interior.
But what if I walked into the office and instead found experienced people dressed in flip-flops and shorts, throwing toy footballs across their desks, and talking to their friends loudly on their cellphones?
I imagined walking into the CEO’s office and a man or woman in a Hawaiian shirt slapping me on the back and saying, “Whaddya want?”
The whole environment was a black box to me.
I felt uncomfortable and had no idea how to interact with everyone when I arrived.
All I knew was academia.
If the situation were turned, and someone walked into an academic lab expecting to see everyone dressed in three-piece suits, with the principal investigator sitting behind a large polished oak desk with a cedar and brass grandfather clock, I would have laughed.
Now the tables had turned.
I never took the time to research the company and reach out to employees for informational interviews.
When you enter an interview, you have to convey the persona of someone that not only has the technical skills, but fits with the culture of the company.
Was I someone that they could picture doing business with? Chatting with over lunch break?
Probably not.
I was nervous, under-dressed and only regurgitated rehearsed interview answers on command.
I may have been the right person for the job on paper, but I did not fit in with their corporate environment.
Next time around, I took the opportunity to understand the culture.
Not only did I want the job, but I wanted to find a company where I could thrive.
Why Understanding Company Culture Is Just As Important As Technical Know-How
If you do not understand the values of the company, no matter your experience or technical expertise, you will be passed over for the job.
Companies make a significant investment to create a workplace culture to maintain staff and be successful.
There is a spectrum of different cultures that exist in business.
A large pharmaceutical company has to have a more conservative culture because people are entrusting them with their health (and money).
Meanwhile, a biotechnology company in a Boston or San Diego startup cluster is more likely to have people in flip-flops and shorts than formal suits.
But why?
First, startups are often in a much more creative phase of the business cycle than that of a large, publicly-traded pharmaceutical company.
Second, startups are smaller and more intimate, which allows for a more casual atmosphere.
However, a company’s culture is not defined just by its appearance.
It’s also comprised of the set of beliefs, values, and attitudes held by the company.
To return to the example of Silicon Valley, it is often said that startups work by the mantra, “Fall often, fall forward.”
That is, they encourage their employees to try things and fail, so that at least they’re trying to innovate and learning from the iterations as they go.
The failing-is-good culture wouldn’t work at large, publicly-traded pharmaceutical companies, or a bank, or a medical doctor’s practice, and so on.
Do not underestimate company culture as just another so-called ‘soft element’ of business.
Numerous academic studies reported in Management Decision show that when two companies merge, the merger most often does NOT work because of a culture difference between the two companies.
The biggest reason that company culture has become such a popular field is because companies can only attract the best talent if they have the right culture.
As a PhD, you are the best talent.
To succeed, we need to find a company that suits our work ethos and our future goals.
The last thing you want is to be stuck in another dead-end job where you are searching for an escape plan.
5 Components Of An Effective Company Culture Every PhD Should Know
Few people will want to work for a company which is considered repressive, or to use extreme examples, sexist or racist.
Companies who fail to change their culture to the changing demands of up-and-coming business talent, will indeed fail.
Younger workers continue to leave companies with outdated cultures to instead work for more tech-savvy and youthful companies who support a healthy work-life balance.
Likewise, consider the number of PhDs and other academic professionals who continue to transition out of academia into industry because of academia’s outdated and financially repressive culture.
If PhDs want to start a new chapter out of academia, they must find a company whose culture will mirror their own working style and beliefs.
Consider these 5 components of an effective company culture before you start your job search…
1. Clarity of purpose.
This one is deceptively simple.
It’s not enough for a company to merely prescribe a purpose for its employees; they also have to buy into it.
They have to feel that what they do matters, and has a measurable impact on the success of the company.
Sometimes, the initial purpose may become cloudy when companies focus on short-term goals like profitability or cost-cutting.
It is vital for the leadership team to continually revisit its overall purpose and remind themselves, and their employees, what they are working towards.
Business is constantly in a state of change.
There is unpredictability which demands adaptation, and change is key to keep its purpose in check and at the heart of every big decision.
It allows the company to navigate through difficult times.
2. Employee engagement.
Engagement is “part two” of purpose.
Employee engagement is how well you’ve prepared your employees to fulfill their purpose.
Are there distractions or inefficiencies throughout the company?
If your employees don’t feel empowered to fulfill their roles to the best of their ability, you have an engagement problem.
In a 2013 survey by the Harvard Business Review, 71% of respondents ranked employee engagement as very important to achieving overall organizational success.
A highly engaged workforce can increase innovation, productivity and performance.
It also reduces costs related to hiring and retention.
If a company wants to attract the best talent, they also have to show they have a low turnover rate and make employees feel they are being recognized for their efforts.
3. An environment of trust.
Trust is absolutely critical in the workplace.
We’ve all had jobs where we thought twice before leaving personal effects unattended in the break room, or where we couldn’t necessarily count on co-workers to pull their weight.
A project does not succeed because of the efforts of one person alone.
You need others’ support and assistance.
Leaders must rely on those who share their vision and goals.
Sure, you can hire people who seem trustworthy, but making trust a company value — with zero exceptions — falls squarely on the business owner.
Trust is built gradually and through the behaviors of top-level management, which then trickle down to all levels of the business.
Trust can come in many varieties.
Consider these examples: following through on one’s word, keeping promises, acting in line with company values, making decisions based on what’s good for the organization, supporting employees, having faith in colleagues and keeping confidential information confidential.
4. Transparency in communication.
Companies cannot be afraid to over-communicate.
Communication also builds trust (see #3 above).
Building a sustainable company culture requires clear, transparent, honest communication.
It requires leaders to consistently send a clear message, as well as constantly reinforcing the value in that message.
The company’s purpose should be transparent, as should each employee’s role and the value the company will deliver to the clients.
Nowadays, people prefer to do business in a culture that is characterized by transparency, and privacy is equated with being devious and potentially hiding vital information.
As people become more transparent, their relationships become stronger.
The same is true for business.
Transparency comes in many forms.
Business leaders can be personally transparent through social media and blogs.
The business itself can be transparent about its mistakes and successes.
It can also be transparent about change.
If there is a shift in the business model, a recruitment freeze, or budget cuts, does the business explain how this will affect its employees, the leadership and the products it produces?
5. Employee referrals.
Building a great culture starts with the people you decide to have on your respective teams.
Investing time and effort to ensure the proper person is selected is fundamental to the success of the team and will pay off huge in the long run.
If you’re a hiring manager, this means hiring very carefully.
If you’re a job candidate, this means you must understand company culture extremely well so you can demonstrate your fit with the company’s culture.
If you’re a current employee, it means only referring people who you know will fit with your company’s culture.
An ideal candidate can become a disaster if this is not the case.
Relying on employees to recruit people is not only cost-effective, but is reassuring to the rest of the team that the new hires will easily assimilate.
It also empowers the employees, giving them a sense of ownership and making them feel more engaged, which feeds back into the building of the culture itself.
One of the biggest mistakes PhDs make when transitioning into industry is going into interviews or accepting job offers without doing their research. Many of these PhDs transition into industry without knowing anything about their new company’s structure or culture. As a result, they look naive and unprepared on the job. Beyond that, they can become trapped in an entry-level position. Companies want to hire PhDs that they would feel comfortable working with. If you do not understand the values of the company, no matter your experience or technical expertise, you will be passed over for the job.
If you’re ready to start your transition into industry, you can apply to book a free Transition Call with our founder Isaiah Hankel, PhD or one of our Transition Specialists. Apply to book a Transition Call here.
ABOUT ISAIAH HANKEL, PHD
CEO, CHEEKY SCIENTIST & SUCCESS MENTOR TO PHDS
Dr. Isaiah Hankel is the Founder and CEO of Cheeky Scientist. His articles, podcasts and trainings are consumed annually by millions of PhDs and other professionals in hundreds of different countries. He has helped PhDs transition into top companies like Amazon, Google, Apple, Intel, Dow Chemical, BASF, Merck, Genentech, Home Depot, Nestle, Hilton, SpaceX, Tesla, Syngenta, the CDC, UN and Ford Foundation.
Dr. Hankel has published 3X bestselling books and his latest book, The Power of a PhD, debuted on the Barnes & Noble bestseller list. His methods for getting PhDs hired have been featured in the Harvard Business Review, Nature, Forbes, The Guardian, Fast Company, Entrepreneur Magazine and Success Magazine.
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