-
Website
http://www.instigatorblog.com/ -
Original page
http://www.instigatorblog.com/the-definition-of-us/2009/06/10/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
AndyBeard
27 comments · 4 points
-
webomatica
4 comments · 5 points
-
Michael Lankton
8 comments · 1 points
-
Jim "Genuine" Turner
15 comments · 2 points
-
mattss
4 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Where’s the Surprise on the Web?
3 days ago · 8 comments
-
Creativity Loves Blowing Constraints Out of the Water
5 days ago · 11 comments
-
How To Write Great Surveys with Actionable Data Results
1 week ago · 15 comments
-
You Won’t Believe What Running a Startup is Really Like
1 week ago · 13 comments
-
Lack of Market Focus Can Kill Your Startup
2 weeks ago · 18 comments
-
Where’s the Surprise on the Web?
This is very unfortunate because over the long term, individuals become demotivated and lost. Re-invigorating the process can be done but takes a substantial amount of work once a business has veered off course.
They also have a complete mission integration team that continues to presence the core values with employees and most recently refused to due layoffs when they were facing a budget challenge.
Using a blog or CMS, you can adapt to your cusomer feedback, and optimize your site and prevent them from bouncing to the competition.
Yes, there will be bad apples, but they will talk bad about you other places as well.
Arun
123 recipes
It makes a difference corporate wide in that we are always thinking in terms of how to execute our jobs in a way that conforms with the nature of "bob". Works for us.
Too often companies create values that are so theoretical and so difficult to apply that they simply don't use them in practical, day to day decision making. "What would Bob do" is something that can guide a company in a practical fashion toward company values AND company goals. Definitely something some consultant up there should pick up.
As consumers we place trust in these businesses and their structures, so we can only remain optimistic about them through hard times.
Having learned about the importance of company values for strong decision making in school, it is great to see it being discussed openly in the real world. It seems to be a theme that is always taught but rarely remembered. Please share them with the community at FiredNetwork.com: https://firednetwork.com/forum/forumdisplay.php...
Thanks!
The image and the imagination of a company, it's drives and core values, shape it. And there are moments when a company must lean on those values and stick to its vision, even when it seems otherwise. This comes through especially on the creative side. When there is a big idea that needs to be followed, because you know it's right. Because you know it will deliver.
There is a balancing necessary of vision and means and the market. You have to balance what you want to do with what you can do with how it will interact with everything around you. You can not neglect your customers; you must adapt to them. Sometimes, you mold yourself so you suit their needs. Sometimes, suiting their needs will be to stick to your vision in the long run. Sometimes, it will be resisting outside pressures. And sometimes, those core values will hold your creative integrity and allow a project to flourish.
But if those values constrain you; if they stop creativity and stop innovation. If they hold back your ability to effectively utilize your assets to deliver something truly remarkable, then they must be revised.
Because Vision is the Big Idea. And the Big Idea is amorphous and changing.
Speaking of a "worthwhile decision filter", in our company we try to make our values fit this definition. I think that when announcing your values to make a promise to your customers that you’ve got to keep. If you can't keep this promise your customers will leave you. Thanks for the post!
Sonum Rana.