5 Leadership Lessons You Need to Know From LinkedIn's Top Companies
Everybody loves a top 50 list. It could be dog breeds, the best cities to live in, highest rated CEO's or in this case the Top Companies to work for in 2018. I love LinkedIn's annual list of the Top Companies in the US to Work For in 2018 because it's based on actual actions of over 146 million US Professionals.
The actions are looked at in four main pillars; interest in the company, engagement with the company's employees, job demand and employee retention.
Regardless if your company made the list or not there are critical lessons to learn from those who did. Here are five leadership lessons that rise above the rest and how you should think about them in your own company.
1. Culture Matters
Netflix CEO Reed Hastings doesn't take culture lightly. The company produced a new corporate culture manifesto to document and provide clarity about the high level of standards and expectations at Netflix. "Our version of the great workplace is a dream team in pursuit of ambitious common goals, for which we spend heavily."
Netflix is on an obvious rocketship as it relates to growth, but the main reason for this is their focus on culture. While most start-ups focus on the fluffy and soft culture, Netflix has done the opposite. They know how important culture is to the success of their organization and their executives don't leave it up to chance.
Every company should be measuring culture and have a mechanism to communicate and reinforce it across the organization.
2. Invest in the Root, Not the Fruit
JP Morgan Chase, the biggest bank in the U.S., has delivered record results the last eight years and their CEO Jamie Dimon attributes the company's success to key investments in "people, systems, and products."
Most companies focus on the products but Dimon knows it's people and the systems those people plug into, are what helps JPMorgan Chase create, innovate, and evolve products that best fit their clients.
By investing in people and infrastructure you invest in the root (people and systems) of the business which ultimately produces the fruit (results.)
3. Be in Alignment with Employee Pains
Live Nation matches employees' student loan contributions up to $1,200 a year, maxing out at $6,000. Live Nation's head of HR Nadia Rawlingson told USA Today that perks like this matter more than "cool stuff" like free food: "We want to make sure we're doing things that are substantive.
Student debt isn't just a buzz word in our political system, it's a real challenge facing many young professionals. Being in alignment with the pains and concerns of employees is one of the best ways to retain great talent and to attract new talent.
Regardless if your organization has the financial means to do what Live Nation is doing, the takeaway is to be in alignment with your employee's pains and create ways to help alleviate them.
4. Forget the Diploma
It's no surprise the 32-year-old CEO of Box, Aaron Levie, has emerged as one of the first major corporations to stop looking at four-year degrees. The company is focusing more on skills instead of diplomas. Box updated its job descriptions to only include qualifications that are necessary to be successful in the role. Having relevant skills is a "must-have;" graduating from a university is not.
While this one is somewhat controversial, it's the future. If someone has the technical and the "hard" skills (leadership, teamwork, etc.) to do the job, a piece of paper shouldn't hold any company back from making them a part of the team.
5. Develop People
Ev Williams the original founder of Twitter spoke recently on the Masters of Scale podcast about the challenges he faced early on at the company and most of them revolved around the skills he lacked in leading people. Fast forward 10+ years and it's no surprise to see the current CEO Jack Dorsey and his team have a serious commitment to the development of people.
A senior engineering manager who recently joined the company wrote that "Twitter's invested over 60 hours in my development." Investing in people is no longer a nice to have, it's a requirement to winning in today's marketplace.
Free Welder Leader Profile Assessment Join over 20k leaders and discover how well you are leveraging love and discipline as a leader and find out what profile you are for free.
Welder Leader for Organizations If you are interested in the assessment and think your organization could benefit from a modernized leadership development program. Find out more here.
About the Author John Eades is the CEO of LearnLoft, a full-service organizational health company focused on improving culture and developing modern leaders. John was named one of LinkedIn’s 2017 Top Voices in Management & Workplace and was awarded the 2017 Readership Award by Training Industry.com. John is also the host of the “Follow My Lead” Podcast, a show that transfers stories and best practices from today’s leaders to the leaders of tomorrow and a new video-based show called “Today I Begin.” He is also the author of Follow My Lead: Standing Out and Being a Leader and the upcoming book “The Welder Leader.”
Manager: Training Support and Administration at ATNS Aviation Training Academy
6yA great article. thank you. I think the world is in dire need of senior management with similar 'big picture' thinking
Strategic Supply and Contract Manager
6yLove the article, realistic and practical
Specialist accountant for healthcare professionals
6yA well-developed article, I enjoyed that leadership explanation!
Director TAR Distribution
6yJohn, thanks for the article and practical recommendations. I particularly appreciate #3 & #5 ...invest in your people and they’ll invest in you! Thanks again! BH
Leadership Professional / Certified Facility Manager
6yMany companies do not understand the road to success!