Cultural change is high on the agenda of many organizations, but proves difficult to realize in practice. Ambitions are often clear, as are the desired values, but the translation into concrete behavior and daily practice lags behind. As a result, a gap arises between what organizations want to be and how work is actually done.
For professionals and leaders in the business world, a clear challenge lies here: how do you ensure that culture does not remain an abstract concept, but becomes a driving mechanism for performance, collaboration, and results? Also read our overview article on strategies to change corporate cultureIn this article, you will read what culture change entails, why it is essential, and – above all – how to implement it successfully and sustainably within organizations.
What do we mean by culture change?
Cultural change is the purposeful adjustment of behavior, norms, and underlying beliefs within an organization to better align with strategic goals and changing circumstances. It is not about formulating new values, but about structurally changing how people think, decide, and act in their daily work.
Why is this important for organizations?
Organizations require cultural change because external pressure and internal ambitions are constantly shifting. Consider market dynamics, strategic shifts, or scaling up. Without cultural change, strategies remain on paper, and a gap emerges between ambition and reality.
Consequently, culture change is not an abstract theme, but a direct lever for sustainable organizational results. The returns of effective culture change are concrete and measurable:
- Better performances: because behavior directly aligns with organizational goals
- Higher maneuverability: respond more quickly to changes and uncertainty
- Stronger leadership: more consistency and trust within teams
- Improved collaboration: less friction and clearer expectations
Why do cultural changes often fail in practice?
Most cultural changes fail because organizations focus on intentions rather than concrete behavior and structural incentives. Posters with core values do not change behavior if the system rewards something else.
We have listed common causes below.
1. Lack of clarity regarding desired behavior
Lack of clarity arises when values are not translated into concrete behavior in daily situations. As a result, employees interpret the same value differently, leading to inconsistency.
In many organizations, values remain stuck on concepts such as “ownership,” “proactivity,” or “customer focus,” whereas it should be clear what this means in the context of conflicting interests.
- What does “ownership” mean when a problem falls outside your formal responsibility?
- When do you prioritize customer interest if it leads to lower short-term revenue?
- How do you act when speed and quality are mutually exclusive?
2. Conflicting systems
Conflicting systems cause desired behavior to be undermined by how the organization manages and rewards. For example, an organization may value collaboration, but if individual targets are the guiding principle, cooperation is discouraged.
Common voltages are:
- Individual vs. collective goals: Cooperation is discouraged by individual reward
- Short vs. long term: Quarterly targets undermine sustainable customer relationships
- Efficiency vs. quality: Manage processes based on output rather than impact
These contradictions ensure that employees rationally choose behavior that brings them success within the system, even if this goes against the desired culture.
3. Lack of leadership consistency
Cultural change stalls when leaders exhibit different behavior. Change management Therefore, it starts with yourself, rather than how they communicate. Employees follow behavior, not words. Inconsistent signals create confusion and cynicism.
Leaders continuously send implicit messages through their choices. What is truly important becomes visible, especially in situations of pressure or uncertainty. If leaders then fall back on old behavior, trust in change disappears.
Typical inconsistencies are:
- Preaching transparency, but withholding information when tension is high
- Encouraging a culture of accountability, but not being open to it oneself feedback
- Acknowledge collaboration, but reward individual performance
4. Too little focus on middle management
Middle management is crucial because they translate strategy into daily behavior. Without their involvement, culture change remains abstract. They operate under pressure from above and the realities of teams, and without support, they quickly revert to old behavior.
When they are not sufficiently involved in the change, bottlenecks arise:
- Lack of clarity regarding expectations
- Lack of skills to manage behavior
- Focus on short-term results
How do you make culture change in organizations successful?
Successful culture change requires sharp choices regarding behavior, systems, and leadership, which are consistently implemented in daily practice. The pillars below determine whether change actually takes hold or remains stuck in intentions.
Make desired behavior concrete and specific
Cultural change begins with making behavior explicit rather than abstract values. By clearly defining what employees do in critical situations, culture becomes applicable and manageable.
Concrete steps:
- Identify recurring moments of tension (e.g. pressure, conflicts, customer issues)
- Translate both desired and undesired behavior per situation
- Test behavioral agreements in teams for recognizability and applicability
Align systems, governance, and leadership
Behavior changes sustainably only when systems and leadership support the same behavior. Without this alignment, the system always wins.
Start with the steps below:
- Compare KPIs and rewards with desired behavior
- Remove the biggest inconsistencies from management and processes
- Make leaders explicitly responsible for exemplary behavior and behavioral management.
Anchor culture in daily work and operations
Cultural change only has an impact when it becomes part of existing work processes and rhythms. Repetition in practice is crucial in this regard.
Handle this as follows:
- Make behavior part of meetings and evaluations
- Discuss in a structured way how results are achieved
- Work with fixed reflection moments on team behavior
Activate ownership at all levels of the organization
Cultural change succeeds only when employees and middle management feel ownership of the desired behavior and actively apply it.
What is important in this regard:
- Involve teams in making behavior concrete
- Work with practical examples and real case studies.
- Provide middle management with tools to open up discussion about behavior, such as coaching leadership
How do you develop leadership and behavior that truly sets cultural change in motion?
Sustainable culture change requires skills that go beyond theory: it requires leaders who can steer behavior through situational leadership, teams that hold each other accountable based on communication styles and organizations that translate change into practice. You do not develop this automatically, but through targeted training, reflection, and application in the workplace.
Do you want to not only understand culture change, but also actually realize it within your organization? Then targeted development of leadership and behavior is the key. Kenneth Smit supports organizations in this with Courses making that change tangible and actionable.
Frequently asked questions about culture change
Cultural change is the purposeful adjustment of behavior, norms, and underlying beliefs within an organization to better align with strategic goals. It is not about formulating new values, but about structurally changing how people think, decide, and act in their daily work.
Most cultural changes fail due to ambiguity regarding desired behavior, contradictory systems that reward old behavior, a lack of leadership consistency, and insufficient focus on middle management. Posters with core values do not change behavior if the system rewards something else.
By making desired behavior explicit in specific situations, aligning systems and management with that behavior, anchoring culture in daily work processes, and activating ownership at all levels. Start by identifying recurring moments of tension and translate desired and undesired behavior for each situation.
Leadership is the most important lever. Employees follow behavior, not words. When leaders are inconsistent, cynicism arises. Effective culture change requires leaders to be explicitly responsible for leading by example, especially in moments of pressure and uncertainty.
Cultural change is not a project with an end date, but an ongoing process. The first visible behavioral changes can occur within months if behavior is made concrete and systems are adjusted. Sustainable embedding, however, requires consistency over a longer period, usually at least one to two years.