Culture Architect¶
Domain: C-Level Advisory | Skill: culture-architect | Source: c-level-advisor/culture-architect/SKILL.md
Culture Architect¶
Culture is what you DO, not what you SAY. This skill builds culture as an operational system — observable behaviors, measurable health, and rituals that scale.
Keywords¶
culture, company culture, values, mission, vision, culture code, cultural rituals, culture health, values-to-behaviors, founder culture, culture debt, value-washing, culture assessment, culture survey, Netflix culture deck, HubSpot culture code, psychological safety, culture scaling
Core Principle¶
Culture = (What you reward) + (What you tolerate) + (What you celebrate)
If your values say "transparency" but you punish bearers of bad news — your real value is "optics." Culture is not aspirational. It's descriptive. The work is closing the gap between stated and actual.
Frameworks¶
1. Mission / Vision / Values Workshop¶
Run this conversationally, not as a corporate offsite. Three questions:
Mission — Why do we exist (beyond making money)? - "What would be lost if we disappeared tomorrow?" - Mission is present-tense. "We reduce preventable falls in elderly care." Not "to be the leading..."
Vision — What does winning look like in 5–10 years? - Specific enough to be wrong. "Every care home in Europe uses our system" beats "be the market leader."
Values — What behaviors do we actually model? - Start with what you observe, not what sounds good. "What did our last great hire do that nobody asked them to?" - Keep to 3–5. More than 5 and none of them mean anything.
2. Values → Behaviors Translation¶
This is the work. Every value needs behavioral anchors or it's decoration.
| Value | Bad version | Behavioral anchor |
|---|---|---|
| Transparency | "We're open and honest" | "We share bad news within 24 hours, including to our manager" |
| Ownership | "We take responsibility" | "We don't hand off problems — we own them until resolved, even across team boundaries" |
| Speed | "We move fast" | "Decisions under €5K happen at team level, same day, no approval needed" |
| Quality | "We don't cut corners" | "We stop the line before shipping something we're not proud of" |
| Customer-first | "Customers are our priority" | "Any team member can escalate a customer issue to leadership, bypassing normal channels" |
Workshop exercise: Write your value. Then ask "How would a new hire know we actually live this on day 30?" If you can't answer concretely, it's not a value — it's an aspiration.
3. Culture Code Creation¶
A culture code is a public document that describes how you operate. It should scare off the wrong people and attract the right ones.
Structure: 1. Who we are (mission + context) 2. Who thrives here (specific behaviors, not adjectives) 3. Who doesn't thrive here (honest — this is the useful part) 4. How we make decisions 5. How we communicate 6. How we grow people 7. What we expect of leaders
See templates/culture-code-template.md for a complete template.
Anti-patterns to avoid: - "We're a family" — families don't fire each other for performance - Listing only positive traits — the "who doesn't thrive here" section is what makes it credible - Making it aspirational instead of descriptive
4. Culture Health Assessment¶
Run quarterly. 8–12 questions. Anonymous. See references/culture-playbook.md for survey design.
Core areas to measure: 1. Psychological safety — "Can I raise a concern without fear?" 2. Clarity — "Do I know how my work connects to company goals?" 3. Fairness — "Are decisions made consistently and transparently?" 4. Growth — "Am I learning and being challenged here?" 5. Trust in leadership — "Do I believe what leadership tells me?"
Score interpretation: | Score | Signal | Action | |-------|--------|--------| | 80–100% | Healthy | Maintain, celebrate, document | | 65–79% | Warning | Identify specific friction — don't over-react | | 50–64% | Damaged | Urgent leadership attention + specific fixes | | < 50% | Crisis | Culture emergency — all-hands intervention |
5. Cultural Rituals by Stage¶
Rituals are the delivery mechanism for culture. What works at 10 people breaks at 100.
Seed stage (< 15 people) - Weekly all-hands (30 min): company update + one win + one learning - Monthly retrospective: what's working, what's not — no hierarchy - "Default to transparency": share everything unless there's a specific reason not to
Early growth (15–50 people) - Quarterly culture survey: first formal check-in - Recognition ritual: explicit, public, tied to values (not just results) - Onboarding buddy program: cultural transmission now requires intentional effort - Leadership office hours: founders stay accessible as layers appear
Scaling (50–200 people) - Culture committee (peer-driven, not HR): 4–6 people rotating quarterly - Values-based performance review: culture fit is measured, not assumed - Manager training: culture now lives or dies in team leads - Department all-hands + company all-hands separate
Large (200+ people) - Culture as strategy: explicit annual culture plan with owner and KPIs - Internal NPS for culture ("Would you recommend this company to a friend?") - Subculture management: engineering culture ≠ sales culture — both must align to company core
6. Culture Anti-Patterns¶
Value-washing: Listing values you don't practice. Symptom: employees roll their eyes during values discussions. - Fix: Run a values audit. Ask "What did the last person who got promoted demonstrate?" If it doesn't match your values, your real values are different.
Culture debt: Accumulating cultural compromises over time. "We'll address the toxic star performer later." Later compounds. - Fix: Act on culture violations faster than you think necessary. One tolerated bad behavior destroys what ten good behaviors build.
Founder culture trap: Culture stays frozen at founding team's personality. New hires assimilate or leave. - Fix: Explicitly evolve values as you scale. What worked at 10 people (move fast, ask forgiveness) may be destructive at 100 (we need process).
Culture by osmosis: Assuming culture transmits naturally. It did at 10 people. It doesn't at 50. - Fix: Make culture intentional. Document it. Teach it. Measure it. Reward it explicitly.
Culture Integration with C-Suite¶
| When... | Culture Architect works with... | To... |
|---|---|---|
| Hiring surge | CHRO | Ensure culture fit is measured, not guessed |
| Org reorg | COO + CEO | Manage culture disruption from structure change |
| M&A or partnership | CEO + COO | Detect and resolve culture clashes early |
| Performance issues | CHRO | Separate culture fit from skill deficit |
| Strategy pivot | CEO | Update values/behaviors that the pivot makes obsolete |
| Rapid growth | All | Scale rituals before culture dilutes |
Key Questions a Culture Architect Asks¶
- "Can you name the last person we fired for culture reasons? What did they do?"
- "What behavior got your last promoted employee promoted? Is that in your values?"
- "What would a new hire observe on day 1 that tells them what's really valued here?"
- "What do we tolerate that we shouldn't? Who knows and does nothing?"
- "How does a team lead in Berlin know what the culture is in Madrid?"
Red Flags¶
- Values posted on the wall, never referenced in reviews or decisions
- Star performers protected from cultural standards
- Leaders who "don't have time" for culture rituals
- New hires feeling the culture is "different than advertised"
- No mechanism to raise cultural concerns safely
- Culture survey results never shared with the team
Detailed References¶
references/culture-playbook.md— Netflix analysis, survey design, ritual examples, M&A playbooktemplates/culture-code-template.md— Culture code document template