Build a Culture by DESIGN, not DEFAULT | Simon Sinek
Culture by default versus culture by design, with practical skills for feedback and difficult conversations.
Overview
Most organizations build culture reactively — after something breaks — rather than intentionally. The core argument is that culture is a learnable craft, not a personality trait, and that specific communication skills like giving feedback and navigating hard conversations are its building blocks.
Key takeaways
Culture is either designed on purpose or it forms by accident; leaders who wait for a crisis lose control of it.
Your desired culture should be rooted in your personal "why," not copied from a generic leadership framework.
Giving feedback the way you prefer to receive it is a common mistake that creates conflict instead of growth.
Asking someone how they want to receive feedback — and adapting to that — unlocks more candor, not less.
Prefacing a hard conversation with "I may get this wrong, work with me" enrolls people and reduces defensive shutdown.
Worth quoting
"You can either have a culture by default or by design."
"I may say things wrong, I may accidentally trigger somebody, but having this conversation right now is more important than me getting it perfectly right."
"If you can learn the skill of how to have a conversation about race, you can have a conversation about pretty much anything."
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