Cultivate a Culture of Growth Within Your Organization

Episode 474 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guest: Mary C. Murphy

How can you foster a growth mindset to transform your company culture?

The concept of a growth mindset is an often-discussed topic these days, with the majority of the conversation exploring the development and impact of this approach to learning on the individual level. While pursuing her PhD, however, my guest today became curious about how teams and organizations are impacted by a growth mindset and how its cultivation can affect workplace culture and company prosperity.

Mary C. Murphy is a professor of psychological and brain sciences at Indiana University. She is the protege of Carol Dweck, who first coined the term “growth mindset” through her original research. Alongside this maven of mindset, Mary began to explore how cultures of growth create better places of work and learning—for the employees and students, as well as for an organization’s overall success. Her new book, Cultures of Growth, leverages this research to help companies shift their workplace cultures for the better. 

Mary and I explore the trick for diagnosing your current company culture, how cultures of growth impact companies, and how anyone—from the new employee to the executive—can take steps to start transforming their organization with growth in mind.

What is a culture of genius?

Identifying which mindset your company culture embodies—a culture of growth (growth mindset) or a culture of genius (fixed mindset)—is the first step in exploring the potential for change. 

A fixed mindset culture, what Mary calls a culture of genius, places all its decision-making and action-planning on the current star performer. “It’s about who is the smartest in the room,” Mary explains. Whoever is considered to have the most inherent capability carries all the decision-making power. As a result of this focus on performance as perception, everyone buys into the belief that some people are innate geniuses and others “just can’t cut it.”

What’s more, the decision-making process and the decisions made vary widely because the genius of the moment can change in an instant with one “wrong step.” When a new Smartest Person overtakes the previous one, corporate strategies are realigned based on this person’s ideas, upending the previous progress. The research shows that this about-face approach doesn’t contribute to the long-term success of high-performing teams—quite the opposite, in fact.

What is a culture of growth?

In a company with a culture of growth, the decision-making process stems from the belief that everyone on the team can develop and contribute to the problems and initiatives in the queue. Furthermore, a culture of growth puts support in place that enables everyone to develop their full potential. 

As we see from cultures of genius, identifying specific people as inherently smarter or more capable means that the perspective rapidly changes as soon as their performance slips or their idea doesn’t pan out. In a growth mindset, innovation and good ideas can stem from every mind, and this fosters the acceptance of experimentation and risk-taking, as well as the inevitable mistakes that come with such bold exploration.

Rather than covering up mistakes and highlighting only the successes of an individual or team project, missteps are discussed right beside wins—the mindset attributes the success of the current project to the learning that stems from successes and failures. Likewise, studying the pros and cons better informs the best steps forward for future projects. This dissemination of all takeaways, “good” and “bad,” means the individual, the team, and the company as a whole have the opportunity to learn and grow.

Research shows that culture of growth environments are the most rigorous. They are dedicated to the ongoing collection and examination of data. Because they are always re-confirming that the project is in line with the goal, these companies catch tangents early and can pivot when they need to without the entire structure crumbling beneath them.

Avoiding the Evaluative Situation mindset trigger as a leader

Everyone in a company is a culture creator, regardless of their power, authority, or prestige within the organization. The data across industries and regions shows that we all shape our surroundings, and perpetuating a shift in culture is undoubtedly a group effort.

We can all encourage cultures of growth by viewing all interactions through the lens of learning—how can I grow and develop with each task, and how can I foster this growth and development in my team?

Mary’s research has uncovered a collection of mindset triggers—circumstances that can push anyone across the mindset continuum from growth to fixed and leave them feeling like progressing isn’t possible. Teams, and leaders in particular, can take steps to avoid triggering employees and coworkers, keeping everyone on that growth trajectory as much as possible.

One of these triggers is “evaluative situations.” Many of us are already primed to tumble into a fixed mindset when we know we’re going to receive feedback on something. From a leadership perspective, adjusting how feedback is delivered can make a big difference. Often, a performance review provides a general acknowledgment of what an employee did well and where they can improve. Mary points out that it’s important for leaders to get iterative in both instances—learning exactly which processes or practices led to the label of “exceeds expectations” is just as important as understanding those that led to “room for improvement.”

Fostering a growth mindset as an employee

Even if you don’t oversee a team, any new assignment is an opportunity to cultivate a growth mindset. So many of us default to a response like “Nope, no questions; I’ve got this” when our boss delegates a new task, but Mary encourages everyone to fight that urge! 

Instead, make it clear to your supervisor and team members that you will be bringing questions to them over the course of the project. Establish the goals and audience of the project early on, and explain that your follow-ups will help ensure the project remains in alignment. 

The connection between diversity, equity, and growth mindset

Organizations with cultures of growth see benefits to employee engagement, retention, innovation, and finances—but that’s not the end of the story. Mary’s research also shows that a growth mindset helps diversity and equity flourish.

We have a prototype of the successful person, the “genius.” We see, over and over, that white men are unconsciously associated with this ideal. In a fixed mindset culture, this preconceived notion is at the fore as we seek out the next genius. Anyone who doesn’t conform is overlooked.

In cultures of growth, though, the belief that good ideas can come from anywhere means everyone is considered for success. When “who has traveled the greatest distance in their work” is the metric by which promise is measured, those who have had to surmount systemic challenges driven by race, ethnicity, gender, and so on are the learners, the adapters, the ones whose past growth highlights their potential for future success.

Now, what about you? Do you have a growth mindset or a fixed mindset? How are you working to build or improve cultures of growth in your workplace and personally? Share your thoughts on Mary’s fascinating work in our Courage Community on Facebook, or join us in our group on LinkedIn.

Related links from today’s episode:

Mary’s book “Cultures of Growth”

Take the Mindset Triggers Assessment

Take the Mindset Culture Assessment

Connect with Mary on LinkedIn

Episode 452, Women and the Fight for a Fair Economy

LEVEL UP: a Leadership Accelerator for Women on the Rise

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

Learn to lead like a boss with LEVEL UP:

Previous
Previous

Why Non-Competes Are Back From the Dead

Next
Next

When Your Promotion is Actually a Glass Cliff