Survey Questions to Assess Your Company s Current Culture



Similar documents
POSITION DESCRIPTION. Role Purpose. Key Challenges. Key Result Areas

ISRS. For the health of your business SAFER, SMARTER, GREENER

TRUE. BLUE. DONE. Health, Safety and Environmental Management System (HSE MS)

Creating a Safe Coaching Environment

Board of Directors Meeting 12/04/2010. Operational Risk Management Charter

Enterprise Risk Management

The Four Stages in Building and Sustaining a Service Culture

Attribute 1: COMMUNICATION

Chapter 1: Health & Safety Management Systems (SMS) Leadership and Organisational Safety Culture

FOREWORD. set clear benchmarks for performance and accountability. drive consistent application of processes and tools

Principal has shared the school vision and goals with the staff. A process for developing a school vision and goals is not evident.

Railway Management Maturity Model (RM 3 )

How Smart Businesses Embrace Change Lessons to Enable a Successful Business Transformation

ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK

ISO 9000 QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES AND GUIDELINES ON THEIR APPLICATION

Confident in our Future, Risk Management Policy Statement and Strategy

POSITION DESCRIPTION

EXECUTIVE SAFETY LEADERSHIP

Performance Factors and Campuswide Standards Guidelines. With Behavioral Indicators

People & Organisational Development Strategy

Leads pedagogical practice. Promotes professional learning

Section Three: Ohio Standards for Principals

The anglo american Safety way. Safety Management System Standards

SBBC: JJ-002 FL: 28 THE SCHOOL BOARD OF BROWARD COUNTY, FLORIDA JOB DESCRIPTION. Approved School-based Administrators Salary Schedule

ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK

Clinical Nurse Specialist Acute Adult Inpatient Unit

CHILD PROTECTIVE SERVICES SUPERVISOR COMPETENCIES

Background: POSITION DESCRIPTION. Position Number: Facilities & Infrastructure, MUSUL Services. Classification Level: Professional Level 6

Baldrige Core Values and Concepts Customer-Driven Excellence Visionary Leadership

Safety Excellence Matrix

Eight Leadership Principles for a Winning Organization. Principle 1 Customer Focus

Framework for Leadership

Job Description. Created Date: June 3, 2015 Version: 1.0

Domain 1: Strategic/Cultural Leadership

PEOPLE INVOLVEMENT AND THEIR COMPETENCE IN QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS * Jarmila ŠALGOVIČOVÁ, Matej BÍLÝ

Writing Performance Objectives for Job Components: A Brief Tutorial

You need good systems and managers who lead

Administrative Procedure Manual

Health, Safety and Environmental Management System

HSMS. Group Health AND Safety Management System

7/24/2015. Disclosure. Preventing Medication Errors in a Just Culture Environment. Blame Free Culture. Objectives.

Good Corporate Governance and Ethics Code Thai Airways International Public Company Limted

MODULE 10 CHANGE MANAGEMENT AND COMMUNICATION

EAST AYRSHIRE COUNCIL CABINET WEDNESDAY 24 JUNE 2015 EMPLOYEE ATTITUDE SURVEY Report by Acting Depute Chief Executive (Safer Communities)

Leadership & People Management WSQ

STAR Consultants, Inc CATT (Corrective Action Trending & Tracking) Version 5. Software

Rubric for Evaluating Colorado s Specialized Service Professionals: School Social Workers

Health and Safety Management Standards

The Seven Levels of Team Consciousness

Tourism Online Reputation Manager

POSITION DESCRIPTION

GaPSC Teacher Leadership Program Standards

*This is a sample only actual evaluations must completed and submitted in PeopleSoft*

ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT POLICY

COMPLIANCE CHARTER 1

BE 2015 A BUSINESS EXCELLENCE INITIATIVE EXCELLENCE IN CUSTOMER MANAGEMENT SELF ASSESSMENT QUESTIONNAIRE

Governance and Risk Management in the Public Sector. Fernando A. Fernandez Inter-American Development Bank (202)

Pima Community College District. Vice Chancellor of Human Resources

Certified Human Resources Professional Competency Framework

Self Assessment Tool for Principals and Vice-Principals

COMMUNICATIONS MASTER PLAN 2012

Safety Management Program

ASTRAZENECA GLOBAL POLICY SAFETY, HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENT (SHE)

MSA71109 Vocational Graduate Certificate in Competitive Manufacturing

Policy on Safety, Security, Health and Environmental Protection (SHE) in the Roche Group Edition

Integrated Risk Management:

FAO Competency Framework

INJURY AND ILLNESS PREVENTION PROGRAM. For SOLANO COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT

Health, Safety and Environment Management System

People Strategy 2013/17

Personal Development Competency Project Professional Services. A 3-part guide for managers and staff

Registered Nurse - Clinical Coach NETP programme Position Description

HR Enabling Strategy

HR TEAM BUSINESS PLAN Page 1 of 5

Helvetia Group. Human resources policy

Director of Facilities Management

Strategic Plan

DIRECTOR, NURSING & CLINICAL SERVICES

FBISD Performance Management Playbook

Manager Corporate Planning and Reporting

Strategic and Operational Plan Strategic & Operational Plan

PBHCI Sustainability Checklist

Business Ethics and Code of Conduct. Executives and employees. Global Connections Pcl.

RISK MANAGEMENT STRATEGY

VISION FOR LEARNING AND DEVELOPMENT

Business Continuity Position Description

Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA)

A Review of the NHSLA Incident Reporting and Management and Learning from Experience Standards. Assessment Outcomes. April March 2004

Using Leading Indicators to Drive Sustainability Performance. Responding to changing circumstances and improving future performance

Wiltshire Council s Behaviours framework

Roche Group Employment Policy

Checklist for an audit of safety management

A Relative Gap Moving from Gap to Strength A Relative Strength Organizational Readiness

JOB AND PERSON SPECIFICATION Position Title: Education Manager Reports Directly to: General Manager Commercial. Non-EBA Senior Manager

Leadership for the major hazard industries

Quality management principles

Human factors is the term used to describe the interaction

PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS:

The Seven Levels of Organisational Consciousness

Sub-section Content. 1 Formalities - Post title: Risk Consultant - Reports to: Head of Group Risk - Division: xxx - Location: xxx

Transcription:

Survey Questions to Assess Your Company s Current Culture 1) My company s core purpose (or mission and vision) inspires we to work with enthusiasm and commitment. 2) My company has clearly established strategic objectives to align priorities. 3) My work group s priorities are clearly aligned with the company s strategic objectives and with other groups who depend on us. 4) I can see a clear linkage between my work, my group s priorities and the company s strategic objectives. 5) My company has clearly established core values, including business ethics principles, to guide behaviors. 6) Roles, authorities and accountabilities for all business-critical activities, especially those for quality and safety management, are clearly established and well understood by all stakeholders. 7) People in business-critical roles, especially those for quality and safety management, are fully aware of their responsibilities and are competent to carry them out. 8) My company has a documented, systematic process to identify, assess and manage to a level as low as reasonably practicable (ALARP) all risks to people, assets, the environment and the company s reputation.

9) There are sufficient people in my company who have been trained on incident management, including reporting, investigation, root causal analysis and corrective actions. 10) I am well informed of the risks in my work and the way my company and I are supposed to manage them.

11) I do a risk assessment before starting any task. 12) I worry about whether I am recognizing all the risks and managing them appropriately. 13) Work stresses are at a tolerable level and I am able to fully focus on the task at hand and be mindful of risks and any abnormal events as they arise during my work. 14) Business-critical activities are closely monitored and managed to assure that they fully meet customer expectations. 15) I feel a deep sense of personal responsibility for all the things I commit to do. I expect to be held accountable if I fail to do what I promise. 16) If people in my group fail to do what they promise, they will at least be held accountable for an after-action review to determine what will be done to prevent repeated shortcomings, and may suffer consequences in pay and/or promotion potential. 17) I have frequent one-to-one discussions with my supervisor to discuss how my goals align with the group and company goals, my performance toward those goals and my personal development plan. 18) My supervisor is helping me achieve my full potential by providing ongoing coaching to improve my performance and recognition for my successes.

19) All managers know what is happening in our organization and where all the problems are the workforce knows exactly what our managers expect there are no mixed messages. 20) Because managers and workers are aligned and show two-way trust there is less need for bureaucracy, audits and supervision, so workload is decreasing. 21) Everyone in my work group collaborates with each other and with stakeholders in other groups to meet internal and external customer expectations. 22) I can report an incident without fear of disciplinary action unless I have been reckless or willfully negligent. 23) My company has a documented process for determining whether disciplinary action is appropriate for those involved in incidents or accidents. 24) I feel free to speak my mind about risks without fear of negative consequences. 25) My company has an easy-to-use system for reporting incidents. 26) I frequently report incidents from which others might learn. 27) A high rate of incident reporting is seen as a good thing in my company.

28) Incident reports are investigated to find root causes and to take preventive actions. 29) Incident investigations focus on learning rather than on assigning blame. 30) I work proactively with management to identify needs for exceptions to rules before tasks are begun in order to give management sufficient time to assess the risks associated with the exception. 31) I comply with the rules while doing a task. 32) I work with stakeholders to suggest ways to improve training, tools, processes, procedures and the rules themselves if I see a better way. 33) Lessons learned from incidents are widely shared. 34) My company actively monitors lessons learned for incidents in other companies and other industries. 35) My company actively benchmarks its performance and seeks to learn best practices from competitors and other industries. 36) My company has a formal process to review, at least annually, its performance toward its strategic objectives and the effectiveness of its risk management system.

Score as follows: 1 point 2 points 3 points 4 points 5 points The questions related to the key elements of a generative culture as follows: 1) Shared sense of purpose questions 1 thru 5 2) Structured systems and resources to achieve the purpose questions 6 thru 10 3) Mindfulness questions 11 thru 16 4) Processes and mindset for learning and continuous improvement questions 17 thru 32 Looking at the average scores for each key element might suggest where to focus corrective actions.