Company Culture is Demonstrated by Your Supervisors Every Tuesday at 2 PM
The Exit Interview
Sarah’s exit interview was yesterday. When the HR leader asked Sarah why she was leaving, she pointed to the poster.
- “Respect? My supervisor talks over me in every meeting and dismisses my ideas without discussion.”
- “Collaboration? He makes decisions without input and tells us after the fact.”
- “Innovation? Last week, I suggested a process improvement, and he said, ‘We’ve always done it this way. Don’t fix what isn’t broken.’
We have long known that people often don’t leave companies as much as they leave their bosses. That poster cost $47 to print and frame. The replacement hire will cost $30,000. At least. The value of the knowledge walking out the door is priceless!
Human Resource leaders face similar situations across industries. Sarah’s HR director shared that it was the third exit interview this month with the same theme. You know that the employee complaint is valid, but it’s hard to document. Watching engagement scores drop despite leadership’s best intentions is enough to keep you up at night. There is an obvious tension of being caught between frustrated employees and defensive supervisors. The company is not just losing talent – it is losing credibility.
What 35 Years of Law Enforcement Taught Me
I rose through the ranks without much training on how to actually lead people. You were promoted into a role with the expectation that you were suddenly an ‘expert.’ I never had an official HR title, but humans were all I ever dealt with. I even wrote a book about it.
And here’s what I learned: Direct Supervisors Make or Break Culture.
- Your company values aren’t what you hang on walls. They’re what your supervisors do on Tuesday at 2 PM.
- Every interaction a supervisor has with their team either reinforces or contradicts their stated values.
- The tone supervisors use when someone makes a mistake is similar to the tone they use when handling disagreements in meetings. That matters.
- How supervisors respond to new ideas is important.
- Do your supervisors protect their team’s time, or do they constantly add to their workload?
- Will your supervisors show respect when having a difficult conversation?
- How supervisors offer feedback is key.
- Can they be trusted to follow through on their promises?
If you ask an employee about company culture, they think about how they are treated.
Culture Initiatives and The Mistakes We Make
We assume management skills transfer automatically and hope that good intentions equal good leadership. At best, the company sends them to a one-day leadership workshop and considers the training as DONE.
That’s not a development strategy. It is wishful thinking at best.
- Grievances that one honest conversation could have prevented.
- Star performers who stop waiting for their manager to invest in them.
- Teams are slowly unraveling because a supervisor would rather absorb the tension than address it.
- Discrimination complaints that trace back to an unconscious bias nobody wanted to name.
- The employee burnout crisis is created by managers who don’t understand sustainable workload management.
Human Resources As The Cleanup Crew
The gap between what’s promised on your values poster and what supervisors actually do can destroy the culture you hope to create. Closing this gap is essential for real culture change.
Supervisors are the Culture of your Organization
- have daily conversations with employees.
- make the decisions about workload, recognition, and opportunities.
- directly impact employee retention rate.
- create the environment where teams either thrive or barely survive.
If you want your values to mean something, teach your supervisors how to live them.
Values are actions, not pretty words on posters.
How Can Your Organization Equip Effective Supervisors?
- Show supervisors what respectful feedback actually sounds like.
- Train them on having difficult conversations with empathy.
- Give them tools to encourage innovation instead of defaulting to “that’s not how we do things.”
- Help your emerging leaders to understand that their words and actions in small moments create the culture your company claims to value.
- Teach them to recognize their own biases and blind spots.
- Give them practical skills to develop their people rather than just manage tasks.
Leadership Development is Infrastructure
Don’t hope for the right moments—empower your supervisors to create them. Equip and hold them accountable so every action reflects your culture.