An organisational culture assessment is a systematic process used to measure the shared values, beliefs, and behaviours that define how work gets done within your business. By identifying the gap between your current environment and your strategic goals, you can make data-driven decisions to improve retention, engagement, and performance. In today's workplace, understanding the 'unwritten rules' of your office – whether physical or remote – is the first step toward building a high-performing team that lasts.
Key takeaways
- An organisational culture assessment uncovers the hidden drivers of employee behaviour and team performance.
- Effective assessments move beyond surface-level perks to measure core values and work personality alignment.
- Data-driven insights allow HR leaders to bridge the gap between their current culture and their desired strategic outcomes.
- Regularly assessing your culture is essential for maintaining engagement during periods of rapid growth or change.
We often think of culture as something that just 'happens' – a collection of Friday drinks, Slack banter, and the occasional team lunch. But for mid-market leaders managing 60 to 1,000 staff, culture is far more than a vibe. It is the operating system of your business. When that system has bugs, you see it in high turnover, sluggish productivity, and a general sense of 'quiet quitting' amongst your best people.
The problem is that most leaders only realise their culture is struggling when the results show up in the bottom line. By then, the damage is often done. You might try to fix it with a new engagement survey or a revised mission statement, but without a formal organisational culture assessment, you are essentially flying blind. You are treating the symptoms rather than the cause.
A true assessment looks under the hood. It asks: do our people actually value what we say we value? Are our Coordinators empowered to build the structures we need, or are they being stifled by a lack of clarity? When you stop guessing and start measuring, you gain the power to intentionally design a workplace where people actually want to show up and do their best work.
For years, the standard tool for checking a company's pulse was the annual engagement survey. While these have their place, they often fail to capture the nuances of organisational culture. Engagement is about how people feel today; culture is about why they act the way they do every day. To get a complete picture, we need to look at the intersection of individual tendencies and collective norms.
This is where understanding work personality becomes vital. Every team is made up of different types – from Pioneers who push for innovation to Auditors who ensure precision. An effective organisational culture assessment considers how these personalities interact. If your culture heavily rewards risk-taking but your team is primarily composed of risk-averse personalities, you have a fundamental misalignment that no 'pizza Friday' will fix.
At Compono, we believe that culture is the sum of these individual parts. By using tools like Compono Engage, you can move beyond simple sentiment and start mapping the actual DNA of your teams. This allows you to see where your culture is thriving and where it is creating friction, giving you a roadmap for genuine, lasting change.
Culture starts at the top, but it lives in the middle. While senior leadership sets the vision, it is the managers and team leads who reinforce – or undermine – that culture daily. In our research into high-performing teams, we've found that the most successful organisations are those where leaders are self-aware enough to adapt their style to the needs of their people.
A comprehensive organisational culture assessment should include a look at leadership styles. Are your leaders naturally directive, democratic, or non-directive? More importantly, is that style appropriate for the current team dynamic? For example, Evaluators in leadership roles often excel at logical decision-making, but they may need to consciously soften their approach to support Helpers who value harmony and empathy.
When we understand these dynamics, we can provide managers with the specific coaching they need. This isn't about changing who they are, but about expanding their toolkit. By aligning leadership behaviour with cultural goals, you create a consistent experience for every employee, regardless of which department they work in. You can explore how we approach this in The Compono Culture, Engagement & Performance Model.
One of the most practical applications of an organisational culture assessment is in the hiring process. Far too often, 'culture fit' is used as a vague excuse to hire people who are just like the current team. This leads to groupthink and a lack of diversity. A data-driven assessment allows you to define 'culture add' – identifying the specific traits or work personalities that will strengthen your existing team rather than just mirroring it.
Imagine you have a team of highly creative Campaigners who are great at selling the dream but struggle with follow-through. Your assessment might show that your culture is currently too scattered. In this case, your next hire shouldn't be another visionary; it should be a Doer who brings the practical, task-focused energy needed to get things done.
This is where Compono Hire changes the game. By selecting the specific work personality your team is missing, the platform helps you automatically rank candidates who bring that missing piece to the puzzle. This ensures that your culture evolves intentionally with every new hire, building a more balanced and resilient organisation over time.
An organisational culture assessment is not a 'one and done' event. Just as your business strategy evolves, so too does your culture. As you grow from 100 to 500 staff, the way you communicate, collaborate, and celebrate will naturally shift. The goal is to ensure that shift happens by design, not by accident.
Regularly checking in on your cultural health allows you to spot trends before they become crises. Are your Advisors starting to feel burnt out by too much conflict? Is the innovation that defined your early days being stifled by new layers of bureaucracy? These are questions that only a structured assessment can answer with certainty.
By tracking these metrics over time, you can prove the ROI of your people initiatives. You can show that a 10% increase in cultural alignment correlates with higher productivity and lower recruitment costs. In the modern business world, being able to quantify the 'soft stuff' is what separates the most successful HR leaders from the rest. It turns culture from a cost centre into a competitive advantage.
Key insights
- Culture is the operating system of your business and requires regular maintenance and assessment to function optimally.
- True cultural change begins with understanding the individual work personalities that make up your collective team.
- Leaders must be willing to adapt their styles to bridge the gap between current behaviours and desired cultural outcomes.
- Data-driven recruitment, supported by tools like Compono Hire, allows you to hire for 'culture add' rather than just 'culture fit'.
- Continuous measurement is the only way to ensure your culture remains a driver of performance as your organisation scales.
An engagement survey measures how employees feel in the moment – their current satisfaction and motivation levels. An organisational culture assessment goes deeper, measuring the underlying values, beliefs, and work personalities that drive long-term behaviour and decision-making within the team.
While a deep-dive assessment is typically done annually, we recommend using pulse tools and continuous feedback loops to monitor cultural health quarterly. This is especially important for mid-market companies experiencing rapid growth or significant structural changes.
Absolutely. High turnover is often a symptom of a 'toxic' or misaligned culture. An assessment helps you identify exactly where the friction points are – whether it is a lack of leadership support, poor role clarity, or a mismatch between personal values and company expectations.
Psychological safety is key. Employees need to know that their feedback is confidential and, more importantly, that it will lead to actual change. When people see that leadership is acting on the data to make their work lives better, they are far more likely to provide honest insights.
Yes, but it takes time and intentionality. Culture change isn't about a single announcement; it's about shifting the daily habits and work personalities of the team. By assessing where you are now and where you want to be, you can create a step-by-step plan to evolve your culture over 12–18 months.