Startup HR Toolkit and Coaching
Why Work With Us for Your Startup’s Interim HR and People Strategy? It’s a No-Brainer!
We understand how important it is for a startup to be cost-efficient during different growth stages. Unfortunately, people and culture often get sacrificed during this time, which can spell disaster for a startup longer term. That’s why our Startup HR Toolkit and “Lean People Strategy as a Service” framework for Startups and SMBs is flexible and customizable to companies at different stages and capital structures.
We help you postpone or avoid the large cost and risk of bringing on a full-time Head of HR/People by providing best-in-class interim HR leadership. With our tools and training, we’ve helped startups reduce operating costs for HR up to 55% using our framework.
Here’s how we’re different:
- Our small but mighty team have all been strategic people strategy and change management leaders at top companies across various industries. So, we bring a strong business focus to the people ops function to boost your ROI.
- Our toolkit uses advanced people analytics tools and partners to measure your company’s unique needs and help you fill urgent roles faster.
- We utilize our expertise in HR training and coaching to improve employee engagement and team productivity.
- You get your startup’s unique HR and People Strategy Playbook as part of the HR toolkit. This contains your People Strategy roadmap, key processes, compensation strategy, learning and development, career paths, and more.
- Ultimately, our toolkit and services can replace the cost of hiring a full-time HR leader for up to 12 months, saving you tons on your costs!
Our Interim HR Offerings
A Helping Hand (1-3 months)
- Best for companies of 30 employees or under
- Mini-organizational effectiveness assessment
Usually includes…
-Recruiting support
– Full Startup HR Toolkit
– Culture and DEI support
-2 hours of Team leader/manager coaching
– Ideal compensation framework
– Employee Handbook
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A Shoulder to Lean On(3-6 months)
- Our full talent and organizational assessment
- Our people analytics tool to cut recruiting time in half
Usually includes Everything in a Helping Hand PLUS….
– Ideal Recruiting process
-Career paths mapping and succession plan
– Communications and operations improvement
– Lightweight info sharing/data governance process
-Learning and development strategy
-Diversity and inclusion
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A Full Mind-Body Experience(6-12 months)
- Best if you need interim HR Leadership
Usually includes Everything in a Shoulder to Lean On PLUS….
– Ideal org and team design/re-design
– Strategic short and long-term people strategy roadmap
– Learning and development plan and implementation
– Change management as needed
– Your company’s People and Culture Playbook
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We create value for startups by combining our unique expertise in…
Data and Analytics
Business Strategy
Neuroscience and Behavior
…And Some Creativity and the Arts
What is Organizational Culture, Anyway?
What is organizational culture? The answer is: it’s more than what you may think. One of my HR consulting clients a few years back was a media company that had just seen the incoming of a new Chief HR Officer. Now, this new leader was a true visionary: he saw the potential of the HR function to revolutionize the way it worked and to serve stakeholders across functions in new, agile ways. He was an inspiring and highly intelligent leader and was able to truly set the vision for the future of the company in a meaningful way. When he spoke at town halls, everyone listened with rapt attention.
But unfortunately, when everyone went back to their daily grind, old habits continued to prevail.
Management did not necessarily keep pace with his ideas or know how to properly implement them. Most of them had been with the company for years, even decades. They were used to their old ways of doing things and managing staff. Despite new technology and processes being brought in, the organization was bogged down with decades of politics and resentment between teams that inhibited the level of stakeholder collaboration the new HR leader envisioned.
It seemed more and more that the vision of agility and continuous improvement that the new CHRO had charted was just an idea on the wall, and not an actual practical reality. And so often, employees define organizational culture as something “abstract” that is not practiced in the day-to-day.
The Unseen Force that Impacts Everything
I have worked in business consulting for 10-odd years helping companies navigate through digital and organizational transformations. Through this work, it has always been interesting to experience the tension that takes place in an organization as a result of being forced to change.
It became apparent to me that each organization had its own unique, intangible force — or “energy.” This force seemed to unconsciously run the organization. Everything from the words used, the beliefs about leadership and the overall company, the work behaviors, and style of meetings.
Another way of describing this force is simply “the way we do things around here.” And that is organizational culture, defined.
Most often, employees are either unaware of organizational culture or simply complacent, preferring to go along with the day to day. After all, organizational culture is usually not something that was consciously cultivated(unless you’re a Zappos or Amazon), but something that just formed by itself as a result of:
1. Leaders and their personalities
2. The organizational design and structure put in place
3. The technology being used
4. The collective forces/individuals in an organization
How to Change Organizational Culture
Thus, organizational culture is an interplay: it both impacts and is impacted, by people, processes, and technology. It is woven in so deeply that it is imperceptible. And because of that, it usually gets ignored or taken for granted. When in fact, it can be the key to a company’s transformational growth.
That’s the reason I was inspired to start a business consulting company that is based on the premise that not only does workplace culture matter, but it can be measured.
It can be assessed through combining both qualitative and quantitative data, which is what our Organizational Assessment does. And only once we measure organizational culture can we change it, by understanding its levers and impacts on the company.
There are some best practices for changing organizational culture. But it is important to remember again, that each organization is unique and has its own personality. And thus, it has its own unique journey it needs to take for organizational culture change.
And why bother, you may ask? Why not just stay the same? Let’s just say survival depends on it. These days, workplace change is not a one-off occurrence but it is the norm. It is the only thing that is constant, with new technologies and competition sprouting up everyday.
And an organization’s ability to navigate change of any kind is directly dependent on its what its organizational culture is.
Interested in learning about our Startup HR toolkit or interim HR leadership?
Let’s start with a 15 minute call to see if we’re a mutual fit!
CultureStrategy Inc.
Startup HR Toolkit | Los Angeles Metro | Orange County CA | NYC | Washington DC Locations
Organizational Design Consulting | DEI and Company Culture Consulting |
Communication Coaching and Training
1 river place suite 2607
new york, ny 10036
(855) 208-7797
“Great Minds Think Differently”
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