By Georgeann H. Ikuma
While casual Fridays and
Ping-Pong tables in the break room may represent an appealing company culture,
they do not necessarily spell success and serenity for the business or its
employees. Steve Gandara, co-founder and managing director of Excellent Cultures
Inc., headquartered in McKinney, Texas, knows what it takes to transform a
corporation into a thriving work environment — adopting a unified vision of the
company mission.
“The problem with culture
is that everyone knows what it means, but it means something different to
everyone,” said Gandara, who has spent more than four decades transforming
leaders and corporate cultures to have relentless excellence. “When people
believe different things in their heart, they behave differently and when they
behave differently, their customers and colleagues feel it.”
Using scientific data to
produce a measurable impact on a company’s revenue, cost savings and bottom
line, Excellent Cultures employs seasoned business consultants, coaches and
corporate trainers to assist businesses in achieving their desired outcomes of
winning, building and sustaining the type of cultures that lead to success.
Pain, passion and purpose
Companies typically reach
out to Excellent Cultures with what Gandara calls “a pain or a passion.” Some
companies already enjoy a good culture that they wish to make great, while
others need to make critical changes to inspire employee engagement and
retention.
The big pain/passion in today’s corporate climate is diversity and inclusion, he said. “While diversity is what every company needs to be at their best, inclusion is not the way to get there. Nobody wants to be included. We want to be celebrated,” he said. “For this to take place, we need unity because diversity without unity is chaos. To win in this season of chaos, we need cultures of unity that celebrate diversity, not tolerate it. To accomplish this requires taking advantage of the Excellent Cultures superpower.
“Our superpower is the
technology we’ve developed over time that unifies people in less than 60 days,”
added Gandara, whose coaching strategy helps companies reach their full
potential using four main benchmarks. “We work on what it means to live
achieving goals, self-actualizing, valuing people and unity.”
Although Excellent
Cultures boasts a vast and varied client roster from Toyota Motor North America
Inc. and Microsoft Corp. to Starbucks Corp. and Amazon.com Inc., he said
employees all seek the same thing — heaven at work.
“You don’t quit a job, you
quit a boss,” Gandara said. “Seventy-two percent of bosses lead in a manner
that creates defensive behavior, and we can help change that.”
Winning attitude
He attributes his
resilience and constant drive for excellence to his father, a Mexican American
teacher and football coach turned car salesman. Growing up, he and his brothers
watched their father earn the position of sales manager three times only to get
replaced by a Caucasian co-worker.
“Eventually, my dad ended up becoming the
first minority auto dealer that General Motors [Co.] ever recruited,” Gandara
said. “If you knock us down, we don’t cry; we just get up and do it again until
we win.”
Coaching through COVID-19
He has carried this same
mindset throughout the ongoing pandemic. Gandara said Excellent Cultures
continues to overcome the challenges of this difficult time by adapting its
curriculum to a virtual model.
“Our particular culture
includes a bunch of feisty entrepreneurs who can always figure out the best way
to make things happen,” he said of his “diverse and talented team.”
“We were fortunate to have
actually set things up using Microsoft Teams back in 2019, so our transition to
virtual was relatively seamless,” he said. “We figured out how to make it work
even better than in person.”
With a tidal wave of new
businesses flooding Texas — according to the state’s governor — Gandara
anticipates Excellent Cultures will see its biggest year yet.
“There is a real void of leadership development in this country,” said Gandara, who continues to expand and build his team with experts who know how to cultivate a company’s cultural landscape. “And we’re the ones to change that.”
To learn more about
excellent cultures, visit excellentcultures.com