When people talk about culture, they often speak as if it is something created by management and then distributed throughout an organization. In reality, culture is far more democratic than that. While leadership sets expectations and establishes direction, culture is ultimately shaped by the collective behavior of everyone who works within the organization.
A station’s culture is not created in strategic planning sessions alone. It is formed through daily interactions among colleagues, including programming meetings, sales discussions, production sessions and casual hallway conversations. The way people respond to challenges, support one another and handle disagreements often reveals more about a station’s culture than any mission statement ever could.
Every department contributes to this process. Programmers, on-air talent, sales teams, engineers, digital specialists, promotions staff and managers all influence the environment around them. Whether they realize it or not, every employee helps define what the organization becomes.
Cultural influence
The influence of culture can be both positive and negative. Enthusiasm spreads quickly through a team, but so does cynicism. Accountability can become contagious, but so can complacency. The question is not whether individuals are influencing the culture. The question is what kind of influence they are having and whether it strengthens or weakens the organization.
The strongest station cultures are built on trust, respect and shared ownership. When employees feel valued and included, they tend to contribute more fully. They become invested in outcomes rather than simply completing tasks. They look for ways to help colleagues succeed and take pride in the station’s overall success.
This is why great cultures rarely emerge by accident. They are built intentionally and protected consistently. The most successful organizations recognize that culture is not a slogan displayed on a wall but a reflection of what people do every day, what behaviors they reward and what standards they choose to uphold. When everyone accepts responsibility for the culture, it becomes a competitive advantage that competitors cannot easily replicate.
Takeaway: Culture is not created by management alone. Great stations succeed because people across the organization choose every day to build an environment that supports trust, accountability and shared success.
Ken Benson has spent more than 40 years helping radio stations around the world build stronger brands, sharper programming and more memorable on-air content. Through his consultancy, P1 Media Group, he has advised broadcasters across six continents on strategies to turn good stations into dominant ones.
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