Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Our Story
    • Partner with us
    • Reach Us
    • Career
    Subscribe Newsletter
    HR KathaHR Katha
    • Exclusive
      • Exclusive Features
      • HR Pops
      • herSTORY
      • Perspectives
      • Point Of View
      • Case-In-Point
      • Research
      • Dialogue
      • Movement
      • Profile
      • Beyond Work
      • Rising Star
      • By Invitation
    • News
      • Global HR News
      • Compensation & Benefits
      • Diversity
      • Events
      • Gen Y
      • Hiring & Firing
      • HR & Labour Laws
      • Learning & Development
      • Merger & Acquisition
      • Performance Management & Productivity
      • Talent Management
      • Tools & Technology
      • Work-Life Balance
    • Special
      • Cover Story
      • Editorial
      • HR Forecast 2024
      • HR Forecast 2023
      • HR Forecast 2022
      • HR Forecast 2021
      • HR Forecast 2020
      • HR Forecast 2019
      • New Age Learning
      • Coaching and Training
      • Learn-Engage-Transform
    • Magazine
    • Reports
      • Whitepaper
        • HR Forecast 2024 e-mag
        • Future-proofing Manufacturing Through Digital Transformation
        • Employee Healthcare & Wellness Benefits: A Guide for Indian MSMEs
        • Build a Future Ready Organisation For The Road Ahead
        • Employee Experience Strategy
        • HRKatha 2019 Forecast
        • Decoding and Driving Employee Engagement
        • One Platform, Infinite Possibilities
      • Survey Reports
        • Happiness at Work
        • Upskilling for Jobs of the Future
        • The Labour Code 2020
    • Conferences
      • Leadership Summit 2025
      • Rising Star Leadership Awards
      • HRKatha Futurecast
      • Automation.NXT
      • The Great HR Debate
    • HR Jobs
    WhatsApp LinkedIn X (Twitter) Facebook Instagram
    HR KathaHR Katha
    Home»News»Do boards help shape organisational culture? 78% board members say ‘Yes’
    News

    Do boards help shape organisational culture? 78% board members say ‘Yes’

    Unfortunately, 67% of respondents report that culture is never, or only occasionally, discussed at board meetings according to a report
    Liji Narayan | HRKathaBy Liji Narayan | HRKathaJuly 18, 20254 Mins Read7557 Views
    Share LinkedIn Twitter Facebook
    Do boards shape organisational culture?
    Share
    LinkedIn Twitter Facebook

    That culture forms the core of good governance is a known fact. For only then can vision and values be shaped, strategies executed and reputation built with stakeholders. Does that mean the boards of companies play a strategic role in shaping organisational culture? Does culture find a place in the list of governance responsibilities of company boards? Culturelytics and the Institute of Directors (IOD) decided to find out.

    To understand the developing attitudes of board members about organisational culture and how it fits into their governance responsibilities, a survey was conducted. Executive and non-executive directors serving on public and private-company boards across sectors were part of the same.

    The findings were interesting: A whopping 92 per cent board members believe that a board’s governance responsibilities should include ensuring that organisational culture aligns with company purpose. A significant 78 per cent of board member respondents agree or strongly agree that the board plays an active role in shaping the culture of their organisation. Where is the problem you may ask? Well, the problem is that, in reality, a good 67 per cent of respondents report that culture is never, or only occasionally, discussed at board meetings. Only about 30 per cent respondents stated that the board of directors and its chair were responsible for shaping culture in their organisation. A measly three per cent respondents admitted to culture being among the top 5 items of the board meeting agendas. About 50 per cent respondents said the agenda items at meetings only comprised operational topics that required approval, including organisational performance, strategic planning, financial reports and projections that
    were important to major business decisions. Culture is missing from the agenda.

    Clearly, while most respondents of the survey were of the opinion that culture should be aligned with the purpose of the organisation, and that the same should be the responsibility of the board, they also admitted that they are not presently playing an active role in shaping organisational culture. That means, while the intent is there, no action has been taken to address the same.

    Why is culture important for achieving business outcomes? For one, the respondents felt that a positive organisational culture contributes to performance, particularly amidst change. It is essential for the culture of an organisation to be adaptive and responsive, and without such a culture there cannot be success. Additionally, the emotional environment of an organisation is important for productivity and good performance. This is determined by long-term culture, which only the board can drive and instil.

    Culture, according to many respondents is what shapes a company’s reputation and affects every aspect of the business, as well as its stakeholders. Culture also forms the foundation of a company’s long-term sustainability goals and vision.

    Culture suffers when the board and executive leaders fail to align the organisation’s purpose with its culture.

    This brings forth another important question. Do boards have the right tools to assess culture performance? Over 87 per cent of the respondents agree there is a need to comprehensively measure the culture of their organisation, while over 65 per cent recommend embracing AI platforms to help measure and manage organisational culture. Almost 87 per cent of respondents believe that their organisation’s culture is aligned with its mission, vision and goals, while only 35 per cent actively benchmark their culture practices against global best practices. Almost 63 per cent of respondents felt a need for a dedicated management team to implement and monitor culture in their organisation.

    When culture is so crucial to the fulfillment of business objectives and is such an integral part of good governance, it is but understood that the boards will have to play a fundamental role in ensuring the establishment and maintenance of the right culture in the organisation. The boards will have to co-create culture and also supervise and support the same.

    With growing competition, and the increasing number of mergers and acquisitions today, cultural compatibility is a must. When business transformations fail, most of the time the reason is cultural incompatibility. Therefore, it is high time boards addressed culture through their agenda and committee structure.

    agenda of board meetings board board meetings board member board of company boards of companies boards shape culture Culture culture and good governance Culturelytics Employee employer governance HR Human Resources IOD long-term sustainability goals Organisational Culture Workforce
    Share. LinkedIn Twitter Facebook
    Liji Narayan | HRKatha

    HRKatha prides itself in being a good journalistic product and Liji deserves all the credit for it. Thanks to her, our readers get clean copies to read every morning while our writers are kept on their toes.

    1 Comment

    1. G K MANJUNATH on July 31, 2025 9:38 pm

      At the outset, my heartfelt congratulations to Liji Narayan for her on the heart burning topic. The Board and top Management has to imbibe culture amongst the shop floor to achieve the company’s mission. The culture is guiding lamp to move forward. It is aptly said “When culture is so crucial to the fulfillment of business objectives and is such an integral part of good governance, it is but understood that the boards will have to play a fundamental role”
      Why many companies are failing and struggling, it is lacking culture at all level in the companies. The top management should lead from the front and be a model to downwards.

      The article is eye opener for all the boards.

      Read more at: https://www.hrkatha.com/research/do-boards-help-shape-organisational-culture-78-board-members-say-yes/

      Reply
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Related Posts

    Viral reddit post exposes recruitment double standards after candidate declines interview

    January 23, 2026

    Glenmark Pharmaceuticals appoints Neha Jangale as head–L&D

    January 23, 2026

    AI may replace researchers before engineers or sales teams; sparks industry debate

    January 23, 2026

    Autodesk to cut 7% workforce as go-to-market overhaul nears completion

    January 23, 2026
    Editorial

    Leaders must stop being the heart and become the nervous system

    Spotify largely avoids leadership approval for routine product features. Squads, small teams owning specific user…

    What failed brands teach us about talent strategy

    Remember Tata Nano? The Rs 1 lakh car that was supposed to revolutionise Indian mobility?…

    EDITOR'S PICKS

    HR metrics: What are you still holding on to?

    January 23, 2026

    Case-in-Point: Founder loyalty vs professional authority

    January 22, 2026

    herSTORY: Supriya Thankappan, ex-head-HR, Greaves Electric Mobility

    January 22, 2026

    The 24-point engagement collapse: Why 88% fell to 64% in just one year

    January 21, 2026
    Latest Post

    NHRDN Delhi & NCR Chapter’s HR Leaders Huddle looks at the road ahead

    Events January 23, 2026

    21 January 2026 was witness to the National HRD Network (NHRDN) – Delhi & NCR…

    Viral reddit post exposes recruitment double standards after candidate declines interview

    News January 23, 2026

    A Reddit post circulating widely on the r/recruiting hell forum has reignited debate around power…

    Glenmark Pharmaceuticals appoints Neha Jangale as head–L&D

    Movement January 23, 2026

    Glenmark Pharmaceuticals has appointed Neha Jangale as head–learning & development (L&D) , strengthening its leadership…

    AI may replace researchers before engineers or sales teams; sparks industry debate

    News January 23, 2026

    The debate around artificial intelligence (AI) replacing human jobs has taken an unexpected turn. This…

    Asia's No.1 HR Platform

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn WhatsApp Bluesky
    • Our Story
    • Partner with us
    • Career
    • Reach Us
    • Exclusive Features
    • Cover Story
    • Editorial
    • Dive into the Future of Work: Download HRForecast 2024 Now!
    © 2026 HRKatha.com
    • Disclaimer
    • Refunds & Cancellation Policy
    • Terms of Service

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.