A couple of years ago, we did a series of exercises to reveal our six values. Then we implemented them in the standard ways: We wrote a blog post, we popped them in our playbook, we talked about them during onboarding. They came up here and there.Solid work.But, we learned that values are most effective when they’re used for more than just a few checkpoints—when they’re talked about and reinforced every single day, and embedded into the work itself. And it’s much easier to do that when they’re as memorable as possible. As silly as it sounds, that can be hard when there are 6.“Do fewer things better,” as the old mantra goes.We came into the year anticipating pretty explosive growth—but growth for growth’s sake has never been our goal. We want to grow into a different and better company, not just a bigger one. We hope to embrace what brings us together, while not just clinging to what worked in the past. That’s hard. It requires intention.So one of the first things we did in 2018 was bring our values down from 6 to 3. Then, we embarked on a series of small but meaningful initiatives to embed them into how we work.[section_break]
We are here to create things. Too many environments and jobs deprive us of the ability to create. Clique is different. We have a heavy bias towards action, feel a sense of accomplishment regularly, and care deeply about the quality of what we put out in the world.We want to build something that can last. When faced with a choice of getting bigger or getting better, we choose to get better. Instead of short-term growth strategies, we invest in things that can be permanent: ourselves, our work, and our relationships with clients.
There is no such thing as “self-taught.” Directly or indirectly, everyone learns from someone. Recognizing that reality, we resolve to be the best at getting better. Technology, after all, is the most rapidly evolving industry in the world. To stay on top of it, we are committed to learning and improving, and building it into what we do—not as an “add on,” but as part of our daily work. We recognize that any minute spent teaching one another will pay itself off tenfold.
When faced with a challenge, we shouldn’t ask how quickly we can hand this off to a colleague or client — we should ask if we’re going out of our way to be a helpful, inspirational, inclusive teammate—and helping unlock the best work in others. We aim to create a virtuous cycle where we all work to make somebody’s day better and our days are better as a result.That’s it. Easier to remember, eh?[section_break]
This is the part that’s missing from most companies’ relationships with their values. OK, you wrote them on the wall, but what are you actually doing to carry them out?Here’s what we’ve done so far, which has been a good start.
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[section_break]As with everything, this is all a work in progress. To steal terminology from teachers, we try to have a growth mindset instead of a proficiency mindset. The goal is simply to keep an open mind and get better.This has helped, big time. Speaking for myself personally, it’s been “centering.” Having three values has enabled us to double-down on what makes us a little different while maintaining the freedom to evolve and change. As any growing company will tell you, that’s harder than it looks. But worth it.