Culture And Connection

Please enable Javascript to have a better user experience Bitte aktivieren Sie Javascript, um eine bessere Benutzererfahrung zu erzielen Activez Javascript pour avoir une meilleure expérience utilisateur Schakel Javascript in voor een betere gebruikerservaring

What is a culture?

There isn’t one definition of culture, and its meaning will vary from one person to another and from one organisation to another, Gartner describes culture as ‘the set of behavioural norms and unwritten rules that shape the organisational environment and how individuals interact and get work done in that environment. In short, it is about ‘how things get done around here which comprises three facets:

  • Identity - who we are
  • Community - how we treat each other
  • Purpose - why we do what we do

 

What is means at Computacenter

career-tuile-future-talent A COUPER

Computacenter’s culture has always been fundamental to the way we operate and to our success. Our culture was established by our founders over 40 years ago and is evident in our leadership and our ways of working, it is based on a high degree of customer-centricity, ambition, and a focus on our people. We communicate our culture through four key pillars:

  • Our brand
  • Our employment value proposition (EVP)
  • Our values
  • Our Purpose

 

Helping us steer to our true north in an ever-changing world

Praxissichten

As we navigate the world of Hybrid working, maintaining our values and culture becomes even more important. Across different offices and countries, company values are the only constant, and they play a crucial role in shaping company culture. Therefore, to create a sense of community in a multinational organisation, where employees may be based on customer sites and remotely, organisations must continue to reinforce and create connectedness to their company values at every opportunity. Our values centre around our customers and our people and describe the way we work together to achieve success.

With the experience of operating a hybrid work model, the way we engage and connect with our people has shifted. Our experience of the past two years has reshaped our priorities, identities, and worldview, the focus now is on health and wellbeing, family time, flexibility, and purpose. As a result, employees’ “is it worth it” equation in terms of what they want from work and what they are willing to give in return, has changed. Culture is the key that keeps us connected to our people on a logical and emotional level.

 

How can we create more connectedness in a remote or hybrid world?

The things that make unite us and create a sense of pride in what we do, are caring for our customers and each other. To foster this connectedness there have been a high number of in-person events in the past three months from across our business, not just the typical sales events, but every department is looking for a reason to bring people together, to re-ignite passions and to re-engage. These events help our people to stay updated on our strategy, goals, intentions, and aspirations, and connect them to us for the months ahead, setting out the role they play in our collective achievements.

Pre-pandemic, the connectedness was lived and defused through the offices by being in the office with each other, making connections and interacting day to day, much was done physically together. The deeper connections were formed with teammates, working together on opportunities and challenges. Office spaces and face-to-face proximity have long been the way to foster connectedness among people, but the pandemic and Hybrid working has removed that, creating a gap that our leaders must fill. Now more than ever, connectedness, flexibility and wellbeing are non-negotiables for both current and future employees.

There is a myriad of advice, guidance, consultancy, and tools which are touted daily purporting to have the answer to retention, recruitment, employee engagement and culture in a post-pandemic world. Organisations today are trying to find their way and every day we read about the extreme stances being taken by Companies offering their employees total flexibility in work location to those demanding a full return to office environments. For Computacenter, the answer lies somewhere between; a hybrid working model that enables our people to spend some time working from an office (or client) location and some time from home. The amount of time in the office is dependent upon many factors such as customer needs, team, and local environment but also a personal choice, flexibility, and trust.

So, a question we should all be thinking about is; if culture is “how we do things around here”, what do we do when there is no one “how” and no one “here” anymore. With our purpose and values guiding us through, I am excited about how this evolves for Computacenter in the future because while our business is about technology, first of all, it’s about people.


Sarah Long

Group Chief People Officer

Sarah has over 25 years’ experience in the Tech industry. She originally joined Computacenter in 1996 and spent 12 years in various Sales and Service Leadership roles. Between 2008 and 2018 she consulted to a number of Tech organisations across Europe, advising on Strategic Growth and Organisational Change. Sarah re-joined Computacenter in March 2019 to lead the Group People Strategy and in-country HR functions. Sarah graduated from Manchester University with a degree in Technology and Design.

Latest Blog articles Nieuwste blogartikelen Neueste Blog-Artikel Derniers articles de blog

International Women's Day - #InspireInclusion

by Elke Suttmöller
Read More

Exploring the four routes to AI adoption

by Steve Walker
Read More

Building a Robust and Secure Network Infrastructure for a Connected Future

Solutions

by Jeff Jennings
Read More

Sustainability at the IT level what do you put on the agenda

by Hasma Nahimi
Read More