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The most powerful organizational schemas are the ones nobody talks about — the assumptions so deeply embedded in how the organization operates that they feel like facts rather than choices. These implicit schemas determine behavior more reliably than any explicit policy, precisely because they operate below the level of conscious examination.
Organizational values are not aspirational posters on walls. They are schemas — shared mental models of what matters — that determine how the organization resolves tradeoffs, allocates resources, and evaluates performance. The gap between stated values and operating values is one of the most consequential schema misalignments an organization can experience, because it teaches members that the organization's words cannot be trusted.
Culture is not a mysterious force. It is the emergent result of all the shared mental models — identity, strategy, process, values, risk, authority, time — operating simultaneously in the organization. When you change the schemas, you change the culture. When you try to change the culture without changing the schemas, nothing happens.
Culture is what people actually do when no one is watching, not what the posters on the wall proclaim. Every organization has two cultures: the espoused culture (the values statement, the mission poster, the CEO's keynote) and the enacted culture (the actual patterns of behavior that shape daily work). When these two cultures diverge, people learn to trust the enacted culture and discount the espoused one — producing cynicism, disengagement, and a collective understanding that the organization's stated values are performance rather than commitment.