Beyond Implementation: The Cultural Challenge
Implementing a new system isn’t the hard part. What’s hard is building the culture around it — a culture that makes steering possible.
Steering isn’t just a model. It’s a mindset. And when done well, it becomes a collective capability: a way of thinking, deciding, and adapting that lives in the organisation, not just in the tools.
Here’s what that looks like in practice — and what it takes to build.
What Makes a Steering Culture?
A steering culture is one where people aren’t just doing tasks. They’re learning to sense, adapt, and influence the direction of the system they’re in. That requires more than new processes. It requires a shift in posture.
At the heart of it is perceived agency — the belief that you can influence outcomes, even in complex systems. Albert Bandura called this “self-efficacy.” Peter Senge called it “personal mastery.” In a steering culture, people don’t just react. They orient. They test. They respond with intention.
This is what creates resilience — not just in individuals, but in teams.
Five Traits of a Steering Culture
- Shared Language for Decision-Making
People know how to talk about the environment, the goal, the feedback, and the steering itself. There’s a common vocabulary for situational awareness and course correction. It’s not jargon — it’s fluency. A shared map. - Modelling from the Middle and the Top
Leaders don’t just give direction. They demonstrate how to steer — how to gather feedback, make trade-offs, and reflect openly. This creates permission for others to do the same. - Systems Thinking in Everyday Work
Teams think in loops, not lines. They understand interdependencies. They recognise that outcomes are produced by the structure of the system, not just the behaviour of individuals. - Real-Time Feedback Loops
The system tells people what’s happening — continuously. Feedback is immediate, meaningful, and tied to actions that people can actually take. - Psychological Safety for Adaptive Thinking
People feel safe to say “I think we need to course-correct.” They’re encouraged to challenge assumptions, reframe problems, and ask questions that might change the route — without fear of blame.
From Compliance to Contribution
Most organisations still operate in what might be called a “compliance culture.” People are expected to follow plans, hit targets, and avoid mistakes. That works — until the plan no longer fits the terrain.
A steering culture invites something different. It says: we value your perception. We trust your judgment. We want your input on how we move forward.
And that requires a shift in how performance is measured, how meetings are run, and how knowledge is shared.
It’s not about loosening standards. It’s about raising the level of engaged intelligence throughout the organisation.
The HubSpot Connection: CRM as Cultural Infrastructure
If your organisation runs on HubSpot, then your CRM isn’t just a tool — it’s the place where structure meets language. It’s the infrastructure that either supports a steering culture, or makes one harder to build.
When your HubSpot instance is aligned with steering principles:
- Properties become signals that help you track what matters
- Workflows become feedback loops that teach the system and the team
- Dashboards act as navigational instruments, not just scoreboards
- Processes reflect loops, not just pipelines
This alignment turns HubSpot into something more than a database. It becomes part of your thinking environment — a space where your culture of awareness, adaptation, and reflection can actually take root.
Leading the Shift
You can’t mandate a steering culture. But you can model it. And you can build the conditions that make it possible.
Start here:
- Use the Steering Model in real discussions — name the nodes when talking about challenges
- Celebrate moments of course correction, not just goal achievement
- Invite questions that improve navigation, not just execution
- Build reflection into the rhythm of work
- Make feedback about the system, not just the individual
Every organisation has its own path. But the direction is shared: from rigidity to responsiveness. From reaction to responsibility. From drift to deliberate design.
Steering as Relationship
At its core, steering isn’t about control. It’s about relationship — with the system, with uncertainty, with change itself.
The organisations that thrive aren’t those with the most detailed plans or the most sophisticated tools. They’re the ones that have built the cultural capacity to sense, respond, and evolve together.
Steering is a way of working in the world — and culture is what makes it sustainable.
The Steering Model begins with five nodes. But it only comes alive when the culture supports it — when awareness becomes shared, feedback becomes welcomed, and people are trusted to steer.
Tools enable. Culture sustains.

Beyond Implementation: The Cultural Challenge
Implementing a new system isn’t the hard part. What’s hard is building the culture around it — a culture that makes steering possible.
Steering isn’t just a model. It’s a mindset. And when done well, it becomes a collective capability: a way of thinking, deciding, and adapting that lives in the organisation, not just in the tools.
Here’s what that looks like in practice — and what it takes to build.
What Makes a Steering Culture?
A steering culture is one where people aren’t just doing tasks. They’re learning to sense, adapt, and influence the direction of the system they’re in. That requires more than new processes. It requires a shift in posture.
At the heart of it is perceived agency — the belief that you can influence outcomes, even in complex systems. Albert Bandura called this “self-efficacy.” Peter Senge called it “personal mastery.” In a steering culture, people don’t just react. They orient. They test. They respond with intention.
This is what creates resilience — not just in individuals, but in teams.
Five Traits of a Steering Culture
- Shared Language for Decision-Making
People know how to talk about the environment, the goal, the feedback, and the steering itself. There’s a common vocabulary for situational awareness and course correction. It’s not jargon — it’s fluency. A shared map. - Modelling from the Middle and the Top
Leaders don’t just give direction. They demonstrate how to steer — how to gather feedback, make trade-offs, and reflect openly. This creates permission for others to do the same. - Systems Thinking in Everyday Work
Teams think in loops, not lines. They understand interdependencies. They recognise that outcomes are produced by the structure of the system, not just the behaviour of individuals. - Real-Time Feedback Loops
The system tells people what’s happening — continuously. Feedback is immediate, meaningful, and tied to actions that people can actually take. - Psychological Safety for Adaptive Thinking
People feel safe to say “I think we need to course-correct.” They’re encouraged to challenge assumptions, reframe problems, and ask questions that might change the route — without fear of blame.
From Compliance to Contribution
Most organisations still operate in what might be called a “compliance culture.” People are expected to follow plans, hit targets, and avoid mistakes. That works — until the plan no longer fits the terrain.
A steering culture invites something different. It says: we value your perception. We trust your judgment. We want your input on how we move forward.
And that requires a shift in how performance is measured, how meetings are run, and how knowledge is shared.
It’s not about loosening standards. It’s about raising the level of engaged intelligence throughout the organisation.
The HubSpot Connection: CRM as Cultural Infrastructure
If your organisation runs on HubSpot, then your CRM isn’t just a tool — it’s the place where structure meets language. It’s the infrastructure that either supports a steering culture, or makes one harder to build.
When your HubSpot instance is aligned with steering principles:
- Properties become signals that help you track what matters
- Workflows become feedback loops that teach the system and the team
- Dashboards act as navigational instruments, not just scoreboards
- Processes reflect loops, not just pipelines
This alignment turns HubSpot into something more than a database. It becomes part of your thinking environment — a space where your culture of awareness, adaptation, and reflection can actually take root.
Leading the Shift
You can’t mandate a steering culture. But you can model it. And you can build the conditions that make it possible.
Start here:
- Use the Steering Model in real discussions — name the nodes when talking about challenges
- Celebrate moments of course correction, not just goal achievement
- Invite questions that improve navigation, not just execution
- Build reflection into the rhythm of work
- Make feedback about the system, not just the individual
Every organisation has its own path. But the direction is shared: from rigidity to responsiveness. From reaction to responsibility. From drift to deliberate design.
Steering as Relationship
At its core, steering isn’t about control. It’s about relationship — with the system, with uncertainty, with change itself.
The organisations that thrive aren’t those with the most detailed plans or the most sophisticated tools. They’re the ones that have built the cultural capacity to sense, respond, and evolve together.
Steering is a way of working in the world — and culture is what makes it sustainable.
The Steering Model begins with five nodes. But it only comes alive when the culture supports it — when awareness becomes shared, feedback becomes welcomed, and people are trusted to steer.
Tools enable. Culture sustains.