According to the World Economic Forum’s Chief People Officers Outlook 2025, fostering culture and purpose ranks as the #2 priority for Chief People Officers around the world.
It’s easy to see why. Culture is what tells people how to show up, for the work and for each other. It’s what keeps teams connected through change and what gives work meaning when everything else is shifting.
But as CPOs know all too well, culture is getting harder to hold together.
The Challenge: Culture Feels More Elusive
The WEF report paints a picture of a workplace under pressure:
- Global talent strategies stretch across time zones and cultures, and distributed teams are now the norm. Technology connects us but also fragments how we communicate.
- Younger generations are entering the workforce with different expectations, placing a higher premium on flexibility, authenticity, and purpose.
- At the same time, rising mental health concerns and deepening social divides are seeping into the workplace.
The result? Even the most purpose-driven companies are struggling to maintain cohesion and trust.
As the WEF puts it, organizations must now “actively reinforce cohesion” in increasingly diverse, remote, and digitally mediated workplaces. To put it simply, it’s time to get serious about connection.
Cultivation, Not Control
And yet, here’s the hard reality leaders must face: You can’t command culture from the top. You can only create the conditions for it to grow.
Too often, organizations try to manage culture through cascading values decks, all-hands calls, or neatly worded commitments on posters and intranets. Those things can help, but they’re surface-level signals.
Culture isn’t declared. It’s lived. It happens in the everyday moments between people, in how leaders listen, how managers respond under pressure, and how coworkers support each other.
That’s where coaching comes in. Coaching takes culture out of the abstract and roots it in real behaviors, real conversations, and real connection.
The Ripple Effect in Action
Culture shifts through people, not policy. Every time a leader chooses to connect differently, they model a new way of working together. Those moments multiply across teams, creating ripple effects that make culture visible:
- A leader caught between conflicting employee viewpoints brings that clash into coaching. They learn how to unpack tensions, interrupt assumptions, and create small connections across differences. Over time, respect replaces resentment.
- A leader notices team anxiety about AI. With coaching, they get better at responding with empathy, sharing information, and creating space for honest questions. Over time, fear gives way to curiosity, and the team starts exploring new possibilities together.
- A new manager struggles with distance across a distributed team. A coach helps with skill-building in real time, as they learn to navigate check-ins and prioritize social bonds. Eventually, the team begins to feel less like a collection of screens and more like a community.
- A leader frustrated by “all this talk about emotions” brings that resistance into coaching. They learn that acknowledging feelings isn’t indulgent, it’s efficient. A few small shifts in how they listen begins to defuse conflict and help team members feel heard.
That’s culture in motion. Not commanded, but cultivated.
The Business Case for Coaching
Coaching doesn’t dictate culture. It seeds it.
Every coaching conversation helps someone see themselves and others with more clarity and compassion. Those insights ripple outward, influencing how people lead, how they communicate, and how they handle conflict or change.
That’s how culture scales in a hybrid, distributed, AI-driven world: not through corporate declarations, but through human connection.
As the WEF notes, today’s CPOs are focused on managing both the structure of work and the social fabric that makes it function. Coaching is the tool that does both, and the results show up on the bottom line.
Research from the Human Capital Institute found 51% of companies with strong coaching cultures report higher revenue than their peers. Meanwhile, professionals who receive coaching report an improvement in workplace relationships (73%), interpersonal skills (71%), and work performance (70%). Dive deeper into the ROI.
Don’t Wait for Culture to Emerge. Seed It.
Culture lives in the choices people make every day, in what they share, how they lead, and how they show up for one another.
In a world of constant transformation, that’s the only kind of culture that lasts. Not the one written on the walls, but the one lived in conversations, in trust, in the willingness to come together when it would be easier to pull away.
The WEF calls it cohesion. We call it connection.
Don’t wait for culture to emerge. Seed it intentionally. Start with a Connection Audit.
See where culture is thriving and where it needs new roots to grow.