The Digital Conversationalist

Facebook Corporate Values

I’ve been undertaking extensive research on corporate values across companies all over the world – large and small. This is for an ebook I’m putting together on messaging, and while I have no idea where I’ll publish it just yet, it’s been a really interesting process contrasting and comparing the biggest brands in the world on such a massive scale, across multiple sectors. Some companies have awesome, deeply meaningful corporate values (with tech/digital companies standing out), but many companies remain very weak in this area, some with no values at all.

Facebook is definitely an awesome example, and when you read its Values and watch the employee videos, it’s definitely something that feels true and motivating – which is exactly what Values should be. You can find this information on Facebook’s career page.

Values are the core of corporate culture – small or large – and it’s the qualities, customs, standards, and principles that drives the business, as well as its employees belief in the company’s direction – all culminating to ensure the company AND its employees succeed. In fact, Steve Jobs is better at explaining this in a way that will resonate. Check out this old video, filmed when Steve Jobs returned to Apple and launched the “Think Different” campaign. As he says, the Core Values should never change, and he famously and very successfully realigned Apple back to focus on its original Values as its driving force.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmG9jzCHtSQ]

Facebook Values

Working at Facebook means doing what you love. We hire trailblazers, hackers and pioneers. We want people who can solve challenging problems, make a real impact and build something big. You should join us.

We don’t have rules. We have values.

Focus on Impact

To have the biggest impact, we need to focus on solving the most important problems. It sounds simple, but most companies do this poorly and waste a lot of time. We expect everyone at Facebook to be good at finding the biggest problems to work on.

Move Fast

We have a saying: “Move fast and break things.” The idea is that if you never break anything, you’re probably not moving fast enough. At Facebook, we’re less afraid of making mistakes than we are of losing opportunities.

Be Bold

We have another saying: “The riskiest thing is to take no risks.” In a world that’s changing so quickly, you’re guaranteed to fail if you don’t take any risks. We encourage everyone to make bold decisions, even if that means being wrong some of the time.

Be Open

We believe that a more open world is a better world. The same goes for our company. Informed people make better decisions and have a greater impact, which is why we work hard to make sure everyone at Facebook has access to as much information about the company as possible.

Build Social Value

Facebook was created to make the world more open and connected, not just to build a company. We expect everyone at Facebook to focus every day on how to build real value for the world in everything they do.

Facebook goes onto elaborate about the sort of people they want, and its commitment to encouraging people to be themselves:

When we say “be yourself,” we mean it.

At Facebook, we value diversity on an individual level. We’re dedicated to creating an environment where people can be their authentic selves and share their own diverse backgrounds, experiences, perspectives and ideas.

I found Facebook’s Values honest and inspiring. Additionally, because of the negative media coverage recently, they stand out because it demonstrates that Facebook is a future-focused company. If they stick to and embrace these values, I am sure the company will make it through its current period of negative publicity.

As a reminder, when creating Corporate Values, they need to be:

  • Personified within the business from the top down – if C-level execs do not embody them, they will be dismissed as irrelevant
  • The business drivers that help a company stand out in a competitive market
  • Considered more important than making profits – because profit should follow if the values are held true
  • The core of your recruitment process – hire and fire based on how a person fits within the corporate values – if they fit, they’re in, if they don’t, they’re out
  • The cornerstone of corporate culture – look at any successful business and you’ll see that corporate culture is the key to success. Therefore if it’s a stern and serious business, the values should reflect that, if it’s fun and youthful, they should reflect that, or if it’s customer driven, make sure your employees are too
  • Reflected in all you do and your employees should willingly embrace them, that’s how you get a corporate culture that delivers success

I found lots of great company Values and will share the highlights as I go. In the meantime, what company do you think has the best Corporate Values? What company has the worst or none at all?

Cheers

Andrea

2 thoughts on “Facebook Corporate Values”

  1. Great post Andrea. CEO’s are fast recognising that truth and integrity take centre stage over brand image in this customer powered social era. In order to walk the talk they need to ‘work their values’ and be more in touch with their social conscience. Not an easy thing to do for sure. In my view, the only way to win is to be REMARKABLE at what you do. Focus on your WHY, create a truly inspiring company culture, deliver an amazing product/service/experience and ultimately make ‘profits with purpose’. Sermon over. Amen.

    1. Hey Paul thanks for checking in and commenting. I definitely agree that we are moving towards a remarkable values-based business world – well at least I hope we are! xxx

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