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alirezarezvani

Culture Architect

by Alireza Rezvani · GitHub ↗ · v2.1.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install culture-architect
Description
Build, measure, and evolve company culture as operational behavior — not wall posters. Covers mission/vision/values workshops, values-to-behaviors translatio...
README (SKILL.md)

Culture Architect

Culture is what you DO, not what you SAY. This skill builds culture as an operational system — observable behaviors, measurable health, and rituals that scale.

Keywords

culture, company culture, values, mission, vision, culture code, cultural rituals, culture health, values-to-behaviors, founder culture, culture debt, value-washing, culture assessment, culture survey, Netflix culture deck, HubSpot culture code, psychological safety, culture scaling

Core Principle

Culture = (What you reward) + (What you tolerate) + (What you celebrate)

If your values say "transparency" but you punish bearers of bad news — your real value is "optics." Culture is not aspirational. It's descriptive. The work is closing the gap between stated and actual.

Frameworks

1. Mission / Vision / Values Workshop

Run this conversationally, not as a corporate offsite. Three questions:

Mission — Why do we exist (beyond making money)?

  • "What would be lost if we disappeared tomorrow?"
  • Mission is present-tense. "We reduce preventable falls in elderly care." Not "to be the leading..."

Vision — What does winning look like in 5–10 years?

  • Specific enough to be wrong. "Every care home in Europe uses our system" beats "be the market leader."

Values — What behaviors do we actually model?

  • Start with what you observe, not what sounds good. "What did our last great hire do that nobody asked them to?"
  • Keep to 3–5. More than 5 and none of them mean anything.

2. Values → Behaviors Translation

This is the work. Every value needs behavioral anchors or it's decoration.

Value Bad version Behavioral anchor
Transparency "We're open and honest" "We share bad news within 24 hours, including to our manager"
Ownership "We take responsibility" "We don't hand off problems — we own them until resolved, even across team boundaries"
Speed "We move fast" "Decisions under €5K happen at team level, same day, no approval needed"
Quality "We don't cut corners" "We stop the line before shipping something we're not proud of"
Customer-first "Customers are our priority" "Any team member can escalate a customer issue to leadership, bypassing normal channels"

Workshop exercise: Write your value. Then ask "How would a new hire know we actually live this on day 30?" If you can't answer concretely, it's not a value — it's an aspiration.

3. Culture Code Creation

A culture code is a public document that describes how you operate. It should scare off the wrong people and attract the right ones.

Structure:

  1. Who we are (mission + context)
  2. Who thrives here (specific behaviors, not adjectives)
  3. Who doesn't thrive here (honest — this is the useful part)
  4. How we make decisions
  5. How we communicate
  6. How we grow people
  7. What we expect of leaders

See templates/culture-code-template.md for a complete template.

Anti-patterns to avoid:

  • "We're a family" — families don't fire each other for performance
  • Listing only positive traits — the "who doesn't thrive here" section is what makes it credible
  • Making it aspirational instead of descriptive

4. Culture Health Assessment

Run quarterly. 8–12 questions. Anonymous. See references/culture-playbook.md for survey design.

Core areas to measure:

  1. Psychological safety — "Can I raise a concern without fear?"
  2. Clarity — "Do I know how my work connects to company goals?"
  3. Fairness — "Are decisions made consistently and transparently?"
  4. Growth — "Am I learning and being challenged here?"
  5. Trust in leadership — "Do I believe what leadership tells me?"

Score interpretation:

Score Signal Action
80–100% Healthy Maintain, celebrate, document
65–79% Warning Identify specific friction — don't over-react
50–64% Damaged Urgent leadership attention + specific fixes
\x3C 50% Crisis Culture emergency — all-hands intervention

5. Cultural Rituals by Stage

Rituals are the delivery mechanism for culture. What works at 10 people breaks at 100.

Seed stage (\x3C 15 people)

  • Weekly all-hands (30 min): company update + one win + one learning
  • Monthly retrospective: what's working, what's not — no hierarchy
  • "Default to transparency": share everything unless there's a specific reason not to

Early growth (15–50 people)

  • Quarterly culture survey: first formal check-in
  • Recognition ritual: explicit, public, tied to values (not just results)
  • Onboarding buddy program: cultural transmission now requires intentional effort
  • Leadership office hours: founders stay accessible as layers appear

Scaling (50–200 people)

  • Culture committee (peer-driven, not HR): 4–6 people rotating quarterly
  • Values-based performance review: culture fit is measured, not assumed
  • Manager training: culture now lives or dies in team leads
  • Department all-hands + company all-hands separate

Large (200+ people)

  • Culture as strategy: explicit annual culture plan with owner and KPIs
  • Internal NPS for culture ("Would you recommend this company to a friend?")
  • Subculture management: engineering culture ≠ sales culture — both must align to company core

6. Culture Anti-Patterns

Value-washing: Listing values you don't practice. Symptom: employees roll their eyes during values discussions.

  • Fix: Run a values audit. Ask "What did the last person who got promoted demonstrate?" If it doesn't match your values, your real values are different.

Culture debt: Accumulating cultural compromises over time. "We'll address the toxic star performer later." Later compounds.

  • Fix: Act on culture violations faster than you think necessary. One tolerated bad behavior destroys what ten good behaviors build.

Founder culture trap: Culture stays frozen at founding team's personality. New hires assimilate or leave.

  • Fix: Explicitly evolve values as you scale. What worked at 10 people (move fast, ask forgiveness) may be destructive at 100 (we need process).

Culture by osmosis: Assuming culture transmits naturally. It did at 10 people. It doesn't at 50.

  • Fix: Make culture intentional. Document it. Teach it. Measure it. Reward it explicitly.

Culture Integration with C-Suite

When... Culture Architect works with... To...
Hiring surge CHRO Ensure culture fit is measured, not guessed
Org reorg COO + CEO Manage culture disruption from structure change
M&A or partnership CEO + COO Detect and resolve culture clashes early
Performance issues CHRO Separate culture fit from skill deficit
Strategy pivot CEO Update values/behaviors that the pivot makes obsolete
Rapid growth All Scale rituals before culture dilutes

Key Questions a Culture Architect Asks

  • "Can you name the last person we fired for culture reasons? What did they do?"
  • "What behavior got your last promoted employee promoted? Is that in your values?"
  • "What would a new hire observe on day 1 that tells them what's really valued here?"
  • "What do we tolerate that we shouldn't? Who knows and does nothing?"
  • "How does a team lead in Berlin know what the culture is in Madrid?"

Red Flags

  • Values posted on the wall, never referenced in reviews or decisions
  • Star performers protected from cultural standards
  • Leaders who "don't have time" for culture rituals
  • New hires feeling the culture is "different than advertised"
  • No mechanism to raise cultural concerns safely
  • Culture survey results never shared with the team

Detailed References

  • references/culture-playbook.md — Netflix analysis, survey design, ritual examples, M&A playbook
  • templates/culture-code-template.md — Culture code document template
Usage Guidance
This skill appears coherent and instruction-only, so the primary risks are operational/organizational rather than technical. Before installing or using it: (1) verify the author/source and license if provenance matters to you (SKILL.md says MIT but 'source' is unknown); (2) review and adapt templates to your legal/HR constraints and local labor laws; (3) when running surveys follow best practices called out in the playbook (ensure true anonymity, avoid collecting PII unless you have explicit reasons and secure storage); (4) treat the guidance as advisory — do not rely on it for legal or compliance decisions; and (5) inspect templates for any default language you wouldn’t want published publicly. No technical red flags were found.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: culture-architect Version: 2.1.1 The 'culture-architect' skill bundle is a collection of educational frameworks and templates for organizational culture management. It contains no executable code, scripts, or instructions that would lead to data exfiltration, unauthorized access, or malicious behavior. The content in SKILL.md, culture-playbook.md, and culture-code-template.md is strictly focused on management consulting topics such as mission statements, behavioral anchors, and culture surveys.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name/description (culture design, assessment, templates) match the provided files (SKILL.md, playbook, and template). There are no unrelated binaries, credentials, or config paths requested.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md and the included markdown files are purely advisory (workshop steps, survey design, templates). They do not instruct the agent to read system files, access environment variables, call external endpoints, or transmit data outside the scope of culture work.
Install Mechanism
No install spec or code files are present; the skill is instruction-only so nothing is downloaded or written to disk during install.
Credentials
The skill declares no environment variables, credentials, or config paths. That aligns with its stated purpose of providing process and documentation templates.
Persistence & Privilege
Skill flags are default (always: false, agent invocation allowed). It does not request permanent presence or modify other skills or system-wide settings.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install culture-architect
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /culture-architect
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v2.1.1
v2.1.1: optimization, reference splits
v1.0.0
Initial release.
Metadata
Slug culture-architect
Version 2.1.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 3
Active Installs 3
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Culture Architect?

Build, measure, and evolve company culture as operational behavior — not wall posters. Covers mission/vision/values workshops, values-to-behaviors translatio... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 386 downloads so far.

How do I install Culture Architect?

Run "/install culture-architect" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Culture Architect free?

Yes, Culture Architect is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Culture Architect support?

Culture Architect is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Culture Architect?

It is built and maintained by Alireza Rezvani (@alirezarezvani); the current version is v2.1.1.

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