Nordstrom Company Culture

The Nordstrom Way

A Culture of Service in 75 Words

For many years, new employees were given a copy of the famous Nordstrom’s Employee Handbook – a single 5-by-8-inch (130 × 200 mm) gray card containing 75 words:

Welcome to Nordstrom

We’re glad to have you with our Company. Our number one goal is to provide outstanding customer service. Set both your personal and professional goals high. We have great confidence in your ability to achieve them.

Nordstrom Rules: Rule #1: Use your best judgment in all situations. There will be no additional rules.

Please feel free to ask your department manager, store manager, or division general manager any question at any time.

However, new hire orientations now provide the card above along with a full handbook of other more specific rules and legal regulations, as the way Nordstrom operates has changed. During this time, Nordstrom had the highest sales per square foot performance in the retail industry – by almost double.

>> Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordstrom#Employee_handbook

More on Nordstrom’s Culture

Customer Service Philosophy

  • Nordstrom’s culture encourages entrepreneurial, motivated men and women to make the extra effort to give customer service that is unequaled in American retailing. “Not service like it used to be, but service that never was.”
  • “A place where service is an act of faith.”
  • Their system is embarrassingly simple, “we out-service, not outsmart, the competition”.
  • “Our success is simply a matter of service, selection, fair pricing, hard work, and plain luck!”
  • ‘It was never that we were so great, it was just that everyone else was so bad.’ We know that at this moment, someone somewhere is getting bad service at Nordstrom
  • When you stop worrying about the money and concentrate on serving the customer, the money will follow. (People who succeed in sales understand this paradox.)

Employee Empowerment

  • Nordstrom’s salespeople are empowered to make decisions and Nordstrom management is willing to live with these decisions – it’s like dealing with a one-person shop. Empowered employees are energized. “Giving away responsibility and authority is the ultimate expression of leadership.”
  • “The customer is always right” is not a cliché at Nordstrom.
  • Nordstrom’s employees are instructed to always make a decision that favors the customer before the company. They are never criticized for doing too much for a customer; they are criticized for doing too little.
  • Nordstrom believes that too many rules, regulations, paperwork, and strict channels of communication erode employee incentive.
  • Because Nordstrom doesn’t have many rules, employees don’t have to worry whether they are breaking any.

Hiring & Training

  • Nordstrom feels that the best training courses come from parents. Previous retail experience or a college degree has never been a prerequisite for succeeding at Nordstrom.
  • Nordstrom “hires the smile and trains the skill.”
  • Nordstrom would rather hire nice people and teach them to sell, then hire salespeople and teach them to be nice.
  • When the company expands to other regions, it dispatches an advanced force of veteran “Nordies” who carry the culture with them and imports it to new employees.
  • Nordstrom never acquires other chains, because it is too difficult for those employees to break old habits.

The Nordstrom Selling Approach

  • At Nordstrom, the priority is on Selling, and the key to successful selling is providing outstanding customer service.
  • If you treat customers like royalty and let them know that you will take care of them, they will usually come back to you.
  • When customers enter a department, salespeople always make sure they are acknowledged. They are relaxed and unhurried in order to help the customer feel the same way.
  • The unconditional money-back guarantee is designed for the 98% of customers who are honest.
  • Nordstrom’s standard of performance is “Sales per hour”.
  • Outstanding sales performances are rewarded with prizes and praise, as are good ideas and suggestions.

“If I take care of the customer, the dollars will follow”

Organizational Structure & Store Design

  • Nordstrom is informally organized as an “inverted pyramid” with the top positions occupied by customers and salespeople. Every tier of the pyramid supports the sales staff.
  • Employees have access to sales figures from all departments and stores in the chain, so they can compare their performances.
  • Part of good customer service is (Store Design) creating “a memorable experience”: Store presentation must be understood immediately. Nordstrom states that it only takes 15 seconds to impress their customers. That’s why Nordstrom has more seating, better lighting, larger fitting rooms, wider aisles, and a more residential feeling.
  • Decision by consensus is how the Nordstrom brothers run their business. Disagreements are worked out behind closed doors and a united front is always presented to the public.

At its best, Nordstrom never forgets that it doesn’t have all the answers. They know that the customers have all the information that they need and that salespeople are the most valuable people in the company!

The underlying Nordstrom culture and philosophy is not difficult to pass on to the next generation because it’s simple: “give great customer Service.”

Join the Conversation

How could you apply Nordstrom’s approach to customer service in your organization? What elements of their culture do you find most compelling?

The Social Network

The Social Network: A Geek’s Perspective

Fact vs. Fiction in the Facebook Origin Story

Christina and I went to see The Social Network, and I would give it a 7 out of 10. As a geek, the subject matter appealed to my interests, but you might be offended by how geeks are portrayed. If you don’t consider yourself a geek, don’t like social networking, or if you’re a woman, there’s an even better chance you won’t enjoy the movie. Not all geeks are out to screw everyone over as depicted, and I’ll leave it to you to decide how women were portrayed.

Fair warning: potential spoilers ahead. Being obsessed with researching things to verify accuracy, I did some post-movie Googling to fact-check the film against reality and learn more about the real people behind the characters.

Erica Albright

Erica Albright

The movie begins with Mark Zuckerberg creating a website rating the attractiveness of female Harvard students after his girlfriend Erica Albright breaks up with him. The real Erica says: “The movie definitely brought back some great memories… I guess you could say the movie is ‘based on a true story’ but there are many scenarios that were soooo made up by Hollywood! As far as the two scenes I’m in, the first one is fairly accurate, we did ‘break-up’ over dinner… but the second scene of me at dinner with my friends blowing Mark off never happened. (also he NEVER friended me on Facebook) lol!”

Sean Parker

Sean Parker

Not that he’s the best role model, but Sean Parker is someone I’ve read about for years. My favorite article is the October 2010 Vanity Fair piece titled “With a Little Help From His Friends.” Parker is described as a “Web oracle; more than a few acquaintances and colleagues use the word ‘genius’ to describe him. He understands not only computers and Web networks but also how people want to incorporate them into their lives.”

Even among his many supporters, Parker “has a reputation for being an erratic party animal.” He was pushed out of Facebook after an arrest for cocaine possession in 2005, though no charges were filed.

Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss

Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss

Cameron and Tyler are identical twins on Harvard’s rowing team who meet Mark and request his help creating Harvard Connection. Soon after, Mark launches “TheFacebook.com,” prompting the Winklevosses to sue, claiming Mark stole their idea. I can’t say I fully understand their case – unless the idea was patented, isn’t Mark free to create whatever he wants?

Winklevoss Twins - Facebook was our idea - Tyler & Cameron
Eduardo Saverin

Eduardo Saverin

Of all the “real world” characters, Eduardo was the most difficult to research online. He gets the “worst way to be portrayed” award, coming across as a nice guy who finishes last. Ironically, he seems to be the only one with ethics, so he should be the character we appreciate most. He once owned 30% of “thefacebook,” which was reduced to 0.03% once Peter Thiel (PayPal co-founder) and Sean Parker took control of the startup’s finances.

Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan

Mark Zuckerberg

According to the film, Mark creates thefacebook.com to meet women after his breakup. In reality, Mark’s girlfriend, Priscilla Chan (shown above), “was one of his pals at Harvard, where he studied back in 2004. Moreover, Chan is amongst the initial supporters who were with Mark when he came up with the concept of Facebook.” Chan even relocated to Silicon Valley with Zuckerberg after Facebook’s launch. She’s a medical student at UCSF with dreams of becoming a pediatrician.

From Business Insider: Zuckerberg On The Social Network

Interesting Facts About the Movie

The Blue Backstory

Mark Zuckerberg is red-green colorblind, which is why Facebook is blue. (Not about the movie, but interesting.)

Star Consultant

Natalie Portman, a Harvard student during Facebook’s creation, gave writer Aaron Sorkin insider information. He thanked her by referencing her in a scene.

Perfectionist Director

The opening breakup scene between Zuckerberg and Erica took 99 takes to complete under David Fincher’s direction.

Join the Conversation

Have you seen The Social Network? How accurately do you think it portrays the real story behind Facebook’s creation? Share your thoughts in the comments!

Room to Grow: Lessons from Big Fish

When our environments limit our potential, sometimes we need a larger bowl

A goldfish swimming in a glass bowl
Like goldfish, we grow to fit the space we’re given

I generally don’t watch a lot of movies, but particularly liked this excerpt from the Tim Burton movie Big Fish:

EDWARD: My muscles couldn’t keep up with my bones, and my bones couldn’t keep up with my body’s ambition. So I spent the better part of three years confined to my bed, with the World Book Encyclopedia being my only means of exploration. I had made it all the way to the “G’s,” hoping to find an answer to my gigantificationism, when I uncovered an article about the common goldfish.

YOUNG EDWARD: “Kept in a small bowl, the goldfish will remain small. With more space, the fish can grow double, triple, or quadruple its size.”

EDWARD: It occurred to me, then, that perhaps the reason for my growth was that I was intended for larger things. After all, a giant man can’t have an ordinary-sized life.

Finding Your Space to Thrive

In life, we all need room to grow. If your bowl is too small for your life or ambitions, find a different bowl and grow to be happy!

Your Thoughts

Where in your life might you need a bigger bowl? Have you ever found yourself limited by your environment? Share your experiences in the comments below.