Culture You Can Measure

Megan Russo, director of sales operations, Southeast, at BradyPLUS, and Sarita Ceron, quality control and compliance manager at CCMS

Culture often gets dismissed as the 鈥渟oft side鈥 of business. But what if leaders could prove that connection鈥攂etween people, performance, and purpose鈥攎oves real numbers?

In a frank conversation, two rising leaders did precisely that: Megan Russo, director of sales operations, Southeast, at BradyPLUS, and Sarita Ceron, quality control and compliance manager at CCMS. Both have reputations for building systems that people want to use鈥攁nd cultures teams are proud to join.

From resum茅s to results

Russo鈥檚 journey began right out of Florida State University, where a recruiter pulled her into the industry as a field sales rep. Nine years on the street taught her customer reality and relationship discipline. She later led a 20-person team across Florida, moved into national partnerships, and now oversees sales operations for BradyPLUS in the Southeast.

Ceron came to facilities services with certifications in environmental engineering and quality management systems. At CCMS, she helped standardize procedures and support ISO 9001 recertification, while contributing to CIMS and other program achievements. Her focus is on integrating compliance, training, and inclusion so front-line teams see how their daily routines ladder up to the mission.

What measurable culture looks like

Asked what 鈥渕easurable culture鈥 means in practice, Ceron framed it as shared values made visible through daily action. 鈥淐ulture is built through daily actions, through habits, through shared moments, through communication,鈥 she said. When those practices align with the organization鈥檚 mission and vision, you can see the outcomes: engagement, collaboration, and quality.

Russo agreed and pushed it further into operational cadence. Measurable culture, she said, requires 鈥渁 company actively soliciting feedback, but more importantly, taking action to improve.鈥 In her experience, you can sense culture in the energy before a meeting starts, the tone of conversations, and whether discussions lean toward curiosity or defensiveness. Those signals aren鈥檛 soft; they鈥檙e leading indicators.

Tracking morale without micromanaging

How do you monitor motivation without turning into a hall monitor? Russo argued for genuine, structured touchpoints: one-on-ones that make room for honesty, and a clear, shared target鈥斺渢hat goal to be the best that we can be.鈥 When teams see that leaders are listening and using input to remove friction, accountability feels empowering rather than punitive.

Ceron emphasized inclusion as a system, not a slogan鈥攅specially in multilingual environments. CCMS built bilingual training, feedback, and recognition flows so everyone can participate. 鈥淲hen communication is open 鈥 everyone feels connected, feels part of [it],鈥 she said. The payoff showed up in quality scores and compliance, but also in day-to-day confidence.

One deceptively simple practice Ceron championed is 鈥減hrase of the week.鈥 In regular meetings, a team member shares a short thought that inspired them. It sounds small; it isn鈥檛. The ritual created space for empathy, reflection, and belonging鈥攁nd unlocked conversations that improved communication and teamwork.

Tying recognition to the numbers

Russo is explicit about linking culture to outcomes like retention, revenue, and service quality. Recognition has to be timely, specific, and cross-functional鈥攏ot just reserved for top sellers. 鈥淥ur drivers matter,鈥 she said, noting their direct impact on sales and quality scores. When recognition spreads across functions, 鈥測ou create a system where recognition fuels performance.鈥

Her favorite metric captures that idea. 鈥淩ecognition velocity,鈥 she explained, is 鈥渢he rate [at which] employees are recognized across teams and levels.鈥 Why track it? 鈥淩ecognition is a leading indicator of engagement, morale, and retention.鈥 In other words, speed and frequency of praise predict tomorrow鈥檚 performance as reliably as last month鈥檚 dashboard.

Ceron pointed to a complementary gauge: A participation index. If people are submitting ideas, joining initiatives, and offering suggestions, it signals trust. 鈥淲hen someone speaks, it鈥檚 because they trust that their voice will be heard,鈥 she said. Participation isn鈥檛 vanity; it鈥檚 a measurable sign of psychological safety.

Where to start: Listen, then quantify

Leaders who want to improve culture鈥攁nd prove it鈥攐ften ask for a first step. Ceron鈥檚 answer began with presence: 鈥淟istening is simple, but it is the foundation of cultural growth.鈥 Observe how recognition, communication, and participation actually happen in your operation. From there, install small mechanisms that make inclusion the default鈥攂ilingual materials, visual training, and shared rituals that fit the team鈥檚 rhythm.
Russo recommends a baseline survey that employees can trust. 鈥淐onduct a voice-of-the-associate survey,鈥 she said, and make it anonymous. If 25% of a team reports they don鈥檛 feel valued鈥攐r 76% would recommend the company to a friend鈥攖hat鈥檚 not just data. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 direction.鈥 Use it to focus on what鈥檚 working, and where energy should go next.

The takeaway

Culture isn鈥檛 a poster, a pizza party, or a quarterly town hall. It鈥檚 the lived system that connects people to purpose and turns effort into outcomes. Russo and Ceron showed how to make that system visible and verifiable: listen first, recognize fast, include everyone by design, and track the human signals that move the business.

Do that consistently, and you鈥檒l have more than a good feeling about culture. You鈥檒l have a scoreboard鈥攁nd a team that鈥檚 excited to play.

Jeff Cross

Jeff Cross is the 91视频 media director, with publications that include Cleaning & Maintenance Management, 91视频 Today, and Cleanfax magazines. He is the previous owner of a successful cleaning and restoration firm. He also works as a trainer and consultant for business owners, managers, and front-line technicians. He can be reached at [email protected].

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