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Table of Contents
- Why Culture Determines How Far Automation Can Go
- The Best Teams Build a Bias for Action
- Innovation Thrives When You Bring in Fresh Perspective
- The Cost of Cultural Debt Is Higher Than You Think
- Why Knowing What Not to Automate Is a Cultural Skill
- How Orchestration Reinforces Good Culture
- Culture Is the Fastest Way to Accelerate ROI
- Culture Is the X Factor
- Ready to Strengthen the Culture Behind Your Automation Strategy?
There is a phrase I have repeated so often that people around me probably hear it in their sleep. Culture eats technology for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. I did not make it up, but I have lived it enough times to know it is true. You can buy the best automation tools in the world. You can hire brilliant engineers. You can build workflows that make your previous processes look prehistoric. None of it will matter if the culture surrounding that work is not ready for what comes next.
That might sound dramatic, but it is the reality inside many organizations. Successful automation and orchestration programs never hinge solely on the platform or the code. They hinge on people, habits, incentives, expectations, governance, and the way teams show up when they are under pressure. Technology accelerates culture. It does not replace it.
During our webinar, Holly and I talked about how often orchestration gets framed as a technical initiative. In practice, it is just as much a cultural one.
When teams embrace orchestration, their processes change, their rhythm changes, their expectations change, and their sense of ownership changes.
Culture becomes both the fuel and the filter for everything that comes after.
Why Culture Determines How Far Automation Can Go
If you have ever stepped on a toy on your way down the stairs in the dark, you know exactly how fast a seemingly small thing can ruin your entire day. In a way, culture works the same across engineering teams. One misplaced expectation, one unspoken assumption, one pocket of resistance inside a group, and suddenly your entire automation program starts limping along.
Culture determines:
- how quickly teams adopt new practices
- how consistently workflows get used
- how predictable operations become
- who contributes and who opts out
- whether automation is treated as a shared capability or an engineering burden
- whether leadership sees progress or confusion
I have worked with teams who embraced orchestration and soared. I have also worked with teams who had the talent, the tools, and the leadership buy in but still struggled. The difference was never the technology. It was cultural readiness.
At Itential, we see the same trend across customers. The ones who succeed are not always the ones with the biggest budgets or the most mature infrastructure. They are the ones who set clear expectations, trust their process, and create the right environment for orchestration to thrive.
The Best Teams Build a Bias for Action
One of the most powerful cultural traits I have seen from high performing teams is what I call a bias for action. These teams do not freeze when conditions are imperfect. They do not wait for the stars to align before building something meaningful. They set guiding principles, define their big goals, and then start moving.
They do not rewrite their strategy every time a new executive arrives. They do not scrap the roadmap because a neighboring team suddenly wants something different. They do not throw their priorities in the air because a new tech buzzword is trending. They commit, they focus, and they make progress.
This is harder than it sounds. Every large organization has pressure points. Leadership changes, reorganizations, quarterly shifts, unexpected fires, vendor noise, and endless opinions about what the network should or should not be doing. Teams that succeed are the ones that understand the noise, but do not get consumed by it.
If your automation program pivots every few weeks, it becomes impossible to create momentum. Culture either reinforces that discipline or erodes it.
Innovation Thrives When You Bring in Fresh Perspective
One of my favorite stories from the webinar was about a customer who treats innovation like the NFL draft. They intentionally bring in interns, early career engineers, or new team members who are not bound by the old ways of doing things. These people are not tied to legacy processes or constrained by unwritten rules about how things should be done. They are given space. They are given a problem. They are given limited guardrails. And they are told to explore the art of the possible.
This approach works because established teams often carry invisible assumptions. They know the work too well. They know the pain too well. They know the politics too well. New voices ask questions the veterans stopped asking years ago. They experiment freely. They approach the work without inherited baggage.
When leadership combines fresh ideas with deep experience, the result is usually something practical but inventive. Not too much disruption, not too much tradition. A balance. A healthy tension between stability and creativity.
At Itential, we see this pattern often.
The organizations that create structured space for experimentation almost always accelerate their orchestration maturity.
They generate new ideas faster. They test faster. They learn faster. And most importantly, they build workflows that reflect the needs of the entire organization rather than just one team.
The Cost of Cultural Debt Is Higher Than You Think
Every engineer understands technical debt. It is visible, measurable, and expensive. Cultural debt is more subtle. It is the accumulation of habits, decisions, and patterns that hold the team back without anyone saying it out loud.
Examples of cultural debt:
- relying on one or two heroes who know the entire environment
- tolerating shadow automation scripts no one else can maintain
- allowing teams to solve similar problems in completely different ways
- resisting new workflows because the old process feels comfortable
- avoiding cross team alignment because it slows things down
- treating automation as optional rather than essential
Cultural debt slows transformation the same way technical debt slows innovation. It makes change harder. It makes onboarding harder. It makes work inconsistent. And it becomes painfully obvious the moment orchestration starts forcing alignment.
The rent on cultural debt always comes due.
Why Knowing What Not to Automate Is a Cultural Skill
One of the most overlooked cultural traits of successful orchestration teams is the ability to say no. Not every process should be automated. Not every request deserves time. Not every idea aligns with the North Star.
This requires cultural strength. Teams must be comfortable pushing back on work that does not move the program forward. They must be confident enough to explain why certain workflows are not worth the investment. They must trust their strategy enough to avoid shiny object syndrome.
This is something we guide customers through often at Itential. Teams have great intuition, but intuition alone is not enough. Without clear principles, automation becomes reactive. It becomes a backlog of unrelated tasks rather than a disciplined program.
Culture determines whether prioritization becomes strategic or chaotic.
How Orchestration Reinforces Good Culture
The relationship between culture and orchestration is a loop. Culture shapes how orchestration is adopted. Orchestration shapes how culture evolves.
As organizations begin orchestrating end to end workflows, they naturally become more:
- cross functional
- structured
- data driven
- outcome focused
- predictable
- collaborative
This is not accidental. Orchestration requires standardization, reusable patterns, shared workflows, and clear ownership. It forces alignment across teams and clarifies responsibilities. It reveals where process drift exists. It exposes where tribal knowledge has been quietly running the show. It encourages teams to think in systems rather than individual tasks.
Good culture makes orchestration possible. Orchestration reinforces good culture. That loop becomes a growth engine.
Culture Is the Fastest Way to Accelerate ROI
ROI is not just a measurement problem or a data problem. It is a culture problem. When teams adopt a culture that values:
- clarity
- intention
- experimentation
- standardization
- alignment
- steady progress
ROI becomes much easier to demonstrate. Leaders see results faster. Teams build workflows that matter. Progress compounds.
At Itential, the highest performing customers are the ones whose cultural maturity matches their technical maturity.
They measure what matters. They avoid distractions. They stay aligned to their North Star. They build with purpose. They treat orchestration as a capability, not a side project.
Culture Is the X Factor
If you want your orchestration program to succeed, choose your strategy carefully, choose your platform wisely, but choose your culture intentionally. Technology amplifies whatever culture it is dropped into. If the culture is disciplined, automation will flourish. If the culture is scattered, automation will fragment. If the culture is collaborative, orchestration will spread. If the culture is siloed, orchestration will stall.
Culture decides how far the program can go.
Culture decides who participates.
Culture decides how you overcome setbacks.
Culture decides whether ROI grows or collapses.
Culture is the multiplier. Technology is the instrument. Orchestration is the bridge between the two.
If you want to strengthen your automation program, start with culture. It will shape everything that comes next.
Ready to Strengthen the Culture Behind Your Automation Strategy?
A successful orchestration program depends as much on people and process as it does on technology. If you want to understand how culture, enablement, and ROI all work together to drive long term success, our on demand webinar walks through the full picture.
Join Holly and me as we break down the real reasons automation programs stall, the cultural traits that support transformation, and the metrics that build strong executive support.
Watch the full session on-demand here or below: