An Advocacy Strategy is Nutrition for a Healthy Culture

Sean Flaherty
14 min readNov 19, 2021

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A Ven Diagram with Advocacy at the center, Loyalty around it and Trust surrounding all three. A Swoosh from the outside in represents the motion we want.
Trust, Loyalty & Advocacy

I travel a lot. I could always choose the cheapest airline, or the most convenient, or I could look for the airline with the most comfortable seats. I don’t. I always start with Delta airlines. Why? Because I believe that they run a responsible business that cares about the people it serves. My family recently traveled and had a bag come open somewhere in transit. I’ll spare you the details of what was lost, but I will tell you that it was something very important to our trip. Delta made us feel as though they mobilized, what felt like, a small army of people searching across the baggage claim systems of three airports until our problem was solved. More importantly, they kept us looped in, by text and phone, on the progress as they worked it out. Even though the device was forever lost, we actually felt good about our relationship with the airline in the end.

Issues will arise if you travel enough. Delta has woven some magic into their culture, at least for those who have worked their way into an “advocacy relationship” with them and it shows up at the ground level. Delta is a huge company, with lots of moving parts and I know that they don’t make all of their customers happy. We all know that this isn’t in the realm of possibilities. However, establishing a clear north star metric for your business is possible, and I believe that Delta has that figured out.

When I earned my MBA in 2006, I was taught the Milton Friedman — Esque mantras of “Shareholder Value,” “Return on Investment,” and “Profit” as the core measures of success for any business. One of the first books I was asked to read in the program was “The Goal” by Eliyahu Goldratt, a treatise to the “Theory of Constraints” as a way to manage an organization. One thing all business leaders know for sure is:

“You Got To Have Goals.” — Zig Ziglar

Goals

We know that goals are important and the research supports this. People that dedicate their time and intellectual energy on the task at hand need to understand why their work matters. A great way to align them, build confidence and achieve higher levels of commitment is to rally them around a goal like “advocacy.”

I propose that an organization’s north star should be a behavioral metric that indicates advocacy. Even better, let’s create a set of metrics and call them RPIs (Relationship Performance Indices), for your products, services, and even for the relationships that your organization fosters at the highest levels. Ideally, the metric should be some combination of behaviors that you see from your consumers when they are acting as your advocates. Ideally, the more embedded you make this concept in your culture, the more you will build relationships with your advocates like Delta does.

Relationship Performance Indices

If you are struggling with the word “advocacy,” you are not alone. Advocacy is not quite the right word to describe what I mean here. The legal community uses the word in a precise way, and if you use it without being clear about its meaning, it could cause confusion. I have seen other organizations use words or phrases like champion, promoter, net promoter, or even apostle. Terms like zealot, fanatic, or phrases like die-hard or raving fan don’t quite embody some of the more important behaviors that we see from advocates that are essential. The English language does not have a better way to describe what I am describing here as the strategic purpose of every organization. The word advocate and the act of advocacy has been the closest proxy I could find to represent this critical north star relationship metric. You can use any word you want, but you must take the time to embed this concept into the fabric of your organization’s culture.

Measuring Behaviors

Every product, service, and company solves a set of problems for a set of people. And the goal should be to derive the ultimate positive outcome for those people. We should be measuring that ultimate positive outcome by observing their behaviors. The most powerful forms of behaviors help us continuously build a better product, service, or organization. They come in the form of investments in our collective future.

I define an advocate and the act of advocacy, very specifically, in the following way:

Advocate: One who invests in our collective future.

The highest form of a relationship between an organization and the people that it serves can be described as “advocacy.” When an individual in the organization’s ecosystem invests in that organization’s collective future and/or its people, you have strategic success. No organization can exist for very long without a group of people investing in its collective future. Our job, as leaders, is to maximize both the number of people working toward this future and the intensity (motivation) with which they pursue it.

Close your eyes for a moment and imagine a world in which all of the people in your organization were authentically and powerfully behaving as advocates of the organization by investing their creative energy in its success. What would the culture of that organization feel like?

Keeping your eyes closed, now imagine a world in which all of the customers or benefactors of your organization’s work were authentically advocates of the products, services, and outcomes that your organization produces. Imagine they were out in the wild, promoting your products, referring new customers, and helping you build your next service offering through deep partnerships. What would that feel like for your organization?

It should be painfully obvious to you that this is an infinite goal. It is a goal that can never be fully achieved and is difficult to optimize, but a worthwhile and motivating strategic goal.

Advocacy is the ultimate strategic outcome for any organization. It is the north star for your organization.

Advocacy Behaviors

Advocacy behaviors come in the form of investments in our collective future. In our work and grounded research, we studied the phenomenon of “advocacy,” defined in this way, for more than two decades and have had the opportunity to survey hundreds of successful business leaders on this concept. One of the questions we always ask leaders in our workshops is: “What do you get from customers or employees who behave as advocates?” Authentic advocates invest in your collective future by giving you information, time, and their personal social capital. They move outside of their communications with you to share their story in the most powerful ways.

Here are a variety of examples that include a combination of these three elements:

  1. Introductions. Advocates are one of the best sources for the next potential customer or employee referral. Universally across successful and sustainable businesses, these people, who are investing in our collective future by making introductions, are coveted by organizations.
    Why is this important? Imagine the marketing and sales cost savings you would have if 100% of your new customers came from advocates. Your advocates do the heavy lifting for you in the relationship-building process, and who better to know where your next potential advocate might be? In most ecosystems, birds of a feather literally flock together. In other words, your ideal customers are already talking to each other. When you solve problems and leave a resonating impact on your customers and employees, they will go out of their way to invest in your future by making introductions for you. Ask the same question of your talent base. Imagine the HR and recruiting savings you would have if 100% of your new hires came from employee referrals. All of the same arguments apply.
  2. Credibility. Advocates are a powerful source of credibility. The form of credibility that comes from advocates is the fuel for an organization’s marketing and sales efforts. Universally across successful and sustainable businesses, advocates are leveraged in testimonials and case studies, and also become reference accounts.
    Why is this important? Unsolicited testimonials might be the best possible form of credibility available. Imagine trying to market your products and services without any stories of authentic success. Your best advocates go out of their way to help you build more credibility. There have been times in my business history when ALL of my client accounts had one or more advocates within their ranks. This has allowed me to proudly proclaim that my prospects can feel free to choose from ANY of the case studies, testimonials, or client accounts that we have talked about, and I would be able to produce a reference for them to speak with. Imagine how much easier it is to earn confidence and trust from these prospects in this scenario.
  3. Promotion. Advocates will sometimes promote your products or services without prompting. It might come in the form of a subtle and benign social media like or, more powerfully, as a blatant public endorsement at a quintessential moment in front of an audience of prospects during your most important annual conference.
    Why is this important? While a single Facebook like might not seem to do much for the organization today, those subtle behaviors, comments, and shares add up over time. They are public affirmations of the collective goodwill for your organization and its outputs. Review sites exist for just about every industry today, and your advocates’ comments and ratings speak volumes to your next prospects. Authentic public endorsement at the right time and in front of the right people is obviously valuable. They may be more powerful if you are not in the room when they occur! The market of social media influencers today proves the value of this market. However, when these behaviors are observed in the wild and are authentic, they might be the most potent form of advertising any organization can hope for. When your customers or employees put their personal brand on top of your brand, it represents the ultimate behavioral demonstration of the relationship you have crafted together. A clear example of this is the Harley Davidson fans who tattoo their bodies and wear the brand proudly and excessively wherever they go.
  4. Constructive Feedback. Someone who cares about your collective future will go out of their way and expend both creative energy and time to tell you when you suck at something or when you have screwed something up in their eyes. When customers or employees go out of their way to spend their valuable time to write a two-page diatribe about your dysfunctions while attempting to give you insights about how to improve, you know you have an advocate. There will always be some people who are not advocates and are deeply unhappy with your organization’s performance. Question: What do they do with their constructive feedback? These folks don’t tell you. They tell everyone else. In fact, much research shows that the negative effect is much greater whereas a disgruntled customer may tell anywhere from 8–16 people (before there was internet). Negativity and complaining typically come from unhappy customers who don’t care about your learning or your future.
    Why is this important? Constructive feedback is worth its weight in gold. It will give you access, and insight into your customers' (or employees’) frustrations and the importance of different aspects of the problems that you solve for them. Critical, useful feedback should not only be welcome, but it should also be celebrated, followed up on, and if it is valuable enough, gratefully rewarded. An organization can not grow, learn, and improve without an authentic and empathic understanding of what is frustrating to its customers and employees.
  5. Encouragement. Someone who cares about your collective future will also care about the people behind your organization’s work. When customers invest in your future by describing how your work has positively impacted their lives, this demonstrates affective empathy toward your people. When employees do it for each other, we might call it recognition or praise.
    Why is this important? Praise, kudos, congratulations, celebration, and words of encouragement are the fuel for your culture. They demonstrate to your teams, the strategic value of the work they are doing.
  6. Insights. When your customers and employees care about your collective future and are exposed to something in your industry that might help you, they will invest in your future by providing these insights. It might be a nudge to look into what your competition is up to, or it might be looking around the corner into the future of your industry. I have seen examples of the most staunch advocates providing direct insights into the relationship’s future and even going one step further by providing analysis or data to help you succeed.
    Why is this important? Insights lead to ideas that lead to innovations. The more information we have from the wild, the better informed and empowered we will be to craft our collective future together.
  7. Beta-Testing. When it comes time to implement a new feature or try out a new business line, where are we most likely to go? Our advocates are the most obvious crew to tap for feedback. I learned this in the context of building software products over the course of multiple decades. No great software product is built without a passionate group of people who understand the context and are willing to jump in and invest their time and creative energy in our new features.
    Why is this important? Perfection, as we know, is the enemy of progress. We need to iterate, and we need early feedback to improve our products and services. We need a safe space to expand our products and service lines without fear of retribution or financial consequences. We need an objective, third-party opinion to make progress. Without a group of advocates that are willing to help us get there, we will struggle to innovate. The best folks to try our new ideas on are our advocates, largely because of their proclivity for forgiveness.
  8. Forgiveness. What happens when we screw something up with our advocates? Our advocates are incredibly forgiving. Because we have earned our way into this relationship and have built up the “relationship equity” through trust and loyalty, it is our advocates who are most willing to forgive us. I believe this is one of the key ways to determine if you have an authentic advocate.
    Why is this important? The world is full of surprises and change. We cannot predict the future. Additionally, we are all dealing with complicated and sometimes unpredictable people in our ecosystems. We need space for problems to occur as they inevitably do. Our advocates are the customers and employees that understand that problems will arise, and they have our backs.
  9. Co-Investment. When you have a new idea of innovation to try, it makes the most sense to partner up with an authentic advocate to get it started. Similar to “beta-testing,” it is your advocates who will be straight with you and will put their money and their time where their mouth is to invest in your collective future.
    Why is this important? We need partners to help us work out the kinks and be our first source of credibility and goodwill when we move into new markets or solve new problems within our existing markets. Our advocates are our best source for partnerships and will maximize the odds of succeeding.
  10. Defense. I like to use a short thought experiment to explain this concept by asking three simple questions:
    >> Raise your hand if you are an Apple person.
    >> Raise your hand if you are an Android person.
    >> Now, raise your hand if you have ever had that conversation with another person about why your choice is better?
    100% of the hands typically go up. Your advocates will defend you, your products, and your company, even when you are not in the room.
    Why is this important? This is essential for any business to grow and thrive because you will most likely not be in the room when you need to be defended. Advocates that defend you are critical to long-term success.
  11. Celebration. Advocates are eager to celebrate successes with you. These are behaviors that feed your culture like no other. It could be as simple as inclusion in their existing celebrations that feel like encouragement, or it could be more overt. The ultimate celebrations may manifest as them nominating your people, products, or company for an award in your community or industry. Whatever the behavior, when you see it, you know you have an advocate.
    Why is this important? Similar to encouragement, celebration, and overt recognition are essential fuels for building a positive culture. Relatedness is possibly the most powerful way for your team to find meaning in their work.
  12. Innovation. You might define innovation as something that causes a structural shift to how a large number of people behave. Alternatively, if you are like me, you might define it as anything, no matter how small, that moves your team toward a better future. No matter how you define innovation, there is a cascade of truths about all innovations:

Innovations only come from ideas.
Ideas only come from people.
Ideas only come from people who care about our collective future.

Why is this important? Without a steady flow of ideas to experiment on that result in innovation, every business is on the path to irrelevance. We need ideas to fuel our curiosity, feed our culture, improve our products, and maximize our profits. Without innovations, our teams will atrophy through boredom, and our products and services will fade into obscurity.

An advocacy strategy is nutrition for a healthy culture.

Your advocates are your organization’s most valuable strategic asset. They are the strategic north star that every organization strives to maximize. I have yet to find successful organizations that sustain themselves for long without a group of advocates, investing passionately in the organization’s future.

The Prime Advocate

Review the list of behaviors that you want to see from your advocates again. Take careful notice that these are behaviors that you also expect from your teammates. If you don’t see one or more of these behaviors from the people that surround you, in the course of your work, on a regular basis, then you have a deep-seated cultural problem. It is not only your customers who you need to earn advocacy from, it is your team and your vendors as well. These people are dedicating a portion of their lives to your endeavor. Their willingness to expend their creativity, invest their time, and endow their intellect on your collective goal is the fuel you need for innovation. They are much more likely to expose you to ideas that might lead to innovations and are some of your most valuable advocates. People who do not care about your future will not take the time nor expend the energy to give you ideas on how to improve. They will either file their ideas away or give them to someone else.

This conversation about advocates does not exclude you. In theory, if you are leading an organization, it should naturally follow that you are the prime advocate. Hopefully, that means that your primary efforts look like investments in your organization’s future and you are modeling behaviors that look like those described above. You need to be the prime advocate for your own work, or you should consider finding another calling.

Strategic Income

The strategic income for your organization is the attention and intent of the people that it serves. The best place to start, if you want to maximize your strategic income is to set a north star metric that identifies your advocates through their behaviors. Invest in them by putting them at the center of your strategy and build this concept into the fabric of your culture. Delta Airlines earned my advocacy because they invested in me when it mattered to me. They know who their advocates are and they invest heavily in systems that identify, measure, and celebrate the relationship.

You can do the same.

If you like this, I would be honored if you would clap, share widely, and reference this work.

Originally published on Medium: https://theseanflaherty.medium.com/measuring-relationships-the-north-star-710f7ed40300

Further Reading:

Capitalism and Freedom, by Milton Friedman (2003)
The Goal, by Eliyahu Goldratt (2014)
A Theory of Goal Setting and Task Performance, by Locke and Latham (2017)
Goals, by Zig Ziglar (2020)
Self-Determination Theory, by Ed Deci and Richard Ryan (2018)
Inspiring Indicators of Performance, by Sean Flaherty (2019)
The Objective Measurement of Trust, by Sean Flaherty (2020)
Can You Hear Me?, by Carder & Gunter (2001)
Great Leadership Requires That Your Strategy is Distinct From Your Tactics, by Sean Flaherty (2021)

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Sean Flaherty
Sean Flaherty

Written by Sean Flaherty

Technologist. Philosopher. Inspirer.

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