My consulting practice helps companies define their strategy — understanding where they want to go and what they want to be. Without that clarity, organizations drift. Carlyle captured it perfectly: without purpose, you’re a ship without a rudder.
I was fortunate to work with Steve Wynn, whose vision was unmistakably clear: to be the preferred brand in casino gaming. To me, that meant creating the kind of workplace culture that naturally produced innovative thinking and action.
A Culture of Excellence
A true Culture of Excellence is not about perfection. It’s about a shared, organization‑wide commitment to continuous improvement, high‑quality output, and innovation. It rests on integrity, accountability, and leadership that empowers people to take ownership and consistently exceed expectations.
Its core elements include:
· Continuous Improvement: A mindset of being better today than yesterday — never settling for “good enough.”
· Empowered People: A supportive environment that values growth, engagement, and collaboration.
· Customer Focus: An obsession with delivering value and exceeding stakeholder expectations.
· Shared Values & Clear Standards: Operating with integrity, trust, and defined, high‑quality expectations.
· Results‑Oriented: A focus on measurable success while fostering a positive, productive, and innovative atmosphere.
That’s the culture Steve allowed me to design and facilitate. And throughout this week, I’ll share how we built it — first at the Golden Nugget, then at The Mirage, and later at Wynn Resorts.
We made sure to:
1. Hire the right people — those capable of and committed to innovation.
2. Create a focused, extensive onboarding program that taught people what to do, why it mattered, and how to do it well — while building teamwork and critical thinking.
3. Train mid‑management leaders to bring out the best in their teams.
4. Build an atmosphere of psychological safety, trust, and respect — the conditions where innovation thrives.
It was all about effectiveness and excellence, achieved through purposeful structure and strategy. Everyone understood their role’s purpose and how it contributed to the organization’s objectives.
This approach works for companies big and small. Vision, strategy, and clarity can drive excellence for you today.
Thomas Carlyle (1795 – 1881): Scottish essayist, historian and philosopher.
Learn more @: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Carlyle






