Here’s what I’ve observed.
Most companies with more than one brand or more than one location treat culture as something each location interprets locally. Headquarters sets a tone. Each site does its best to reflect it. The gaps between locations are treated as inevitable.
O2E Brands didn’t accept that as inevitable.
No. 8 on the 2026 Top 100 Global Most Loved Workplaces®, it operates three distinct consumer brands. 1-800-GOT-JUNK?. WOW 1 Day Painting. Shack Shine. Different services. Different customers. Different market positioning. Operating across a large franchise network, which means most of the people delivering the culture every day aren’t even direct employees of the parent company.
That’s the hardest version of the multi-site problem. And O2E solved it not by writing a better culture statement, but by building an operating system specific enough that it travels without supervision.
Daily team huddles at every location. Transparent metrics visible to every employee, not filtered through layers of regional management. A documented, real pathway from frontline worker to franchise owner, the kind of advancement that isn’t aspirational language but an actual track record people can see happening around them.
Here’s what that system produces. A new franchise owner opening in a market O2E has never served before doesn’t have to guess what the culture should feel like on day one. The system tells them. Specifically. Operationally. Run the huddle. Share the numbers. Build toward ownership, because that’s what the people training you did.
The organizations that solve the multi-site culture problem aren’t the ones with the most inspiring mission statement. They’re the ones who figured out that culture has to be specific enough to be franchised. A new manager should be able to pick up your culture system and run it correctly from a written playbook.
O2E built a system. That’s why its culture travels across three brands and a large franchise network without fragmenting into 50 different interpretations of what the company stands for.
If your organization operates across multiple locations, plants, or brands, the test worth applying is simple. Could someone open a new location tomorrow, with no direct supervision from headquarters, and run your culture correctly just from what’s documented? If the answer is no, the gap isn’t in your values. It’s in your system.
If the answer is yes, the next question is whether the rest of the world, especially prospective employees, is even aware of that strong culture.
Find out in two minutes where your organization stands.
certcheck.mostlovedworkplace.com
And if you want to hear how a 30-year, single-enterprise culture has solved a related version of this problem at extraordinary scale, Kelly Sullivan of Mohegan is doing a free livecast on August 11 that’s directly relevant.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q. How does O2E Brands maintain culture consistency across three different brands?
A. O2E Brands built an operating system, daily team huddles, transparent metrics, and a documented pathway from frontline worker to franchise owner, that’s identical at every location regardless of which brand it operates under. The system is specific enough that new franchise owners can run it correctly without direct supervision from headquarters.
Q. What’s the difference between a culture statement and a culture system?
A. A culture statement describes values in general language and leaves interpretation to each location or leader. A culture system specifies the exact daily practices that produce the culture, specific enough that someone unfamiliar with the organization could execute it correctly from documentation alone. Only a system travels reliably across multiple locations.
Q. Why do franchise and multi-brand organizations have a harder employer brand challenge?
A. Most of the people delivering the culture in a franchise organization aren’t direct employees of the parent company. Without a specific, documented operating system, culture has no mechanism to travel from headquarters to a franchise location that’s run by an independent owner. The organizations that succeed treat this as an operating design problem, not a communications problem.