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Good to Great

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Title: Good to Great


1
Good to Great
  • Book by Jim Collins

2
Good to Great
  • Good is the enemy of great.
  • Why is that true?


3
Companies Studied (15-year return compared to
general stock market)
  • Abbott (3.98)
  • Circuit City (18.5)
  • Fannie Mae (7.56)
  • Gillette (7.39)
  • Kimberly-Clark (3.42)
  • Kroger (4.17)
  • Nucor (5.16)
  • Philip Morris (7.06)
  • Pitney Bowes (7.16)
  • Walgreens (7.34)
  • Wells Fargo (3.99)
  • Upjohn
  • Silo
  • Great Western
  • Warner-Lambert
  • Scott Paper
  • AP
  • Bethlehem Steel
  • R.J. Reynolds
  • Addressograph
  • Eckerd
  • Bank of America


Unsustained Burroughs, Chrysler, Harris, Hasbro,
Rubbermaid, Teledyne
Kirk Wakefield
4
Lesson 1 Leadership
1
  • Humility Will Level 5 leadership
  • Modest, willful, humble, fearless
  • Ego-driven, genius-types, may produce short-term
    positive results, but cannot sustain results
  • 1highly capable 2 contributing team member, 3
    competent manager, 4 effective leader,
    5executive that builds enduring greatness thru
    personal humility professional


Kirk Wakefield
5
Leadership
1
  • Professional Will
  • Creates superb results, a clear catalyst in the
    transition from good to great
  • Demonstrates an unwavering resolve to do whatever
    must be done to produce the best long-term
    results, no matter how difficult
  • Sets the standard of building an enduring great
    company will settle for nothing less
  • Looks in the mirror, not out the window, to
    apportion responsibility for poor results, never
    blaming other people, external factors, or bad
    luck
  • Personal Humility
  • Demonstrates a compelling modesty, shunning
    public adulation never boastful
  • Acts with quiet, calm determination relies
    principally on inspired standards, not inspiring
    charisma to motivate
  • Channels ambition into the company, not the self
    sets up successors for even greater success in
    the next generation
  • Looks out the window, not in the mirror, to
    apportion credit for the success of the
    companyto other people, external factors, and
    good luck


Kirk Wakefield
6
Lesson 2 First whothen what.
2
  • There are going to be times when we cant wait
    for somebody. Now, youre either on the bus or
    off the bus. (Ken Kesey, The Electric Kool-Aid
    Acid Test)
  • What did the 11 successful companies find out?
  • You dont first figure out where to drive the bus
    and then get people to take it there.
  • No, first get the right people on the bus (and
    the wrong people off) and then figure out where
    to take the bus.


Kirk Wakefield
7
Why you get the right people on the bus first
2
  1. If you begin with who rather than what you
    can more easily adapt to a changing world.
  2. If you have the right folks on the bus, the
    problem on how to motivate manage people
    largely goes away.
  3. If you have the wrong people, it doesnt matter
    whether you discover the right direction, you
    still wont have a great organization. Great
    vision without great people is irrelevant.


Kirk Wakefield
8
Level 5 thinkingon getting folks on/off the bus
2
  • I dont know where we should take this
    commission, but I do now that if I start with the
    right people, ask them the right questions, and
    engage them in vigorous debate, well find a way
    to make this organization great.
  • David Maxwell (CEO, Fannie Mae) made it
    absolutely clear that there would only be seats
    for A players who were willing to put forth an A
    effort, and if you werent up for it, you had
    better get off the bus, and get off now.


Kirk Wakefield
9
Rigorous, not ruthless
2
  • To be rigorous means consistently applying
    exacting standards at all times and at all
    levels, especially in upper management. To be
    rigorous, not ruthless, means that the best
    people need not worry about their positions and
    can concentrate fully on their work.
  • To let people languish in uncertainty for months
    or years when in the end they arent going to
    make it anywaythat is ruthless. To deal with it
    right up front and let people get on with their
    livesthat is rigorous.


Kirk Wakefield
10
How to be rigorous
2
  • When in doubt, dont hirekeep looking.
  • When you know you need to make a people
    changeact.
  • The moment you feel the need to tightly manage
    someone, youve made a hiring mistake. The best
    people dont need to be managed. Guided, taught,
    ledyes. But not tightly managed.
  • Waiting too long before acting is equally unfair
    to the people who need to get off the bus.
  • How to know Would you hire the person again?
    Would you be relieved if they left the
    organization?
  • Put your best people on your biggest
    opportunities not your biggest problems.
  • Corollary When you decide to sell off your
    problems, dont sell of your best people. Make a
    place on the bus for the best people, and theyll
    be more likely to support changes in direction.


Kirk Wakefield
11
Discuss How do you need to be rigorous?
2
  • When in doubt, dont hirekeep looking.
  • When you know you need to make a people
    changeact.
  • The moment you feel the need to tightly manage
    someone, youve made a hiring mistake. The best
    people dont need to be managed. Guided, taught,
    ledyes. But not tightly managed.
  • Waiting too long before acting is equally unfair
    to the people who need to get off the bus.
  • How to know Would you hire the person again?
    Would you be relieved if they left the
    organization?
  • Put your best people on your biggest
    opportunities not your biggest problems.
  • Corollary When you decide to sell off your
    problems, dont sell of your best people. Make a
    place on the bus for the best people, and theyll
    be more likely to support changes in direction.


Kirk Wakefield
12
Lesson 3 Confront the Brutal FactsYet never
lose faith
3
  • Two choices confront brutal facts and change or
    stick head in sand
  • Kroger and APsuperstores vs. low prices
  • You have to be number one or two in each market
    or you have to exit.
  • You absolutely cannot make a series of good
    decisions without first confronting the brutal
    facts.


Kirk Wakefield
13
Confront the Brutal FactsYet never lose faith
3
  • Your job is to turn over rocks and look at the
    squiggly things, even if what you see can scare
    you!
  • Some organizations (Bank of America) have
    climates where managers will not even make a
    comment until they know how the boss felt.
  • The moment a leader allows himself to become the
    primary reality people worry about, rather than
    reality being the primary reality, you have a
    recipe for mediocrity, or worse.


Kirk Wakefield
14
How to confront the Brutal FactsYet never lose
faith
3
  • Lead with questions, not answers
  • Put more questions to board members than they put
    to you
  • Raise questions for one reason only to gain
    understanding (not manipulation)
  • Engage in dialogue and debate, not coercion.
  • Good-to-great companies have a penchant for
    intense dialogue
  • Conduct autopsies, without blame.
  • No finger-pointing.
  • Build red-flag mechanisms.
  • Good-to-great companies dont have better
    information, necessarily. The key is turning
    information into info that cant be ignored.
  • Red cards in meetings folks hold it up to deal
    with real issues
  • Short-pay allow customers to circle items on
    invoice they dont want to pay due to bad service
  • Attitude We will never give up. We will never
    capitulate. It might take a long time, but we
    will find a way to prevail.


Kirk Wakefield
15
How do you need to confront the Brutal Facts?Yet
never lose faith
3
  • Lead with questions, not answers
  • Put more questions to board members than they put
    to you
  • Raise questions for one reason only to gain
    understanding (not manipulation)
  • Engage in dialogue and debate, not coercion.
  • Good-to-great companies have a penchant for
    intense dialogue
  • Conduct autopsies, without blame.
  • No finger-pointing.
  • Build red-flag mechanisms.
  • Good-to-great companies dont have better
    information, necessarily. The key is turning
    information into info that cant be ignored.
  • Red cards in meetings folks hold it up to deal
    with real issues
  • Short-pay allow customers to circle items on
    invoice they dont want to pay due to bad service
  • Attitude We will never give up. We will never
    capitulate. It might take a long time, but we
    will find a way to prevail.


Kirk Wakefield
16
The Stockdale Paradox
3
  • Research by the Intl Committee for the Study of
    Victimization found that those facing serious
    adversity generally fall into one of three
    categories
  • Those who were permanently dispirited by the
    event
  • Those who got their life back to normal
  • Those who used the experience as a defining event
    that made them stronger.


Kirk Wakefield
17
The Stockdale Paradox
3
  • Jim Stockdale stoically accepted the brutal facts
    of reality while maintaining an unwavering faith
    in the endgamethat he would prevail despite the
    brutal facts.
  • Who didnt make it out? The optimists.
  • Those who think it will all be a quick fix and
    everyone will be out by Christmas are the ones
    that lose heart and fail.


Kirk Wakefield
18
Lesson 4 The Hedgehog Concept
4
  • The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog
    knows one big thing.
  • Foxes pursue many ends at the same time and see
    the world in all its complexity. They are
    scattered or diffused, moving on many levels.
  • Hedgehogs simplify a complex world into a single
    organizing idea, a basic principle or concept
    that unifies and guides everything.
  • For a hedgehog, anything that does not somehow
    relate to the hedgehog idea holds no relevance.


Kirk Wakefield
19
The Hedgehog Concept
4
  • Examples
  • Walgreens the best, most convenient drugstores,
    with high profit per customer visit (viz., also
    Starbucks)
  • Wells Fargo running a bank like a business, with
    a focus on the Western U.S.
  • Strategy, per se did not distinguish the
    good-to-great companies from the comparison
    companies. Both sets had strategic plans, and
    there is no evidence that the good-to-great
    companies invested more time/energy in strategy
    development long-range planning.
  • ?All the G2G companies attained a very simple
    concept that they used as a frame of reference
    for all their decisions.
  • ?A Hedgehog Concept is a simple, crystalline
    concept that flows from deep understanding about
    the intersection of the following three circles


Kirk Wakefield
20
Developing The Hedgehog Concept
4
  • What can you be the best in the world at (and,
    equally important, what you cannot be the best in
    the world at)
  • What you can be the best at might not even be
    something in which you are currently engaged.
  • What drives your economic engine?
  • Must discover the single denominator (profit per
    X ) that has the greatest impact on your
    economics/budgeting.
  • What are you deeply passionate about?
  • What do you have a genetic or God-given talent to
    do?
  • What are you well-paid to do?
  • What do you enjoy doing that you absolutely love
    to do, enjoying the actual process for its own
    sake?


Kirk Wakefield
21
The Hedgehog Concept
4
  • You can be passionate about all you want, but if
    you cant be the best at it or if it doesnt make
    economic sense, then you might have a lot of fun,
    but you wont get great results.
  • If we cant be the best at it, then why are we
    doing it at all?
  • A Hedgehog Concept is not a goal to be the best,
    a strategy to be the best, an intention to be the
    best, a plan to be the best. It is an
    understanding of what you can be the best at.


Kirk Wakefield
22
Develop your Hedgehog Concept!
4
  • What can you be the best in the world at (and,
    equally important, what you cannot be the best in
    the world at)
  • What you can be the best at might not even be
    something in which you are currently engaged.
  • What drives your economic engine?
  • Must discover the single denominator (profit per
    X ) that has the greatest impact on your
    economics/budgeting.
  • What are you deeply passionate about?
  • What do you have a genetic or God-given talent to
    do?
  • What are you well-paid to do?
  • What do you enjoy doing that you absolutely love
    to do, enjoying the actual process for its own
    sake?
  • A Hedgehog Concept is not a goal to be the best,
    a strategy to be the best, an intention to be the
    best, a plan to be the best. It is an
    understanding of what you can be the best at.



Kirk Wakefield
23
A few hedgehog facts
4
  • Growth is not a Hedgehog Concept
  • You cant just go off-site for 2 days and come
    back with it
  • On average, it took 4 years for G2G companies to
    clarify theirs
  • It is an inherently iterative process
  • Useful mechanism is a Council that consistently
    meets to review the 3 aspects of the Hedgehog
    Concept (and they should get/read the book!)


Kirk Wakefield
24
An interesting note on bureaucracy
  • Most companies build their bureaucratic rules to
    manage the small percentage of wrong people on
    the bus, which in turn drives away the right
    people on the bus, which increases the need for
    more bureaucracy to compensate for incompetence
    and lack of discipline, which then further drives
    the right people away and


Kirk Wakefield
25
Lesson 5 The Flywheel and the Doom Loop
5
  • G2G comes about by a cumulative processstep by
    step, action by action, decision by decision,
    turn by turn of the flywheelthat adds up to
    sustained and spectacular results.
  • Media attention often comes to G2G organizations
    after years of slow build-up and then
    break-through.


Kirk Wakefield
26
Flywheel Doomloop
5
  • Flywheel transitions look like dramaticm
    revolutionary breakthroughs from the outside
    (when the wheel is fully turning).
  • From the inside they feel completely different,
    more like an organic development process.


Kirk Wakefield
27
Flywheel Doomloop
5
  • Egg sitting there.
  • No one pays attention.
  • Egg cracks open.
  • Out jumps chick.
  • Media
  • The transformation of Egg to Chicken!
  • The remarkable revolution of the Egg!
  • Stunning turnaround at Egg!


Kirk Wakefield
28
Flywheel Doomloop
5
  • The point?
  • G2G companies had no name for their
    transformations. There was no launch event, no
    tag line, no programmatic feel whatsoever.
  • There was no miracle moment.


Kirk Wakefield
29
Flywheel
5
  • UCLA won 10 NCAA championships and 61 games in a
    row.
  • How many years did Wooden coach UCLA before the
    1st championship?
  • 15


Kirk Wakefield
30
Flywheel
5
  • Point to tangible accomplishmentshowever
    incremental at firstand show how these steps fit
    into the context of an overall working concept.
  • Step forward, consistent with hedgehog concept
  • Accumulate visible results
  • People line up, energized by results
  • Flywheel momentum builds


Kirk Wakefield
31
Doomloop
5
  • Instead of a quiet, deliberate process of
    figuring out what needed to be done and then
    simply doing it, the comparison companies
    frequently launched new programsoften with great
    fanfare and hoopla aimed at motivating the
    troopsonly to see the programs fail to produce
    sustained results.
  • They sought the single defining action, the grand
    program, the one killer innovation, the miracle
    moment that would allow them to skip the arduous
    buildup stage and jump right to breakthrough.
  • Guess what happened


Kirk Wakefield
32
Two popular doomloops to avoid
5
  • Misguided use of acquisitionsmaking deals for
    the sake of making deals.
  • When the going gets tough, we go shopping!
  • G2G companies did acquisitions after the Hedgehog
    Concept and after the flywheel had significant
    momentum.
  • Acquisitions are accelerators not creators of
    flywheel momentum.
  • Leaders who stop the flywheelleaders who step
    in, stop an already spinning flywheel, and throw
    the organization in entirely different direction.


Kirk Wakefield
33
Whats the diff between flywheel doom loop
organizations?
  • (in)consistency
  • (non)confrontal
  • (un)disciplined
  • (un)motivated (self)
  • (talk)results

Kirk Wakefield
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