Sunday, June 21, 2015

A.G. LAFLEY ON LEADERSHIP: LESSONS FROM PROCTER GAMBLE'S SUPERSTAR CEO

By Mike DuBose and Blake DuBose
Fueled by a passion for learning the ins and outs of successful leadership, we have studied, researched, and interviewed many great leaders over the years. We have found that, although each has their own style and strategies, leaders often share common traits like humility and a dedication to executing ideas. One such leader is Alan George Lafley (known as “A.G.”), who joined Procter and Gamble upon graduating from Harvard Business School in 1977. He became P&G’s CEO, a position he held for ten years before stepping down in 2009. In 2008, Lafley also co-authored the bestselling book The Game Changer with fellow business expert Ram Charan.

In May 2013, Lafley’s replacement at P&G, Robert McDonald, resigned amidst declining sales and investor complaints. The corporate board invited Lafley back in an attempt to stabilize the faltering Fortune 500 Company, a consumer goods giant that employs more than 120,000 employees worldwide and owns 300 well-known brands such as Pampers, Tide, Bounty, Crest, Gillette, and Dawn.

What makes A.G. Lafley such a great leader that P&G was compelled to call him out of retirement? For one thing, he gets results. As the Wall Street Journal reported, he more than doubled sales to nearly $84 billion while CEO of P&G, partially through smart acquisitions like Gillette and other premium and beauty brands. In fact, when Lafley retired, P&G boasted 23 brands each earning $1 billion or more in sales, according to USA Today. Publications such as Business Insider magazine laud him as “one of the most successful executives in the history of the 176-year-old company.”

We had the exciting opportunity to meet with Lafley as part of a small group in New York City. To our surprise, the 2006 Chief Executive magazine CEO of the Year showed up in blue jeans, and his responses to our questions were not only thoughtful, but also phrased in simple, understandable language. You would never know that the man with whom we spoke is tasked with leading one of the most important companies in the world!

Interestingly, Lafley began the conversation by stressing the importance of “productive paranoia,” noting that every leader and employee should “always think about things that can hit you.” This phrase resonated with us, especially since it echoes a philosophy we have in our family of companies to always “hope for the best and plan for the worst!” He then noted that great organizations maintain their success and sustain growth by emphasizing seven key areas: leadership, culture, purpose and values, goals, strategies, structure, and systems. (We have illustrated these key areas in the accompanying graphic, which is similar to one Lafley and Charan use in The Game Changer). To reach maximum success and sustain growth, all seven areas must row in unison towards the same destination. Let’s examine each in greater depth.


Purpose and Values: When Lafley asked the group about our companies’ purpose, few leaders could say that their businesses had one other than making money. When we said that our purpose was “to create opportunities to improve lives,” Lafley responded that such higher purposes are good for engaging staff, an important factor in success. He agreed that every leader must build a sense of ownership for all employees so they feel like the company is part of them. Lafley asserted, though, that the overarching purpose of a business should be “to create and serve a customer with value,” an idea also present in the work of Peter Drucker. In fact, talking with Lafley, one can sense that his management style draws deeply from Drucker’s teachings. (Business Week has called Drucker “the man who invented management,” and his philosophy has influenced organizations across all sectors of society, including not only P&G, but also General Electric, IBM, Intel, Girl Scouts of the USA, The Salvation Army, Red Cross, United Farm Workers, and several presidential administrations.)

Goals: Every organization should have strategic short-, medium-, and long-range goals. Like Jack Welch, Lafley emphasizes “winning” and the need to know when you are winning (which is impossible without specific goal-setting). Lafley feels that companies that strive to be the best can eventually become number one. Accordingly, P&G has established the long-term goal of being in the top 1/3 of the most successful companies in every decade.

Strategies: Lafley defined strategy as the “choices to win.” For example, companies must define the geographical area and the type of clients they want to serve. Most important, he said, is that organizations grow from their core business and play to their strengths. When they chase ventures outside their core services, resources, and expertise, they run into trouble and quality diminishes.

Structure: Lafley stated that it’s important to be crystal clear on how the structure—the way a business is organized to deliver the strategy—will be implemented. However, not even Lafley has found an exact business structure that works 100% of the time, so it’s important for businesses to remain flexible and  experiment with different structures. He once referred to P&G as being like an amoeba that is constantly changing its shape to eat and survive. Like Lafley, business leaders must be willing to change quickly when they see opportunities. Jack Welch told us the same thing, saying, “Successful companies have to be ready to change direction on a dime!”

System: This concept refers to the resources needed by the structure to get work done. Like Larry Bossidy and Jack Welch (both successful former leaders of General Electric), Lafley does not believe that businesses should develop detailed budgets and plans more than two years in advance. We agree; the economy and technology are rapidly changing and there are many variables that come into play over time (although, as Jack Welch and Lafley suggested, it’s ok to dream ahead 5 to 10 years in general terms). At the human resource level, P&G spends a lot of time on talent and professional development to keep its employees and leaders engaged and challenged.

Leadership: While employing the right, outstanding employees is very important, businesses cannot achieve success without creative leaders to develop and implement the vision. Strong leadership is instrumental in learning from the past and guiding organizations into the future.
“Shaping values and standards and then living them is critical,” Lafley said. “If the leader doesn’t set the standards, it won’t happen. Employees watch every move you make and don’t make. If you don’t truly live the values and standards, you won’t have them!”

Leaders must also explain the “whats” with the “whys.” That often means making sense of outside variables and translating them into language understandable to both consumers and employees. Of course, the leader’s main goal is to get everyone pulling together towards a common mission that adheres to the organization’s core values and business. One common mistake is chasing too many projects instead of doing fewer things really well. Instead, successful companies practice the “Hedgehog Principle” explained in Jim Collins’s book Good to Great, focusing on their passions, their areas of expertise, and the activities that are most profitable to them. Lafley warned that many leaders fail because they want quick fixes. It takes time to get the right people on the train and excited to head toward a common destination!

Culture: If organizations become too big, too successful, and too slow, they often lose contact with the customer, Lafley said. Every organization should be customer-focused, and leaders must stay in close contact with the employees who are out in the trenches. This allows the organization to change as customer needs evolve (a problem for some businesses, including 100-year-old Rhodes Furniture, which went bankrupt because it failed to listen to front-line staff). We talked a good bit with Lafley about addressing customer desires, and he commented that businesses cannot wait for the consumer to express a need, but rather should predict needs before the customer even realizes them. One great example of this strategy is Apple under visionary leader Steve Jobs, which did a great job of generating products ahead of their time, such as iPods, iPads, and iPhones.

Lafley encourages employees to learn as much about the customer as possible. He even had some P&G staff live with consumers for a while to directly witness their interactions with products. They experienced firsthand how the customers used them and what needed to be changed! Lafley has also created labs where consumers are invited to come in and provide input. However, as he noted to us, customers sometimes have difficulty articulating why they do or don’t like a product, and it’s a leader’s job to seek this information out. With a culture of open communication and receptiveness to ideas, leaders can glean valuable information from staff and customer feedback.

Lafley also said that ideas are generally not the problem; rather, companies often have difficulties taking an idea from start to finish. We’ve often experienced the same problem in our companies—get a small group of creative individuals in a room and you can have lots of great ideas, but the most important thing is being able to actually do them! Thus, cultures must also have an execution element.

According to Lafley, a leader’s most pressing challenge is to get everyone working in the same direction in all of his seven key areas. When we asked what advice he would give today’s leaders to help them accomplish this goal, he said, “You have to see things as they are and not what you want them to be. You have to be transparent and open to suggestions and criticism. And the most important aspect of effective leaders is to LISTEN, LISTEN, and LISTEN.” We apply these wise words to our family of companies, and we believe that others can benefit from doing the same!
The bottom line: A.G. Lafley’s powerful leadership style incorporates both his own expertise and ideas shared with other business greats, and leaders in any organization can learn a great deal from him. To sum up what he believes are the keys to success, in a 2008 Forbes magazine article, Lafley said, “I believe that if we take care of our customers, if we create more customers, if we create loyal customers, and if we inspire our employees, the results are going to be fine.”

About the Authors: Our corporate and personal purpose is to “create opportunities to improve lives” by sharing our knowledge, experience, success, research, and mistakes.
Blake DuBose graduated from Newberry College Schools of Business and Psychology and is president of DuBose Web Group. View our published articles at www.duboseweb.com.
Mike DuBose has been in business since 1981, authored The Art of Building a Great Business, and is a field instructor with USC’s graduate school. He is the owner of four debt-free corporations, including Columbia Conference Center, Research Associates, and The Evaluation Group. Visit his nonprofit website www.mikedubose.com for a free copy of his book and other useful articles.
Katie Beck serves as Director of Communications for the DuBose family of companies. She graduated from the USC School of Journalism and Honors College.

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

LEADERSHIP LESSONS FROM STEVE JOBS



Like Thomas Edison or Henry Ford, there is no doubt that Steve Jobs is now considered one of the world’s greatest game changers who ever lived. 

His impact changed in a great way how we live, work and play.  What made him become such a great
Steve JobsPhoto Credit: Albert Watson 
leader and influence in our lives?


Looking at his leadership style, I am listing here at least 11 of his leadership traits that enabled him to build Apple from almost nothing to one of the greatest and most valuable business organizations in the world today.   


Focus

On top of my list is his laser-like ability to focus on what he believed is important. 


When he came back as CEO of Apple in 1997 after he was ousted in a power struggle in 1985, the first thing he did to save the ailing company was to reduce the number of products it makes and focus only on a few.  He believed that deciding what not to do is as important as deciding what to do.  Not long after this decision, the company made a dramatic turn around and saved it from ruin.    

Keep it simple
Call it a gift but Jobs has the knack for looking at the essence of things and come up with simple solutions to complex problems.  His ultimate aim is to make life easier for users of his products.  For me, the greatest example of this

is the on/off feature of a devise.  For most electronic products, it would be unthinkable to do without it. But to Jobs, he insisted on doing away with it.  The result:  a devise that shuts off on its own when not it use and automatically opens when the user starts engaging it. It is now a standard feature in many devices.  

Take full charge
Jobs, who is sometimes ridiculed as a control freak, is a 100% take-charge person.  He did not leave anything to chance.  He made sure that every element of his product passed his scrutiny and he had a hand in creating those elements to form part of an integrated whole.  “Jobs knew that the best way to achieve simplicity is to make sure that hardware, software, and peripheral devices were seamlessly integrated.  An Apple ecosystem—an iPod connected to a Mac with iTunes software, for example—allowed devices to be simpler, syncing to be smoother, and glitches to be rarer” wrote his biographer Walter Isaacson

Take one step backward, to make two leaps forward
When he finds himself behind, Jobs made sure that he not only caught up but to leap forward in great stride.  This is how he left competition miles behind.  This happened when he built the original iMac.  It was useful for managing photos and videos but not when it comes to music. So he did not only catch up.  He integrated the iMac system that resulted in the combination of iTunes, the iTunes Store and the iPod allowing users to buy, share, manage, store and play music better than they could with any other devices.  He created iPhone to stay ahead of competition who he believed were thinking of adding music players to their handsets.

Put the horse before the cart    
Conventional thinking among business executives is that profits should come first before everything else in business.  For Steve Jobs, products should come first.  This belief caused his ouster from Apple and it took him over a decade to prove wrong those people who thought otherwise.  When Jobs and his team designed the original Macintosh in the early Eighties, his marching order was to make it “insanely great”.  Profit maximization or cost trade-off was the least of his concerns. The dramatic turnaround of Apple and how he built it into the world’s most valuable company is a testament to his belief that creating winning products comes first.

Follow your intuition
Steve Jobs relied more on his intuition when it comes to knowing what customers want. In the course of developing the Macintosh, one of his team members suggested that they should do market research to find out what customers wanted.  His reply was “If Henry Ford asked customers what they wanted, they would have told him, ‘A faster horse!’” 

It’s so much different to continually ask customers what they wanted than caring deeply about what they want. It required intuition and instinct to know their desires that have not yet formed. He said “Intuition is a very powerful thing—more powerful than intellect, in my opinion.”

To create great products, he made what he and his friends wanted. For instance, when he looked at the many portable music players in the market in 2000, he found that not one of them allowed him, a music fanatic, to have a simple device with which he can carry a thousand songs in his pocket. “We made the iPod for ourselves,” he said, “and when you’re doing something for yourself, or your best friend or family, you’re not going to cheese out.”

Make the impossible possible
Jobs felt that life’s ordinary rules didn’t apply to him.  This he proved by changing the course of computer history with just a small fraction of the resources that Xerox or IBM had.  He had the ability to push people to do the impossible. During his early years at Atari, he pushed his partner Steve Wozniak to do a new computer game in just four days which Woz thought will take months to do.  He ended up doing it in just four days. 

When Corning developed a process for scratch-proof glass, Steve Jobs said that he needed it for iPhone and asked its CEO Wendell Weeks to deliver in six months.  To think that Corning was not making the glass and did not have the capacity yet, Weeks was stunned at Jobs confidence that he can do it. “Yes you can do it,” Jobs said.  Weeks did it under six months.  Not long after, every piece of glass on an iPhone or iPad is made in America by Corning.     

Judge a book by its cover
Jobs was aware that people form an opinion about a product or a company on the basis of how it is presented and packaged. “…people do judge a book by its cover,” he told his biographer Isaacson.

When he was about to ship the Macintosh in 1984, he was very attentive and concerned about every detail such as color and design of the box.  Likewise, he personally devoted so much time in designing and redesigning the jewel-like boxes that contained the iPod and the iPhone.  When a buyer open the box, Steve wanted to set the tone for how the buyer perceive the product.

Aim for perfection 
In almost every product Steve created, there were certain stages that he asked his people to do things all over again no matter what the cost.  That happened with the movie Toy Story at Pixar and when he was about to launch the Apple Stores.  He decided to delay everything for a few more months so the store layouts are designed around activities instead of product display and arrangements. His perfectionist tendencies went even further to the unseen parts of devices Apple makes. 

Even how the chips are arranged inside Apple II and the Macintosh did not escape his passion for perfection.  In both cases, he asked his engineers to redo how the chips inside are lined up.  He wanted them to be neatly arranged so the board would look nice. “I want it to be as beautiful as possible, even if it’s inside the box.”

Make no room for mediocre players
Jobs was known for being impatient and tough with people around him.  Though not praiseworthy, his treatment of people stemmed from his passion for perfection and his desire to work with only the best. It’s his way of being frank and honest when he felt that people were not giving their best.  Maybe he could get results by being nicer but he said that it’s not who he really is.

Even Apple’s co-founder Wozniak believed that Steve should have been nicer to people around him.  There must be other ways he could have motivated them instead of terrorizing them.  But then he said that if the Macintosh project had been run his way, things probably would have been a mess.

Despite Steve’s rudeness, he had that unique ability to inspire and generate loyalty among his top executives who tended to stick around and stayed longer.  He made people passionate about creating groundbreaking products and made them believe that they could accomplish what seemed to be impossible feats.  One of them, Debi Coleman recalled that Steve would shout at him in a meeting:  “You asshole, you never do anything right”.  Yet he considered himself the luckiest person in the world to have worked under Steve.

Meet with people face-to-face
Steve was a strong believer of face-to-face meetings.  He is not in favor of chats over email or any other sort of online communications. Even in the design of his office buildings, he made sure that there are opportunities for people to meet often by mingling.  “…Creativity comes from spontaneous meetings, from random discussions. You run into someone, you ask what they’re doing, you say ‘Wow,’ and soon you’re cooking up all sorts of ideas.” he said.

Jobs hated slide presentations.  He met with his executive team every week to discuss ideas without a formal agenda.  “People who know what they’re talking about don’t need PowerPoint” he said.

See the forest, and also the trees
Jobs was both a big picture and detail person.  While appreciating the big picture, he had the ability to examine every detail and aspect of design.  He worries over the shape and color of the screws inside the iMac while having the grand vision of the personal computer as the “digital hub” for synchronizing the user’s music, videos, photos and content. 

Harmonize Humanities with the Sciences
Steve had his own role models too.  He was inspired by what Edwin Land of Polaroid said about the importance of people who could be at the intersection of humanities and sciences. This became the theme of his life, the essence of his story.

He was able to connect the humanities to the sciences, creativity to technology and arts to engineering. With an intuitive feel for business strategy, no one today could combine the arts and technology better than he did, in my view.


Interestingly, Steve possessed the traits of creative but strong personalities of Franklin and Einstein, both of whom have great feel for the humanities and the sciences. “…I believe that it will be a key to building innovative economies in the 21st century. It is the essence of applied imagination, and it’s why both the humanities and the sciences are critical for any society to have a creative edge in the future.” wrote Isaacson.

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

LEADERSHIP STYLE OF MCDONALD'S FOUNDER RAY KROC


Having been in sales in my younger years, I observed that top salesmen are not usually good leaders. 
Ray Kroc


The case is different though with Ray Kroc, founder of McDonald's, the world’s largest chain of restaurants.  He’s both a good salesman and a good leader.

I will not dwell so much here about his achievements as a salesman or a sales leader ( For over 30 years, he was both a good salesman and sales manager, outstanding even) but rather on his style of leadership that propelled a tiny hamburger parlor in San Bernardino, California during the 50’s into the world’s largest fast food chain that it is today.

Starting in 1954 when he paid a visit to the McDonald Brothers and sold them the idea of putting up a chain of McDonald’s all over America, Ray exhibited and utilized certain leadership skills that helped him propel the company, and made him extremely wealthy in the process.

Here's what I found to be his set of leadership skills from his book bio, Grinding It Out,The Making of McDonald's.

Visionary
While he was convincing the McDonald brothers of his plan, his mind began to visualize the thousands of McDonald stores in every city all over America.  At first, he was excited by the idea of these stores having his multi-mixers in each of them.  He was then in the business of selling those machines that turn out milk-shakes.

Like any good leader, Ray held by his vision and persuaded others to embrace that vision.

Committed
During his days as a paper cup salesman, Ray was committed to following rules and principles that made him a good salesman and later, as sales leader.  The first order of the day before he made his daily rounds was to make sure that he looked and felt good.  Tailored suits, shiny shoes, well-combed hair and pleasing appearance were standards that must be followed starting with himself, day in day out.   

This values served him well when he started McDonalds.  His fastidious adherence to operating processes and procedures became standards in restaurant operations worldwide.  He firmly believed that the quality of a leader is reflected in the standards he set for himself.

Motivator  
What set Ray apart from his contemporaries was his ability to make people do willingly what he wanted them to do,   although he is the type of a leader who would  not ask anyone to do things that he himself is not willing or able to do.  He’s known to have mopped floors and clean toilets for franchisees during store openings in the early days of McDonalds. 

Enthusiasm
A key to Ray’s overall success is his infectious enthusiasm that attracted people to him.  Whether they are potential franchisees, employees, suppliers or investors, he had a certain way of making people like him and to accept his ideas.  Apparently, this ability helped him sell millions of paper cups to hard-nosed Italian and Polish restaurant owners in the streets of Chicago during his days as a salesman. He was considered a great storyteller, socializer, and had a way with words.

Mentor and Coach
Ray never finished high school but to me he is a great teacher.  He liked and originated the idea of the “Hamburger University” that systematized the teaching of the ins and outs not only of preparing burgers and fries but running fast foods restaurants.  Even before the concept of operations analysis became a buzzword in business circles and taught in the universities, it was already part of the curriculum in the training programs at McDonald's.  

Optimist
Ray never wavered despite obstacles that come his way.  For instance, when he was having a hard time perfecting the process of preparing potatoes - a big problem in the cold and damp weather of Des Plaines, Illinois but not in sunny San Bernardino, California - instead of being discouraged, he embarked on a series of fact finding and research, until he found the solution.   

This he did in many other situations he encountered in the early days of McDonalds.  One of my favorites is the story of how he knew how many hamburgers his competitor across the street exactly sold each day.   He "researched" by checking on the competitor's garbage cans in the dead of night, the night before!

Great Communicator
A salesman that he is, communication is one skill he does naturally and well.  This is how he gets across his ideas, his vision and anything he wanted to tell people.  And he does it with style, like having President Kennedy present in the inauguration of a store or by grabbing a microphone in the stadium when he wanted his San Diego Padres to play better!

The golden arches, which Ray adopted and became a de facto symbol of the American Dream, is one example of how he made use of communications as a powerful means of persuasion. He believed in it and made use of it to the fullest.  

Then and now, when people see this symbol, an important entrepreneurial undertaking is taking place in any of the 18,710 restaurants anywhere in the world, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.  

For the consumer, it says “hey drop by for some delicious and satisfying meals”! For the franchisee, more profits from the cash register.