Download - Good to Great
Good to GreatChapter 4
Confront the brutal facts never lose faith
Presented by : Jonathan Alvarez, Chris Hill, Shawn Stults
Same type of companies:◦ Both invested all assets into the traditional
grocery store.◦ Both had strongholds outside the major growth
areas of the US.◦ Both had knowledge of how the world around
them was changing.◦ Both had different strategies to deal with the new
era of grocery stores.
Kroger vs. A&P
Ralph Burger◦ “What would Mr. Hartford do?”◦ “You can’t argue with a hundred years of
success.” The Golden Key
◦ Separate brand to experiment with new methods/models to learn what customers wanted
Pep Rallies, radical price cutting strategies, hiring/firing CEO’s
A&P
Started to realize the ‘Superstore’ concept◦ Moved away from traditional store setup (100%
of their business) Jim Herring, CEO
◦ “…learned that you had to be number one or number two in each market, or you had to exit.” Concept didn’t hit the mainstream for another 10 yrs.
Decided to eliminate, change, or replace every store and get rid of every region that didn’t fit the new realities
Kroger
Good-to-Great companies showed two forms of disciplined thought:1) They looked at each situation focusing on the
brutal facts of reality “You absolutely cannot make a series of good
decisions without first confronting the brutal facts.”2) Developed a simply frame of reference for all
decisions (chapter 5)
Facts Are Better Than Dreams
Roy Ash◦ CEO of Adressograph◦ Bold vision to dominate the likes of Xerox,
Kodak, and IBM Didn’t show signs of a good leader
◦ First who, then what◦ Didn’t recognize the brutal facts of reality◦ Too strong and charismatic
“The moment a leader allows himself to become the primary reality, rather than reality being the primary reality, you have a recipe of mediocrity, or worse.”
Cont’d
Strong personality, bold vision◦ BUT made sure to keep a close eye on the brutal
facts Statistical Office
◦ Knew his personality might scare people from giving him bad news
◦ Principal function was to feed him the most brutal facts of reality
“Facts are better than dreams.”
Winston Churchill
How do you motivate people with brutal facts?
You do not need to waste your time or energy
on trying to motivate people if you have the right people on the bus they will be self-motivated
A Climate Where the Truth is Told
1.Lead with questions not answers
2.Engage in dialogue and debate, not coercion
3.Conduct autopsies, without blame
4.Build “red flag” mechanisms
Creating a Climate Where the Truth is Heard
Leading with questions not answers -Means having the humility to grasp the fact
that you don’t yet understand enough to have the answers and then to ask the questions that will lead to the best possible answers
Alan Wurtzel believed in this system after having the right employees in place
Building Truthful Climates
Engage in dialogue and debate, not coercion
Generate debates where everyone is listened to and not just heard as a formality.
There can be no predetermined decisions for this to be an effective way of conveying the truth
Building Truthful Climates Cont.
Conduct autopsies, without blame
Figure out what went wrong and where a lesson can be learned on how to change it in the future
Don’t point the finger at anyone unless it is at yourself in the mirror.
Building Truthful Climates Cont.
- “I will take responsibility for this bad decision. But we will all take responsibility for extracting the maximum learning from the tuition we’ve paid”
- Joe Cullman (Phillip Morris Co.)
Building Truthful Climates Cont.
Build “red flag” mechanisms
The red flags allow you to get immediate feedback, and addresses what needs to be done NOW
Ex. Short Pay…. With short pay you have to pay attention to the data now instead of waiting for the customer to be too unsatisfied without even knowing it
Building Truthful Climates Cont.
1960 P&G invaded the paper based industry
The industry leader, Scott paper, rolled over without a fight
Proctor & Gamble Vs. Scott Paper
Kimberly-Clark viewed competing against P&G not as a liberty but as an asset
In confronting brutal facts they left themselves stronger and more resilient, not weaker and more desperate
“We respected them so much they are bigger and talented. They beat the hell out of all their competitor, except one, Kimberly-Clark”
Proctor & Gamble Vs. Kimberly-Clark
International Committee for the Study Of Victimization
1) Those who are permanently dispirited by an event
2) Those who got their life back to normal3) Those who used the experience as a defining
event that made them stronger
“Hardiness”
Highest ranking U.S. officer in the “Hanoi Hilton” POW camp
Tortured over twenty times during eight year imprisonment 1965-1973
Jim Stockdale
What separates people is not the presence or absence of difficulty, but how they deal with the inevitable difficulties of life
Stockdale Paradox
“You must never confuse faith that you will prevail in the end-which you must never lose-with the discipline the most brutal facts of your current reality”
Jim Stockdale