Title: Visionary Organizations
1Good to Great
2What is Good to Great?
3What is Good to Great?
4 5 6Level 5 Leadership
- Traits of a Level 5 Leader
- More of a plow horse than show horse
- Spends time developing leadership processes
rather than showy projects - Accepts personal blame for failures, shares
credit for successes - Exhibits humility, but a great will for the
organization to succeed
7Level 5 Leadership
Sir Ernest Shackleton Antarctic Explorer Level 5
Leader
8(No Transcript)
9(No Transcript)
10Sir Ernest ShackletonA Level 5 Leader
- He is always able to keep his troubles under
and show a bold front. - In spite of his own great disappointment he
never appears to be anything but the acme of good
humor and hopefulness.
11First Who . . . Then What
- Level 5
- Management Team
- (Good-to-Great Companies)
- Level 5 Leader
- First Who
- Get the right People on the Bus. Build a
superior executive team. - Then What
- Once you have the right people in place, figure
out the best path to greatness.
A Genius with a Thousand Helpers (Comparison
Companies) Level 4 Leader First What Set a
vision for where to drive the bus. Develop a
road map for driving the bus. Then Who Enlist a
crew of highly capable helpers to make the
vision happen.
12First Who . . . Then What
- What do Great Leaders do?
- Get the right people on the bus
- (and the wrong people off the bus)
- Also, get the right people in the right seats.
- And then figure out where to drive it.
- Select the right people before the right strategy
- Rigorous, not ruthless (in people decisions)
- When in doubt, dont hire - keep looking
- When you know you need to make a people change,
act (make sure you dont simply have someone in
the wrong seat) - Put best people on biggest opportunities not the
biggest problems
13First Who . . . Then What
- Whether someone is the right person has more
to do with character traits and innate
capabilities than with specific knowledge,
background, or skills.
14 15The Hedgehog the FoxSir Isaiah Berlin
(1909-1997)
The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows
one big thing. Archilochus (7th-century b.c.e.)
16Examples of the Hedgehog Concept
Darwin Natural Selection
Marx Class Struggle
Einstein Relativity
Adam Smith Division of Labor
- What are our simplistic Hedgehog ideas?
17The Hedgehog ConceptSimplicity within the 3
Circles
18 19A Culture of Discipline
Freedom and responsibility within the framework
of a highly developed system
20A Culture of Discipline
- Disciplined Rigorous Dogged
- Determined Diligent Precise
- Fastidious Systematic Methodical
- Workmanlike Demanding Consistent
- Focused Accountable Responsible
- The rinsing your cottage cheese factor
- Start a Stop Doing list.
21A Culture of Discipline
- A strict or fanatical adherence to the
Hedgehog Concept
22A Culture of Discipline
- A culture of discipline is not just about
action. It is about getting disciplined people
who engage in disciplined thought and who then
take disciplined action.
23- Confronting the
- Brutal Facts
24The Stockdale Paradox
- 37 Years Regular Navy
- Fighter Pilot
- Shot down over Hanoi in 3rd Vietnam combat duty
- POW in Hanoi for 7 ½ yrs
- Tortured 15 times
- Solitary Confinement 4 yrs
- Leg irons for 2 years
Vice Admiral James Stockdale
25The Stockdale Paradox
- Retain faith that you will prevail in the end,
regardless of the difficulties. - and at the same time
- Confront the most brutal facts of your current
reality, whatever they might be.
26Back to the Ice
27A Brutal Reality
28The End?
- -15 degrees Fahrenheit
- 350 miles from land
29Whats your vision now?
To get your crew back alive.
30- The Flywheel and the Doom Loop
31The Flywheel
32The Flywheel Doom Loop
- The Flywheel
- There was no miracle moment
- There was no one magical moment
- It wasnt a flash from the blue
- It wasnt a single switch that was thrown at one
time - The Doom Loop
- Skip buildup and jump right to breakthrough
- Implement big programs, radical change efforts,
dramatic revolutions - Spent a lot of energy trying align and motivate
people
33The Flywheel Doom Loop
- John Wooden
- 10 NCAA Championships
- in 12 years
- 61 game winning streak
- 1948 1963 nothing
- 1964 First Championship
341 invested on January 1, 1926 to December 31,
1990
General Market 415 Comparison Companies -
995 Visionary Companies - 6,356
35- Preserving the Core
-
- Stimulating Progress
36(No Transcript)
37Preserving the Core Stimulating Progress
- Tyranny of the OR
- Genius of the AND
38Preserving the Core Stimulating Progress
Greater Efficiency
More Service
39Preserve the Core vs Stimulate Progress
- Stimulate Progress
- ?
- Preserve Core
- Preserve Core
- ?
- Stimulate Progress
- Stimulate Progress
- ?
- Preserve Core
- Preserve Core
40Preserve the Core vs Stimulate Progress
- 2. Build a 1 billion endowment.
- Preserve Core Stimulate Progress
5. Dismiss an employee openly critical of the
First Presidency. Preserve Core Stimulate
Progress
8. Establish goals to increase diversity within
the student body. Preserve Core Stimulate
Progress
41Preserve the Core vs Stimulate Progress
- If you are involved in building and managing an
organization, the single most important point to
take away from this book is the critical
importance of creating tangible mechanisms
aligned to preserve the core and stimulate
progress. This is the essence of clock
building. - - Built to Last, p.89
42Conclusion
43Conclusion
- As we look back on our findings, one giant
realization towers above all the others Just
about anyone can be a key protagonist in building
an extraordinary business institution. The
lessons of these companies can be learned and
applied by the vast majority of managers at all
levels. Gone forever at least in our eyes is
the debilitating perspective that the trajectory
of a company depends on whether it is led by
people ordained with rare and mysterious
qualities that cannot be learned by others . . .
44Conclusion
- We hope you take many things from this book. We
hope the hundreds of specific examples will
stimulate you to immediately take action in your
own organization. We hope the concepts and
frameworks will embed themselves in your mind and
help guide your thinking. We hope you take away
pearls of wisdom that you can pass along to
others. But, above all, we hope you take away
confidence and inspiration that the lessons
herein do not just apply to other people. You
can learn them. You can apply them. You can
build a visionary company. - - Built to Last, Preface to
Paperback edition
45