8 Ocak 2019 Salı

Fortune the Greatest Business Decisions of All Time - My Highlights

Another book on business: "Fortune the Greatest Business Decisions of All Time" Let's see what I have highlighted from the book:




Great decisions begin with really great people and a simple statement: I don’t know.


Of course, you can’t entirely control your own destiny with good decisions. Luck is still a factor. But overall our research is showing that the primary factors reside more inside your control than outside.

Act local, think global.


There is a decision that many of today’s CEOs have lost sight of: Give your employees time to daydream.


Regardless of their assignment, 3M technical employees are encouraged to devote up to 15% of their working hours to independent projects. Note that the 15% rule isn’t a rule. It doesn’t require anyone to do anything. It just says that technical employees are allowed and encouraged to spend 15% of their time on whatever strikes their fancy. So let’s call it a policy rather than a rule.


Highly creative people are focused on the task, not on themselves. They’re asking, How can I solve this problem?, and not What will solving this problem do for me? Trying to push creative people doesn’t work. They aren’t pushed; they’re driven.


The 15% policy has inspired other companies to imitate it directly. Most famously, Google gives engineers 20% of their time to pursue their own projects so do Atlassian, an Australian software firm, and some smaller outfits. More broadly, 3M’s decision showed a doubtful world one of the knowledge economy’s most important and counterintuitive principles: A company can improve its performance by giving up control.



Crotonville also began inviting in major GE customers, both to offer ideas about “best practices” and to listen to GE’s ideas about them. For prospective customers, such coveted access might be why GE ended up getting a deal over a competitor offering similar prices. Steve Kerr, who at one point ran Crotonville for GE, recalled that when a customer was deciding between, say, GE Plastic and ABC Plastic, where price and availability were basically equivalent, the trump card GE played was Crotonville. Kerr says the sales conversation would go like this: “If you purchase GE Plastic, we’ll throw in some tickets for your leadership team to participate in the highly coveted Crotonville education center. After all, it’s not about the plastic, it’s about helping you become a better leader so you succeed.” 



Steve Jobs spent part of his final years aiming to perfect his own version of Crotonville: Apple University, a secret executive-training program that would institutionalize the surely idiosyncratic gifts of the late, great co-founder.                         


Shocking the world of academe, Jobs in 2009 convinced Joel Podolny to leave the deanship of the Yale School of Management to build it. Podolny’s job is somehow to put together a curriculum of people and ideas and written materials to show Apple managers how to thrive, even if they could never—and should never—seek to think as Jobs would have. Such is a formidable, perhaps impossible, task. Before GE and Jack Welch made the corporate-university model vital and sexy, it would have been an unthinkable assignment.



Deming preached a simple doctrine as true today as when he first formulated it more than 80 years ago: Better quality will reduce expenses while increasing productivity and market share. He taught companies to treat production as a system, involving suppliers and consumers as well as the factory. In Deming’s world, mass-produced items that were supposed to be identical always varied from one another in practice. Therefore, industrial processes should include a cycle for observing those variations and changing the process to reduce them. The defects should be analyzed, changes made, and the processrefined until it was done right. His favorite saying was “In God we trust; all others must bring data."



In a meeting with the 50 top executives at IBM, he said he wanted them each to visit a minimum of five big customers over three months. “The executives were to listen, to show the customer that we cared, and to implement holding action as appropriate,” Gerstner wrote in his memoir, which devotes a chapter to Operation Bear Hug. “Each of their direct reports (a total of more than 200 executives) was to do the same.” Moreover, Gerstner wanted his executives to listen carefully enough that they could report their findings directly to him. He wanted short reports—one to two pages, maximum—about the Bear Hug visits, and he wanted the reports also sent to anyone else at IBM who could help with any problems the visitors had unearthed. (Chain of command was an institutionalized aspect of the IBM culture, and Gerstner wanted to break the chain.) Gerstner wrote that Operation Bear Hug was “a first step in IBM’s cultural change.” Not only was IBM going to be remade “from the outside in,” but the CEO actually was going to pay attention to what top executives did and hold them personally responsible.



Keep your minimum-wage employees happy, and your customers will be happy—and then your investors will be happyKeep your minimum-wage employees happy, and your customers will be happy—and then your investors will be happyKeep your minimum-wage employees happy, and your customers will be happy—and then your investors will be happyKeep your minimum-wage employees happy, and your customers will be happy—and then your investors will be happyKeep your minimum-wage employees happy, and your customers will be happy—and then your investors will be happyKeep your minimum-wage employees happy, and your customers will be happy—and then your investors will be happy. (Walmart case)



So what is the Saturday morning meeting like? In the early days it was one giant share-a-thon: Employees touted their best ideas—the famous Wal-Mart “greeter” was a concept developed by a store employee. Some executives would show best-practices videos and use the occasion to reiterate company rules, among other things. Remember, only a few years ago the company was often under siege from unions and the media for its employment practices. Over the years the meetings became a little stale, and executives worried that headquarters employees would lose focus. To freshen things up, the company started bringing in guest stars, from Adam Sandler to Oprah Winfrey to Peyton Manning. I had the chance to see Gov. Bill Clinton in action. (He answered questions ranging from foreign-policy trade issues to the Arkansas Razorbacks. You could tell you’d be hearing from him again—that’s for sure.) 



“The plain fact is that the public which buys from you does not come from nowhere… One’s own employees ought to be one’s own best customers. [By paying high wages] we increased the buying power of our own people, and they increase the buying power of other people, and so on and on. It is this thought of enlarging buying power by paying high wages and selling at low prices which is behind the prosperity of this country.”



Neo-Keynesians like Paul Krugman and Robert Reich continue to argue that high wages naturally create consumer demand and that a little inflation isn’t a bad thing. Supporters of the low-wage doctrine assert that economic prosperity is best served by low wages that don’t threaten inflation or squeeze profits. Rising wages, while good for the individual, are construed as bad for the overall economy.

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