Soaring
with the Phoenix: Renewing the Vision, Reviving the Spirit, and
Re-creating the Success of
Your Company
by James A. Belasco and Jerre Stead
The
Continually Renewing Phoenix:
The Herald of Revivolution
HEAVY HUMAN TRAFFIC: SEARCHING TO BE
SOMETHING AND SOMEBODY
Once More, with Feeling: Rewind,
Playback, Pump Up the Volume
It is dark—well past our 7:00 p.m.
dinnertime—by the time I slip into my car to make my way home after
another twelve-hour day. "This is Thursday, isn't it?" I ask
myself. "No, it's only Wednesday." The days all run together.
"It's been seven months since I signed on as plant manager. I've been
hard at it, seven days a week, twelve hours a day. And what do I have to
show for it?
"Why is this plant so tough to
move?" I ask myself. The boss told me it was in bad shape, and
everyone else seemed to agree. But it's been like moving through molasses.
Everything is harder, takes longer, and gets less than enthusiastic
execution. People smile a lot and agree in meetings, and then go back and
do it the same old way.
I review today's events. I walk through the
plant on my way in. The housekeeping is still poor, a sure sign of low
morale. The on-time shipment chart that I insisted on is three days
behind. "A good example of foot dragging when the boss insists upon
something," I tell myself. I pass lots of people hard at work making
parts. These are good people looking for good leadership.
I'm ten minutes late for my 8:00 a.m.
operations meeting. The knot tightens in my stomach when I tune into the
conversation. It's about our production planning system. Haven't we
settled this issue already? It seems to me we've been talking about this
topic forever. Everyone agrees about what we have to do. We just can't get
on with doing it.
The second half of the meeting consists of
each production line head presenting their three-year plans. The first one
is a disaster. I wait for others to speak up—having learned early in my
career that I need to speak last to maximize the input from the group.
Thirty agonizing minutes later we're still doing the corporate minuet. I
ask a few sharp questions and others pick up the scent. "With some
prompting these people are really good," I think. "How do I get
them to prompt themselves?"
But the real issues don't ever get
addressed. We're falling further and further behind in our manufacturing
technology base. We tried a lean manufacturing approach and scrapped it
before I came. Inventory is sky-high and the financial folks are screaming
that we need to cut it in half. Whenever I mention the inventory concerns
everyone just shrugs their shoulders and says, "It can't be
done." Employee turnover is the highest in our industry. We're just
not doing the right things to get and keep a high-quality workforce. I
know these issues will get worse as the competition closes in on us. I
just can't get anyone else to be concerned. The knot in my stomach
tightens still more.
Beginning with a working brown bag lunch,
my afternoon is bumper-to-bumper meetings. I spend one hour with the
production staff of our chief component supplier and our own executive
staff. Then I spend another hour with just the plant manager of that
supplier. We go round and round the same issues. Talk seems to be the
currency of choice in his organization and mine—not action. Neither of
us can get our people to face up to the serious issues confronting us.
Several managers drop by to discuss
personnel issues. These conversations go well, but again, we tend to talk
more than do. We've been talking about replacing one of the production
line heads—the one who made such a poor presentation this morning—for
almost five months.
My shoulders hurt. The pain in my lower
back won't quit. And the knot in my stomach is a constant companion. Home
is a safe haven. Hovering in the foyer is the savory aroma of dinner. I
hear the kids arguing down the hall as a DJ babbles vacuously. My wife is
talking on the phone as I enter the kitchen. Still in her company attire,
she uses her free hand to take a dish from the microwave—waving at me
with a smile. Things seem intact. No paramedics. No police. All is well. I
thumb through the mail, nothing serious there, then pitch right in to move
dinner along: set the table, round up the kids, help my wife get the food
on the table and watch the minutes spin by.
Several roller-coaster conversations and
verbal exchanges later, I have dined, relaxed, pontificated, warned and
even apologized. I shake my head and ask myself, "Have I really done
enough today?" Still, tomorrow is another day.
"Nuts," I think to myself.
"Got to review those policy changes before I hit the hay." I
wave good-night to the family as I trundle off to the den for what has
become my daily after-dinner work session.
In Search of Meaningful Change: The
Ethereal Golden Fleece
The day recounted above never exactly
happened. But versions of it take place every day. Some days are better,
many are worse. They're unfortunately too typical for those of us trying
to create more productive, more satisfying offices, factories and living
rooms.
From the workplace to the community to the
family, we (Jerre and Jim) see real human issues to resolve,
communications to improve and commitments to keep. Everywhere we look
there are people with hopes and dreams, fears and anxieties. Real,
earnest, authentic people with attitudes and stubbornness and nuttiness
and affection who want to be "something" and
"somebody" for other people. These personal human issues play
out on the stage set by traumatic, dramatic changes in industry and
business. The search to be something to somebody becomes even more
complicated by the global business earthquake zone in which we all live.
NOW IS THE HOUR: HEED THE NEED FOR
REVIVOLUTION
We live in an uncertain world. Old
countries and political entities are breaking apart and new ones are
forming. Industries are changing dramatically right before our very eyes.
Jobs we thought were sacrosanct disappear in the twinkling of an eye. We
confront a world in which personal and organizational change is
revolutionary, not evolutionary. That is why we refer to the phenomenon as
"revivolution": renewal through revolution (or rapid evolution
that looks a lot like revolution).
Shopping malls morph into amusement parks.
Amusement parks look like Jurassic Parks. The Web makes it possible to
create multimillion-dollar businesses almost overnight. Corporate giants
are spawned in home basements and garages. Rapid renewal—or revivolution—is
everywhere.
Monumental Change Drives the Need for
Revivolution
Tomorrow arrives too quickly for most of
us. Stuck in the mire of today's rules that no longer work, we flail
around in our search for security. But the answer is right before our
eyes. Invent a new tomorrow and change the rules! The January 1997 edition
of Fast Company reports how Moses Znaimer, the owner of a start-up TV
station in Toronto, Canada, called Citytv, created a whole new set of
rules for television news broadcasting. He created local and interactive
TV that was real-time with real people. Instead of talking-head news
anchors who read TelePrompTers to audiences, Citytv offers television
where the street is the studio and the real-time experience is the
program. People love it. When the rules don't allow you to do what you
think is best to do, change the rules. Moses Znaimer did!
And it's not just businesses that
revivolute. Today, churches don't act like conventional churches in many
places. They meet in huge community centers—or drive-in movie locations.
They provide a variety of creative enterprises where members participate,
create, learn and meet others. They use the Internet—and cruise the
streets in vans to reach out in mobile high-tech and high-touch
configurations to meet the needs of people who can't/won't come to them.
If Muhammad won't come to the mountain, the mountain will come to
Muhammad.
Jack Welch, chairman of General Electric
Company, recently said: "If your change isn't big enough,
revolutionary enough, the bureaucracy can beat you." He recognizes
the need for monumental change that overrides our own mind-sets that cling
to the security of today. Welch's monumental change, in turn, drives the
need for revivolution.
Businesses regularly get blindsided by new
competitors, new technology, new industries or a sudden shift in what
customers value. Banks—and bank tellers—disappear, new automobile
nameplates emerge like weeds in a garden, plants open and then close again
in the twinkling of an eye. Individuals are similarly surprised by radical
changes in jobs and markets. We can be sure of only one thing. The
head-spinning rate of global, technical, social and personal change will
continue to accelerate. Incremental adjustments will never be enough.
Phone-Genesis: Revivoluting at the Speed
of Sound and the Death of Distance
A September 1995 special supplement of The
Economist pointed out that this is the best of times for
telecommunications firms. Everywhere around the world people are
scrambling to get a telephone. Millions of new subscribers—both wireless
and wired—join the rate-payer rolls every year. Prices often rise faster
than costs, yielding large profits for many telco firms.
Yet this is also the worst of times for
telco organizations. Tomorrow is coming too fast for most of them. As the
world telecommunications companies deregulate, there is a competitor
hiding under every rock. Everyone wants a piece of the $500 billion global
market. In the U.S., competition for the local franchise includes not only
the local telcos, like Southwest Bell, and national telco firms, like
AT&T, but also international telco firms, like British Telcom. And
that's just counting telephone companies. To that witches' brew of
competition across the world add cable companies (Time Warner and TCI),
electric utility companies (Utilicorp), railroads (Deutsche Railroad),
water companies, banks (Societ Generale), software/hardware computer
companies (Microsoft and Intel) and even chemical companies (Bayer). From
a monopoly market, telecommunications is becoming a classic free-for-all
market of which Adam Smith would be proud.
The increase in competitors fuels the
switch from scarcity to glut in communications capacity. Counting the
rapidly expanding wireless capacity, less than one fifth of the total
global telecommunications capacity is currently utilized.
The telecommunications cost structures pose
another strategic challenge. Operations costs continue to fall. Already
the cost of a call from New York to New Delhi is about the same as a call
to the neighborhood pizza place. When telephone costs are no longer
distance-related, tariffs will inevitably change. The time-related,
distance-related rate structure will likely disappear. You'll pay as much
to call for that pizza delivery as you will to talk to Uncle Ivan ten time
zones away across the pond and half a continent beyond.
All of these swirling changes pose the
potential for a major price war in the telco business. The war is already
underway. Consider what's happened in the long-distance business in
America. Rates are cheaper now in real terms than they were in 1984. And
mailboxes are filled with mail from AT&T, from MCI, from Sprint urging
you to switch to them for your local service. Telemarketers call twice a
week, offering free weekend calls and other incentives to switch local and
long-distance service.
The old-line telcos who die by atrophy or
as war casualties will do so because they were unable to revivolute
themselves to create new organizational forms. Incremental change in
service offerings and products will only work for so long. Without both
organizational and individual monumental change from the inside, there
will continue to be many resumes out on the street that list telco
experience.
Metal-Genesis: Revivolution in the Big
Steel Business
The steel business has been through the
revivolution mill. Originally, the huge, integrated steel companies set up
near the sources of their raw material. The plants turned out semifinished
products that went to customers for finishing. Big steel was essentially
in the commodity business. Managers ran tight, centrally managed
hierarchical organizations.
Japan attacked first, using new and more
efficient technology to produce the same commodity. Then Korea combined
newer technology with cheaper labor. For a while, it looked as though the
American steel industry was dead. But along came the new mini-mill
industry, complete with a whole new way of doing business, characterized
by a flat organization centered around the needs of the customers it
served.
Mini-mill operators bought recycled scrap,
used computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing, and produced
finished products to customer specifications. Scrap steel was available
almost everywhere, so they could move closer to their customers. They
encouraged employee empowerment, which led to dramatic productivity
improvements. Today, mini-mill operators, like Chaparral and Nucor, not
only produce more steel than the integrated steel companies, they also
rank high on the "Most Admired Corporation" list—a feat never
accomplished by US Steel and Bethlehem.
Avoid the Quicksand of Incremental
Improvement: Improving Today Almost Never Creates a Successful Tomorrow
Most organizations fail largely because
they are focused on incremental improvements of the present, not a
revivolution creation of the future. General Motors invested $121.8
billion in capital equipment and research and development during the
1980s, only to see its stock value fall $22.9 billion in the same period.
We jokingly recall the picture of robots spray-painting other robots in
Roger Smith's "Factory of the Future" as the classic example of
misguided investments.
The General Motors experience exemplifies
the need for revivolution and why investments in improving the present
don't pay off. In the automobile business, as in many others, hectic speed
and quantity of change create a deceptive illusion of dramatic
improvement. Actually, most organizations are only making incremental
changes at a whirlwind pace. The carousel whizzes by on spin cycle, and
people think: "Wow. I'm really going places!" Not the case.
Revivolution spans the face of economic,
political and organizational life. Everywhere we turn, every institution
in our lives cries out for revivolution—now.
THESE ARE THE BEST OF TIMES—FOR
REVIVOLUTING FUTURES!
We live in a time of unparalleled abundance
and prosperity. A 1996 study by David W. Moon for Barron's reveals that
Americans today enjoy not only the highest standard of living, but also
more disposable income than any preceding generation. Family income,
adjusted for inflation, grew steadily throughout the 1980s. Real
disposable income per capita rose steadily throughout the past two
decades.
America is the job creation envy of the
world. We've created more than 70 million new jobs since 1970, at least 10
million of them in this last half decade alone. And these are not
"hamburger-flipping" jobs, either. More than 60 percent of the
new jobs are high-paying managerial and professional positions.
All of this job creation goes on despite
headline-grabbing stories about "downsizing." A recent
black-bordered Newsweek cover story "Job Killers" is just plain
wrong. Announced downsizings totaled 3 million workers since 1989.
Compared to the 10 million new jobs, that means a net gain of 7 million
new jobs, better than all the countries in Europe combined in the same
time period. For instance, former AT&T CEO Bob Allen announced 40,000
reductions (which later shrank to 24,000). However, in the last decade, in
the same industry, MCI added 36,000 new jobs and Sprint 25,000. IBM cut
135,000 people during the 1990s. In 1996, they hired 10,000 new people.
The bottom line: America's unemployment rate—about 5 percent—is less
than half that of the rest of the world. There are lots of high-paying
jobs out there.
Americans are earning more, too. Real wages
increased 9.3 percent since 1959, while wages as a percent of total income
rose from 68.6 to 73.1 percent. So wage earners like you and me are
getting a larger share of the economic pie these days. More important,
real per capita personal income rose an average of 3.7 percent every year
in the 1990s, enabling just about all of us to buy more of the things we
like.
As a result of this economic prosperity,
more and more poor people make it into the middle and upper class today
than ever before. A University of Michigan study found that over a
fifteen-year period (from 1974 to 1991) only one in twenty poor Americans
stay poor, thirteen become middle-class, and six become rich. The U.S.
Treasury found similar results. That's the best upward mobility rate ever.
But good-paying jobs rely upon education.
The pay difference between those with and without college degrees
continues to widen. In 1979, there was a 49 percent wage difference
between college and noncollege wages. Today that difference is 89 percent.
The message: if you want a brighter future, go to school. That's a good
news message, though, because more educational opportunities exist in the
United States than anywhere else in the world.
JOIN THE REVIVOLUTION: FOLLOW THE
FOOTPRINTS OF OTHER REVIVOLUTING INDIVIDUALS
Many people are enlisting in the
revivolutionary army. They are proactively, revolutionarily creating new
futures for themselves. Are you ready to join up? Follow these footprints.
The Surplus Executive Finds a New Home
Imagine the challenge confronting Ned, a
fifty-eight-year-old marketing executive laid off from a large company.
Ned spent all of his thirty-six years of gainful employment with large
organizations. He found that large organizations don't often hire people
his age for executive positions.
He finally found a spot with a much smaller
organization. He told us, "It's sort of like it used to be in my old
organization, with one basic difference. I know now that every day I have
to sell something, make something, ship something and collect
something—or I don't eat. There is no big Deep Pockets Daddy to finance
me for a while or some assistant to make my calls or prepare my handouts.
I've got to rely upon doing it myself—every day." Ned revivoluted
himself in order to create his future in the midst of continuous upheaval.
New Life Chasing White Balls on the
Greens
Dan was forty-seven when we met him—a
senior vice president for information technology for a major money center
bank. Dan had it all: a top job in a cutting-edge profession with a
growing company, and a new beautiful wife and three wonderful children.
Two years later we encountered Dan at an information technology
conference. He still had the beautiful wife and family, but was now with
another company. "My former company decided to outsource IT, so I
became excess baggage. A great outplacement package enabled me to land
with this smaller company, at just about what I was making, with a real
opportunity to make a difference. My family loves the new location. I'm
set for life."
Maybe. But "life" turned out to
be a lot shorter than Dan was thinking about. We ran into him at a
restaurant recently and got caught up on his activities. "I left that
company within a year. They wanted ninety hours a week from me. It was too
much. Talked it over with my wife and kids and decided that life was too
short to invest that much in somebody else's future. Why not invest it in
my own, we figured. I quit the job and went to golf school to become a pro
golfer. At age fifty-one I decided to do what I've always wanted to
do—play and teach golf. Cut back on our expenses and lived on our
savings for the year I went to school. Now I'm the assistant pro at the
big course in town and loving every minute. Come on out and play a few
holes. Who knows what you might decide to do."
Talk about revivoluting. Dan seized the
moment and created his own future.
Do I Have to Go Back and Sit in a
Classroom Again?
We met Jonathan at a seminar some years
ago. He was almost forty years old and had worked his way up to a
mid-level management position at a large industrial naval installation in
town. But he was unhappy. "I've been marking time for the past ten
years. I've just got to do something else. There's talk of privatizing the
base, or moving our work to some other location. I could be on the
street—and not know what to do."
We urged him to consider one of several
education programs that might give him a non-navy perspective and set of
skills as well as getting him into a network of people working in the
private sector.
"What, you want me to go back to
school?" he exclaimed. "It's been eighteen years since I've sat
in a classroom. I don't think I can do it." Much conversation later,
Jonathan agreed to talk to an MBA admissions counselor.
Jonathan dropped off the radar screen for
several years, until we ran into him in a shopping mall. We shared a cup
of coffee and his revivolution story. He signed up for and completed the
Executive Masters of Business Administration program. He applied a number
of ideas to improve his section at the base that he developed as part of
his master's, got recognized by the captain and then the admiral for his
improvements and wound up leading the reinvention task force team.
"It was the biggest kick in my entire
life. I got several offers from folks in private industry. One finally was
too good to pass up. I'm leaving next weekend to begin my new life in
Oklahoma."
We smiled as we went looking for our family
members in the mall. We midwifed another successful revivoluteer.
So, You Think One Person Can't Make a
Difference, eh? Ask Carol About That
Carol worked as a technical writer for a
large engineering/architecture firm. She was good at what she did. But it
didn't bring her much joy. Her boss was very supportive. "Why don't
you try your hand at design," she suggested. Carol did a little
design work on a project and liked it (as did the architect on the
project).
Carol signed up to go to evening school to
learn design. Six long years later, balancing night school, a day job and
a growing family, Carol finally graduated and became state-certified. Just
recently we saw an article in the local paper that Carol's firm won the
"orchid of the year" award for the best-designed building, and
Carol was mentioned as the project designer. Who says one person can't
make a difference? Carol did!
Calling the Doctor: Information Please
Greg was an impressive figure sitting in
the rear of the seminar room at the executive MBA class we recently
taught. With a full head of silver hair, an easy smile and a soft and
reassuring voice, it was easy to see why he ran one of the most successful
gynecology practices in town. Why was he in this expensive, intensive,
self-paid two-year education program?
He told us. "I've been delivering
babies in this town for almost twenty years, and get Christmas cards from
more than a thousand people every year. But I make less today to deliver a
baby than I did twenty years ago, while my expenses are up more than 2,000
percent. Beyond the money, the practice has changed. People are less
courteous, more demanding, less willing to listen to advice. It's just not
as much fun anymore. I'm going to open a chain of stores providing
products, services and information oriented toward middle-aged women. My
wife and I researched the field and decided that there is a huge unmet
need out there. More importantly though, this will give us a chance to
recapture our life together. We're not getting any younger, and if we
don't do it now I'm afraid that we'll be too locked into the practice to
give it up. At forty-seven these flowers can still bloom in a new
garden."
We'd wager that the fragrance from their
revivoluting blossoms fills the air. By the way, he's one of six
physicians in that class, all looking to use the lever of additional
business education to revivolute themselves into new careers.
Pink Cadillacs and Green Dollars
Then there's the woman who took her life
savings of $5,000 and renewed her personal and professional world. After
working for years in direct sales, she launched a new life as an
entrepreneur, opening a small storefront. She later became an author. She
branched out into helping other women become financially independent and
personally more fulfilled. Today, that little family business has grown to
a nearly $2 billion cosmetics company with an international presence. Her
name: Mary Kay Ash. Her company: Mary Kay Cosmetics. She is one of Forbes
magazine's "Greatest Success Stories of All Time." She now
devotes her time to helping other women become the beautiful living
legends they deserve to be.
Right, I can hear you saying. That's just a
once-in-a-blue-moon experience.
But think again. Today there are 3.5
million female-owned, home-based businesses in the United States,
employing 14 million people on a full- or part-time basis. And they're
making very good money.
Leading Active Revivoluteer Lives
We—Jerre and Jim—have lived active
revivoluteer lives ourselves. One of us started out in personnel in a
large company. (Actually yearning to be a teacher, just like Dad, but
didn't because of a severe stuttering problem.) Then revivoluted into a
college professor (after taming the stuttering somewhat), researcher and
writer. All the while maintaining a strong business connection, working as
both a consultant and business owner. In retrospect, both of us have
revolutionarily revived our careers at least half a dozen times in the
course of forty-five years. For us, revivolution is a personal way of
life.
THE PHOENIX METAPHOR FOR REVIVOLUTIONARY
SELF-RENEWAL
"Okay, okay," you say. "I
got it. I've got to revivolute—change dramatically. But I've tried that
before and failed. I've quit smoking nineteen times. I've been on
seventeen crash diets that only add inches to my waist line. How do I
revivolute?"
Look around you for the answer.
Self-renewal is the way. See self-renewal in living color blossoming
before your eyes. From the ever-renewing sunrise to the season-changing
colors on the trees, we live a life that continuously rejuvenates
itself—and ourselves. Renewal is a natural and permanent part of life.
Plants renew themselves. People renew themselves. Organizations renew
themselves. Revivolute yourself through self-renewal.
Now is the time for self-renewal. Robin
Williams standing on desktops in Dead Poets Society shouting, "Carpe
Diem"—seize the day. There is no time like the present. We live in
good times—good economic times, and good times to move on to new lives.
One executive we know told us recently, "I'm going to die in six
months. Not a physical death. But my life in this job will end in six
months. Once I complete the projects on which I'm working—and that will
take about six months—I will stop doing what I'm doing. I will have made
the last big payment on my retirement annuity. The last child will be out
of school. At fifty-two, it's time to think about what I want to do with
the rest of my life. I may take on another role in this organization, may
keep the same role but change the way I think and do this job. I may move
on to another organization or change professions altogether. Whatever I
do, it won't be what I'm doing now." The same "What do I want to
do with the rest of my life" question resounds over and over again in
executive suites, plant floors, classrooms and living rooms. The answer to
the question will be found in the pages of this book.
The Phoenix is the mythical symbol of the
continually renewing life force. Throughout history and across many
different cultures, humans have told stories about, fantasized about and
worshiped the forever-renewing Phoenix. Each culture paints a similar
picture of the self-renewing Phoenix: beautiful sunrise-sunset gold and
crimson feathers, a bird which renews itself, a soaring spirit that
periodically emerges in newly re-created forms. The great scarlet and
purple creature continually soars past its yesterdays on its way to
brighter tomorrows. For all of humankind's history, the Phoenix embodied a
core attribute of time and life itself: the renewal of all living things.
The Phoenix is a symbol of hope for the future—and of our enduring
capacity to create infinitely better tomorrows for ourselves and others.
The Roman poet Ovid wrote: "There is
one bird which renews itself out of itself. The Assyrians call it the
Phoenix." But there is no need to go back 2,000 years to see examples
of the self-renewing Phoenix. Look at the sun every day or the changing
colors of the leaves and the seasons to see renewal played out in living
color. From the spring festivals of Easter and Passover to the fall and
winter festivals of Thanksgiving, Christmas and Hanukkah, we order our
lives, our work, and our celebrations around the recurring cycle of
renewal.
The economist Joseph Schumpeter talked
about the phoenix-like characteristics of our economic system that
cyclically leaves the "old order" behind in order to create a
better "new order." We believe that this same life cycle exists
for organizations and individuals. In fact, we've seen it, and lived it.
Look around you today and see, feel and
hear self-renewal taking place. Turn every page in this book and you'll
read about self-renewal. It is a constant theme. It represents the
overpowering reality with which we deal, day in and day out, minute in and
minute out. In a world rent by change, Phoenix self-renewal is the path to
a more secure future. Renew, revitalize and re-create yourself. Be a
soaring Phoenix.
PREVIEW OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
To soar, the self-renewing Phoenix utilizes
the five principles discussed on the following pages.
First, Renew Yourself: Create a Future
That Makes a Difference and Leaves a Legacy
"Change an organization"—now
there's an oxymoron. Years of working to "change"
organizations—either our own or others—convince us that
"change" is an elusive rare species, often talked about, seldom
observed and rarely captured. Look around. Read the business press. Talk
to your colleagues. The instances of successful long-term organizational
change are as rare as polar bears in Peru.
Why the poor record? And, given the poor
record, why the repeated efforts? The answer: each and every one of us
shares the deep desire to learn, to grow, to make a difference. We are
filled with the wonder and awe of what can be—along with the terror of
what might be. The questions swirl through heads—and hearts—and dog
our every step. Like a resounding bell in a endless series of valleys,
they echo through waking and sleeping hours. Will tomorrow be better than
today? Will I be better off tomorrow? Will my children? My grandchildren?
Can I make a difference in my life and in the lives of those around me?
What do I want the rest of my life to be like? What do I want my work
environment—my organization—to be like? Can I really make a
difference?
In the answers to those questions lies the
kernel of this book, and our promise of a better tomorrow. We're on a
journey—an exciting adventure into tomorrow. We are optimists. We
believe that earnest, hardworking folks can create their own future, make
it better, leave a mark and help others. We know that one person with
courage can make a revolution. It takes hard thinking and hard working.
Sir Edmund Hillary didn't take a Sunday stroll and wind up at the top of
Mount Everest. We are ready. Are you?
It Is Easier to Create Tomorrow than Change
Today. Everywhere we look, there's a need to change: "The morning
bathroom line is killing me: we need a bigger house. The car is rattling:
time to trade in and up. Why can't the children get better grades in
school and be better behaved? Got to change their attitude. The job looks
dicey: better look into changing jobs before the reduction in force
comes."
On and on it goes. Change rears its ugly
head in every aspect of our lives.
We busy ourselves trying to "change
things." Virtually every change effort begins with a simple
assumption that colors everything: we can change what other people do. At
home, we micromanage the kids, grounding them when they misbehave or get
poor grades, and even do their homework with them to make certain it's
correct and gets turned in on time. At work, we install customer service
programs to change the way employees treat customers. We adopt
simultaneous engineering to change the way engineers develop products. We
establish lean manufacturing techniques to change the way production
workers produce products. We reengineer systems to change the way people
process the reams of data in our world. All these efforts rely upon the
simple assumption that we can change the way people perform.
"Nonsense," shouts the more than
a century of experience between us. Rather than attempting to change an
ongoing situation, we've discovered that it is far easier to create a
brand-new one. "Green field" organizations and situations almost
invariably are more successful. Yet we go merrily on our way trying to
"change things." "Insanity is doing the same things and
expecting different outcomes," Einstein said. Judged by that
standard, most of us are certifiably insane.
Self-renewal Is Job No. 1. Nothing is
forever. Today's star is forgotten tomorrow. Today's market leaders become
tomorrow's also-rans. Yakov Smirnoff is an example of successful
self-renewal. The Russian comedian, of "Oh, What a Country!"
fame, had a very successful career in the 1980s—a weekly sitcom, parts
in several movies and a highly visible Best Western commercial. His
satirical way of looking at things Americans take for granted, combined
with his trademark laughter, made Smirnoff a famous, successful celebrity.
But, as in all businesses, times changed.
The Wall fell, the Soviet Union imploded and being a Russian comedian no
longer had a mystique. The canceled TV show and diminished bookings
convinced Smirnoff that he needed a new act. He moved to Branson,
Missouri, renewed himself and relaunched his career. He's now a very
successful theater operator/performer. Self-renewal was Job No. 1 for
Yakov—and it paid off.
Mother Earth's Self-renewal in Bright Red
and Black. Visit the big island of Hawaii and watch the earth renew
itself. On the southeastern side of the island, 3,000-degree lava spills
out of Kilauea destroying tropical forests, covering the land with
smoldering black lava and creating hundreds of acres of new land. Just
thirty miles to the north up the coast, too-many-to-count waterfalls spill
the two hundred or more inches of rainfall into the ocean carrying in
their muddy waters the remnants of thousands-of-years-ago lava flows now
softened into rich, fertile soil.
Self-renewal is Job No. 1 for the earth.
Molten rock boils up from beneath the oceans and eventually forms land,
hard crusts of moonscape-like barrenness. The wind, rain and sun weather
the land, transforming the hard rock into fertile soil. Plants, animals,
birds and insects populate the forest, taking it into another renewal
stage. The wind and rain ceaselessly wash the now soft and fertile soil
back into the ocean, causing yet another renewal phase. In time, the land
will disappear again beneath the waves to be renewed in another place and
time.
As it is with the earth, so it is with
humans. In fact, our life's story is the story of continual renewal: from
child to student to husband to parent to grandparent, from engineer to
manager to executive to president to friend. And we're not done yet. We
know the value of continual renewal. We know that we must continue to
create our own future—seize the moment—be in charge. That's why we
choose the Phoenix as the symbol for our book.
Create a Tomorrow That Makes a Difference
and Leaves a Legacy of Which You Can Be Proud. But what kind of tomorrow
is worth creating, worth spending the long hours toiling in the salt
mines? What kind of "new order" do you want? It certainly isn't
the "new order" of the dark ages where civilization almost
disappeared. Neither for us is it the "new order" of fear for
one's job that characterizes so much of the downsizing and right-sizing
that passes for corporate revitalization these days.
What "new order" do we want? Hard
question, easy answer. Like most of you, we yearn to leave a legacy,
something that makes a difference in the world and makes our children
proud to carry our name. We collect our children's prizes and prominently
display them throughout our home and office. We are not unique. A
neighbor's son is a very good soccer player. Soccer trophies decorate
their fireplace. Pictures of their son in action on the soccer field,
along with his numerous "My Child Was Citizen/Scholar of the
Month" bumper stickers, line the guest bathroom walls. Part of their
legacy is their award-winning soccer-playing son.
Our neighbors are no different than
President Bill Clinton, who frets about his place in history, or Jack
Welch, who wants to create a General Electric that continues to grow and
prosper after he leaves. At the deepest point in our souls, each of us
wants to leave something worthwhile behind. We "Soar with the
Phoenix" when we keep creating new futures that will help us leave a
legacy that truly makes a difference.
Second, Plug into Your Connections
Ah, What a Web of Business and Personal
Connections We Weave. We are connected to many people: some we know, most
we don't. Connections tie us together as members in the human family.
Follow the connection lines for Sally, an engineer at Boeing Aircraft.
Sally is connected to other Boeing employees: the eighteen members of her
engine casing development team for the Boeing 747 airplane, the 2,400
members of Boeing's product development department who develop other
components of the 747, the 6,200 product development employees working on
other aircraft like the 737 and the 777, the other 12,400 members of
Boeing's commercial aerospace division, and the balance of Boeing's 42,000
employees. She knows only 500 of her 42,000 Boeing connections, but she is
intimately connected to them all. If one mechanic forgets to complete the
solder on one rivet and that causes one Boeing 747 to fall out of the sky,
Sally's job is at risk—as are all 42,000 employees' jobs.
Sally is also connected to the thousands of
suppliers who provide more than 60 percent of the components that compose
the 747. And she's connected to the airlines who buy 747s and the
airlines' customers (you and me) who occupy those jumbo jet seats. Sally
also has many connections in her home community of Seattle, including
neighbors, teachers, grocery clerks and insurance brokers. Many people
across the world own shares in Boeing, and thus Sally is connected to all
of them.
Sally also has a wide range of personal
connections. She's connected with her primary and extended families.
Friends are important to Sally. Her personal telephone book bulges with
the names of hundreds of fellow MIT graduates. She's active in several
professional associations and those names fill her book as well. Sally
serves on a planning subcommittee in her community. Through that work
she's met a number of the local officials and businesspeople.
Sally's connections are many and complex,
numbering in the hundreds of thousands. She knows personally only a few of
the many people who influence her life and whose lives she touches in one
way or another. Sally is interconnected with others in the way the air
molecules inside a balloon are connected to each other: push one side of
the balloon in and it moves all the molecules around and changes the shape
of the entire balloon. Sally lives in a connected world. We all do.
John Donne, the famous English poet,
articulated connectedness four hundred years ago when he wrote, "No
man is an island." The Internet is today's manifestations of Donne's
poem, where everything is connected to everything and everyone is
connected to everyone. You can't see the Internet, you can't touch it. Yet
the Internet, like the personal and business network connections in which
we all participate, is one of life's most fundamental facts.
All Business Connections Are Personal, and
Personal Connections Are Another Form of Business. People don't buy from a
business. They buy from a person. We buy a car from a salesperson, not a
dealership. After all, there are lots of dealerships selling identical
automobiles. Walk down the street and listen to the pitchmen. Pick out one
you can trust and that's whom you'll do business with. That's true buying
cars, homes and components for 747s. Sally will tell you that. She works
hard to build trust with her customers and her teammates. She delivers
what she promises and works to only promise what she can deliver. Business
is relationships, and all relationships are personal.
"Balance" is a popular word these
days: balance between family and work, between work and exercise, between
career and personal development, according to Sue Schellenberger in the
Wall Street Journal. She cites the example of Randall Tobias, chairman and
CEO of the large pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly, who says: "I don't
want to be defined solely by the boxes I happen to occupy on organization
charts. I also want to be defined as the father of my children." J.
Michael Cook, CEO of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, a large accounting and
consulting firm, said, "I wish that over the years I had more control
over my time and more opportunities to be involved in family things. I
wish I'd understood the importance of that Thursday afternoon soccer game.
. . . At Deloitte we say to people, 'Though client demands drive our days,
we have the flexibility of having multiple clients and the freedom to make
our own schedule and to decide how and where to spend our time. Take
advantage of that flexibility.'"
Those words strike a chord with us. We
understand the importance of balance between personal and business life
all too well. Some years ago we lost our top financial person because his
wife died and he just fell apart. His personal life so impacted his
business life that he lost both. Every day we encounter people struggling
with personal issues that affect their business day. Tobias's words ring
true for us. We, too, want to be more than a box on an organization chart.
Don't we all? We've said words similar to Cook's to ourselves and the
folks with whom we work. As the leaders of our organizations we know that
we must be concerned with the personal as well as the business life of our
teammates. As we'll say repeatedly throughout this book, "You can't
hire a hand, or a brain. You hire the whole person and all of that
person's business and personal connections."
Recognize and Honor Your Connections.
Connectedness and interdependency are not new concepts. We borrow them
from our colleagues in biology and in physics. We see them today, in
living color, as the Internet, read about them as the "network
organization" or the "virtual organization." It's a popular
topic, because beyond the hype, this vital interconnectedness drives a
great deal of our behavior.
Each of us—like Sally—has many
connections that are like ever-widening ripples caused by a stone in a
calm lake. Our point: we live lives connected to many others. These
connections form the framework within which each of us plays our part.
Identify your connections and the role you play in their lives and the
complementary role they play in yours. Leverage these connections to
create a future that leaves a legacy that makes a difference.
Third, Create Success for All Your
Connections
Hands need bodies. People need communities,
nations and this planet. We are all interconnected—and interdependent. A
healthy hand depends on a healthy body. A healthy person depends upon a
healthy community, a healthy nation and a healthy planet. Since we're all
connected, my health depends upon your health. My success, therefore,
depends upon your success. I am as committed to helping you succeed as I
am to helping me to succeed. Isn't that logical? Of course.
That's why good "capitalists" are
concerned about the health and success of employees and community
members—as well as shareholders. James Gwarty, Robert Lawson and Walter
Bark of the Cato Institute point out that free market activities exist
within a democratic context. Research clearly supports the reality of this
interdependence. On the most macro level, economic freedom produces
national prosperity. Political freedom is a necessary prerequisite to
economic freedom. Democracy fosters a market economy that, in turn,
creates prosperity. Political democracy in a community, then, is the
driving force that enables economic prosperity for any given organization
within that community.
Freedom creates the opportunity for people
to generate innovative ways to help customers succeed, while a
totalitarian state limits both the range of options available to create
customer success and the sole customer for whom success must be created:
the state. Successful American business organizations today can thank the
framers of the Constitution two hundred years ago. To ensure their future
success, organizations today must work to strengthen political freedom and
the long-term viability of the market economy.
Take the "create success for
others" mandate to the more personal level. Teaching is the best way
to learn. Medical training is based on the "see one, do one, teach
one" philosophy, where the doctor-in-training sees a procedure done,
does the procedure himself, and then, to reinforce the knowledge, teaches
the procedure to the next group of doctors-to-be. We've learned a lot
about life teaching scouting to our kids. Our wives learned a lot about
faith teaching Sunday school. Helping others learn helps the teacher
learn. What a win-win deal. And a great example of how our "create
success for others" philosophy helps create success for you.
Fourth, Learn More in Order to
Contribute More to Others' Success
"How Safe Is Your Job?" the
headline agonizes from the cover of Fortune magazine. "Job
Killers," the cover of Time wails in angst above the scapegoated
"Rogues Gallery" of corporate presidents who announced
substantial job reductions. From the six o'clock news, to the drive-time
talk shows, to the business press, the media howl of economic instability
reverberates.
Those misleading headlines do, however,
present truth in one regard: gone is the idea that organizations create
job security. Writers of every stripe, from the union press to the
"Capitalist Tool" Forbes, convinced us for years that "The
Company" or "The Union" or "The Government" would
take care of us. Recall the words of Tennessee Ernie Ford's song
"Sixteen Tons": "He mined sixteen tons of Number Nine coal
. . . but he owed his soul to the company store." Is that the job
security we want? Obviously not.
In truth, there never was security in any
job—except the security of indentured servitude that Tennessee Ernie
Ford sang about. Union or nonunion—it never mattered much. There were
jobs in good times and no jobs in bad times. And the bad times came
frequently.
"Okay, okay," you say. "I
see what you mean. I've got to create my own job security. But how do I do
that? It sounds like an impossible task." Make no mistake. It isn't
easy. But it is doable. The solution is simple to articulate, and hard to
do: keep learning more so you can create more value for others.
In the 1960s Sonny Werblin, owner of the
AFL New York Jets, paid an astronomical $400,000 to Joe Namath, a
gimpy-kneed quarterback from Alabama. He was vilified in the press for
spending ten times what other leading quarterbacks were receiving at that
time. Yet, using the draw of Joe Namath's name, Werblin increased season
ticket sales by more than $2 million. What would you do if someone offered
to give you $2 million tomorrow if you could scrape up $400,000 today?
You'd mortgage the house and everything you owned to the max. A 500
percent return in one year is better than the tables at Vegas. Was Namath
worth $400,000? Absolutely. He created value five times his cost for his
"customers"—the owners who paid him and the fans in the seats.
The Namath principle applies in
organizations as well. The best job security in any organization is to
create so much value for others that they see you as essential to their
own success. How do you do that? By learning more. Joe Namath not only had
a strong arm, he also worked hard studying defenses. He worked hard
learning—and it paid off for himself, Sonny Werblin and the millions of
football fans he entertained every Sunday afternoon. Use his
lesson—learn more—to create success for everyone in your
network—including yourself. We will talk about how to do these
easy-sounding but difficult-to-execute activities in later chapters.
Fifth, Take Ownership of Your Company
and Your Life
We hear it all the time. "That's all
well and good for you to say take ownership. After all, you're the CEO.
But I'm a middle manager. I work for a Neanderthal. We just announced a 12
percent reduction in force and I'm not certain I'll make the cut. Look, I
need this job. I've got a mortgage to pay and hungry mouths to feed. I'd
better keep my nose clean and not make waves." Or, "Me? A
leader? I'm just a machinist around here. I just do what they tell me to
do. 'Leave the engineering to the engineers. Just do what you're told,'
the foreman told me last week after chewing me out for making a small
adjustment in my machine to make it easier to use and faster."
Yet who gets hurt when the business goes
south and customers tell us to get lost? Look in the mirror for the
answer. If each and every one of us does not assume responsibility for
making tomorrow different, none of us has a place there.
The old movie High Noon says it best. In
that movie a bunch of bad guys ride into town and cow the merchants. There
are more merchants than bad guys. The merchants have more guns than the
bad guys. But the merchants cannot get themselves together. Along comes
the hero, Gary Cooper. The merchants talk him into saving them. Though he
tries mightily to get them involved in the fight, at high noon there he
is, on that dusty street, packing iron, facing the bad guys alone as the
merchants hide behind their counters.
Of course, Coop the hero wins and the
merchants come out of hiding and cheer him. In a moving ceremony, they
offer him their sheriff's badge. He throws the badge in the dirt. He knows
that without the merchants' taking responsibility for their own
protection, it is only a matter of time until he winds up in a wooden box.
The message of the movie is clear: everyone must assume responsibility for
his or her own success. How to do that is found in the chapters that
follow.
The message is very important. Each and
every one of us can make a difference. You are responsible for your life
and your career success just like each of us—Jerre and Jim—is
responsible for his life. One person can—and will—make a revivolution.
Are you ready?
THE ROAD MAP
The self-renewing Phoenix soars, renewing
its vision, revitalizing its spirit and re-creating its success when it
spreads its leadership wings and takes charge. The self-renewing Phoenix
leads his or her network of interconnected people to create another symbol
of the legacy of continuing success: the Pyramid, itself a symbol of
enduring greatness and creativity. We've divided our book, like ancient
Gaul, into three parts.
Part 1: Introduction to Phoenix Principles.
In this section we spell out the basic principles for becoming a soaring
Phoenix: renewal is the natural way to create a future, we are all
interconnected and interdependent, and creating success for others is the
best way to create success for yourself. The Phoenix soars utilizing these
principles.
Part 2: Phoenix Leadership. We soar like
the Phoenix when we take ownership of our organization and our lives and
become a leader. A soaring Phoenix seizes the moment, takes charge and
helps everyone with whom he is connected achieve their dreams and
aspirations. Phoenix leaders make five critical contributions to the
success of their interdependent, interconnected people: they surface
issues, engage the people, prioritize resources, unleash ownership and
energize learning.
Part 3: The Phoenix Pyramid. The Phoenix
leader then creates the new foundation for future success. That solid new
foundation is represented by a Pyramid, itself a symbol of strength and
creativity. We'll lay out the systematic way a Phoenix leader builds that
solid Pyramid base for the future success of vision, mission, values,
goals, strategies, disciplined management infrastructures, business
processes and communication systems.
Throughout, we'll challenge you to renew
yourself, develop your leadership skills and build your strong Pyramid
base for future success.
Authors' Biases:
Do What Actually Works, Do What's Really
Right
Just so you know. We are primarily
businesspeople. Our focus is: "Does it work?" We are practical
folk, more impressed with the elegance of work ability than the elaborate
articulation of philosophy.
We are also emotional people. We think with
our hearts as well as our heads. We are more concerned with the question
"Is it the right thing to do?" than "Are we doing it
right?" We have often walked away from "good" business
deals because there were "bad" strings attached.
And we are doers. We believe that people
learn by doing, not talking. So, let's get on with the doing.
© 1999 by James A. Belasco and Jerre Stead
Excerpt posted with permission from http://www.twbookmark.com
Many thanks to Time Warner
Bookmark (Little, Brown & Company, Warner Books, A Time Warner
Company) at: www.twbookmark.com.
We appreciate their cooperation with OfSpirit.com to share this chapter of
their book with our visitors for education, entertainment and
empowerment.
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