Read Taking People With You: The Only Way to Make Big Things Happen Paperback Online
Authors: David Novak
Exercises
1. Consider your responses above: Are you doing all you can to build know-how and expand your IQ?
2. Do you seek out opportunities to build your know-how? Think about the people you interact with on a regular basis and ask yourself:
I believe leadership is a privilege. I also believe deep down in my bones that all people, when given a choice, have an inherent desire to do the right thing, to contribute, and to make a positive difference through the work that they do. And I’m absolutely convinced that it’s crucial to have this mind-set in order to get the most out of the people you work with. As a matter of fact, I believe that there is potential in every person, and as the leader, it’s my job to unleash it.
To put it another way, if there are distrust and bad feelings among the people you work with, is it any wonder that business suffers? I’ve often told the story about how, when I became president of KFC, I inherited not only a business in decline, but a system that was full of animosity. For a whole host of reasons (not the least of which was a pending contract dispute) the company’s leadership and the franchisees simply didn’t like or trust each other. I may have been new to KFC, but I understood right off that none of us was going to be successful in an environment like that.
My first official act as president was to get together with my executive team and let them know things had to change. I told them that I understood how hard things had been. “But,” I said, “I want you to know something, I love working with franchisees. And from now on we’re going to trust our franchisees. Fighting isn’t doing either side any good. We might have some bad franchisees, but most of them put their blood, sweat, and tears into growing the KFC business, and one thing
I know for sure is, they don’t like losing any more than we do. So I don’t want to hear anything bad about them.”
Next I had to convince the franchisees that it was a new day, so I went out to all nine of their regional association meetings and asked what
they
would do if they were in charge. I broke them into groups, and each group had to come back and present its ideas. Then I just sat back and listened.
That was the beginning of a new relationship. And I truly believe that if I hadn’t started things off this way, what came next would never have happened. The two things that are largely credited with turning around KFC during my time as president from 1994 to 1997 are the introductions of two popular new products: Crispy Strips and the Chicken Pot Pie. And both of these products came about only because we had a more open relationship with our franchisees. Crispy Strips started because a franchisee down in Arkansas created, on his own, a freshly prepared chicken strip that helped boost his business by 9 percent. When I heard about this, we took the first plane down to have a look. We not only loved his product, but he took us to his supplier, who worked with our R&D team to get enough supply so we could roll the product out across the United States.
Our Chicken Pot Pie also was a result of working closely with franchisees. I created what I called our Chef Council, composed of franchisees who had a passion for making great food. We’d start taste-testing new recipes at 9:00
A.M.
and eat so much some of us had to take a nap in the afternoon! One of the Chef Council members came up with a recipe for a pot pie that started the ball rolling for another big success.
The thing is, this helped make my career. Crispy Strips and our Chicken Pot Pie hugely boosted sales and led to other new products that did the same. KFC started growing again and almost doubled profits in just three years. And I got the credit for turning around a brand that had been losing for a long time. That success earned me a reputation for leadership that put me in a position to eventually run Yum! Brands. If you ask the finance people what ignited the business, they will tell you it was the new products, but my answer would be that it was a triumph of human spirit. It all started with one simple
decision: to trust franchisees. That opened the way for them to trust me and the corporation in return, and together we unleashed the power of our people to succeed.
MIND-SET CHECKWHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU PUT YOUR FAITH IN PEOPLE?“Give people an inch, and they’ll take a mile.” versus
“Believe in people, and they’ll believe in you in return.”
The thing people don’t realize about trusting others is how much it can expand the possibilities for success. The following are some examples of how the simple act of putting one’s faith in people has led to big financial success:
They Do Things Even They Didn’t Know They Could Do:
Early in his career, David Cote, now CEO of Honeywell International, had a new job running a chemical factory when, just three weeks after he started, one of the manufacturing guys came to him and said, “We just found an air permitting problem, and we’re going to have to shut down that operation for two weeks.” Cote was still just getting his footing in his new position, and as he told me, “Other than a high school chemistry class, I’d never had anything to do with chemistry.” So he had no idea how to solve the problem. What he did know, however, was that there was no way things could be shut down for that long. “So,” Cote recalled, “all I told him was that I refused to accept that.” Instead, Cote suggested he get everyone together in a room who might be able to help and, in twenty-four hours, he wanted an
answer as to how they could make sure a two-week shutdown didn’t happen while still complying with the air permits.
The manufacturing guy looked at Cote and told him it was impossible, but Cote stuck to his position. “I remember walking out of there thinking,
Oh man, I don’t know what else to do,
” Cote said. “
I just hope I’m right that they can figure this thing out.
” The next day Cote arrived early, thinking of how to manage the shutdown, and found that his faith had not been misplaced. Not only had the team come up with a way to fix the problem that wouldn’t require a shutdown, the new solution was going to cost them $200,000 less than their original plan. Even Cote was amazed. He said to me, “That really stuck with me, because it shows that teams don’t always know everything that they’re capable of.”
They Become More Invested in Their Work:
I met leadership expert Ken Blanchard in 2000 at a KFC franchisee meeting, where he talked about the importance of creating a people-first culture within an organization in order to bring the concept of customer focus to life. After all, you can reach your customers only through your people, so you better hire great ones, train them well, and empower them to satisfy your customers. I liked what he had to say so much that I invited him to come to speak at one of our top-management meetings in Louisville, where he told a story about how Ritz-Carlton trained its hotel employees to handle customer complaints and gave them a $2,000 discretionary fund that they could use to satisfy customers without having to get anyone’s permission first. We liked the idea so much, we brought it to Yum! and developed what we called a Customer Mania training program, which taught front-of-house
employees how to listen to customers, be empathetic to their issues, recover from mistakes, and exceed expectations within reason. It also included a policy whereby restaurant employees could use up to $10 to help resolve customer issues on the spot without having to call for a manager. It had a huge impact on team members, who felt respected and empowered, and in turn, on customers, who felt their issues were being handled better and faster. (Ken Blanchard was so taken with our approach to building a new company that he even wrote a book about us called
Customer Mania: It’s Never Too Late to Build a Customer-Focused Company,
which was published in 2004!)
They Rise to the Occasion
: Stephen Burke remembers with trepidation the time when he was first asked to go to Paris to be the president of Euro Disney. The park had been open for only six months, and it was “in terrible shape,” as he described it to me. “We looked at the numbers and realized that if we didn’t do something very dramatic,” he explained, “not only were we going to lose half a billion dollars the first year, but it was going to get worse because interest was going to compound.” It was clear that what they had wasn’t working, and what they had was a lot of Americans who had been sent over from Orlando to build the park and staff it. They were essentially using the Orlando handbook to manage the park in Paris, so Steve and his team decided to send the Americans home. In their place, they gave big promotions to a lot of young Europeans and encouraged them to figure
out how to run the park so that it would please their European customers. “That was the single smartest thing we did,” Steve told me. “It completely changed the company and unleashed a lot of enthusiasm. The thing it really taught me is that if you have people who are really in touch with the customer, if you have people who are excited about what they do, give them the keys, because if you do, they’ll do the right thing nine times out of ten.”
If you can establish an environment where every single person feels that they are part of a team and have a chance to contribute, you’ve created a situation where people can do great things. To build an environment like this, you have to start with trust.
Reaching out to people and building relationships based on trust might seem like a natural idea, but how do you do it? This is not the sort of thing they typically teach in business school. Below are things you can do to show people that you believe in them and that you care.