Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Chapter 74: Lloyd G. “Buzz” Waterhouse, CEO

Overview

Reynolds & Reynolds
Simplify until it fits on one page.
In an increasingly complex world, Buzz Waterhouse, CEO of Reynolds & Reynolds, believes the key to effective leadership is to keep things simple.
“I believe great leaders are great simplifiers,” says Buzz. “After all, leaders lead people, not organizations or companies. And leading people is about gaining understanding, alignment, and support. One of the best ways to do that is to simplify.”
Buzz outlines the three key questions every leader must ask himself:
  1. Does everyone understand the direction you’re headed and how you expect to get there?
  2. Are your people aligned around that direction?
How can you gain their support for the actions needed to move in that direction?
“I try hard to simplify things to their essence,” Buzz says. “My approach to solving any problem is to synthesize the facts until I can find the essence of what the company is trying to do.”
The key to his method: Simplify the business plan until it fits on one side of a sheet of paper.
“It doesn’t matter whether it’s the most complex business or complicated market, an organization’s core values, or any other critical focus. Simplify it to one page. That way, everyone in the organization is— literally—working from the same page. They see the same picture, and use the same language to talk about the essence of what you’re doing. And then you hammer it home in everything you do.
“In my career, I’ve worked with leaders who have been extraordinarily-good as simplifiers in the most complex, global businesses you can imagine. That ability makes an enormous difference. I’ve also worked with leaders who made the simplest business too complex, and it drove most of us nuts. It also made us less effective.
“Both experiences have stayed with me and reinforced the same lesson: A leader’s ability to simplify is a powerful way to focus people on the essence of what you’re doing.”
Reynolds & Reynolds serves automobile retailers with information technology and software. The technology enables these dealerships to manage their businesses more robustly and connect seamlessly with car companies and with consumers.
Recently they developed a new technology platform that captures a comprehensive picture of an automobile retailer’s entire business and all the touch points with consumers—from the first visit to the dealer’s Web site to the service reminder after 40,000 miles.
Following his philosophy of “keep it simple,” Buzz and his executive-team managed to articulate the new generation of solutions—and the company’s approach to the market—on one side of a single sheet of paper.
“We displayed the essence of what Reynolds offered by grouping solutions around the circumference of a wheel,” says Buzz.
“Each section of the wheel, like a slice of pie, represents a department in a dealership and a set of corresponding solutions from Reynolds. Adjacent slices on the wheel are linked, and together form a comprehensive, integrated array of technology solutions that match a customer’s total business needs.
“That sounds pretty basic, I know, but the wheel takes two complex businesses—ours and the dealership—and simplifies both. All I have to do is mention the wheel, and everyone in the organization knows the reference point. This simplifies the essence of how we meet the customers’ needs and creates value for them in every part of their auto dealership—from sales and leasing, to insurance and financing, to parts and service.”
Buzz concludes: “I recall reading a comment made by Einstein. He said, ‘Always simplify things to the greatest extent possible, and not one bit more.’ That seems like a pretty good formula for business success.”

Chapter 18: Terdema Ussery, President and CEO

Overview

Dallas Mavericks
Have a vision and translate that vision to everybody in the organization with passion and conviction.
“The key to leadership is to have a vision and translate that vision to everybody in the organization with passion and conviction,” says Dallas Mavericks CEO Terdema Ussery.
When he was appointed CEO of the team in 1997, he quickly announced his vision to make the Dallas Mavericks “the best sports entertainment company in the country.”
With the emphasis on entertainment, the most important measurement of success is fan satisfaction—did the fan have a great experience watching the game?
One of his innovative ideas for soliciting customer feedback was to put his personal e-mail address up on the scoreboard at home games. Fans were told, “If you send an e-mail, we will get back to you personally by the end of that day. If we don’t, then don’t support us.”
Says Terdema, “One fan sent an e-mail in the first quarter saying he couldn’t find the game on TV. I called our broadcast partner, and together we called the fan at home within ten minutes of receiving his e-mail. We then showed him how to get the game on his TV. He could not believe that we had called him personally.”
Another improvement came from fan feedback when attendees at home games complained that seats in the upper level were too far away to hear the game. “The solution was to mike the rims and floor so people in the upper level could hear every slam dunk and sneaker squeak.”
Also, when people in the upper level complained they could not see the 24-second clock, Terdema bought and had installed a new three sided clock to accommodate them.
“Eleven thousand people sit in the upper levels,” he explains. “The cost of these improvements was minimal, but the impact phenomenal.
“Only your customers can tell you whether you are doing things wrong or right. We listen to them through our e-mail, through which we get comments every day.
“It used to be in the business world that companies didn’t listen. We keep our ear to the ground, hear what people are telling us, and adjust and adapt based on this feedback.”
The results speak for themselves: The Mavericks played to a sell-out crowd in 71 consecutive home games. In addition, in surveys from ESPN and JD Powers, the Mavericks consistently garner top ratings from fans.

Chapter 11: James M. Anderson, President

Overview

Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center
Be nimble in pursuing opportunity.
“Be nimble in pursuing opportunity,” is the leadership advice of hospital president James Anderson. “See opportunity, even in the face of challenges, and adjust strategy to reach goals. Be flexible, adaptive, and responsive.
“At a football game, I happened to meet and talk with an Ohio political leader. He asked why our hospital did not apply for federal funding available to hospitals for special projects.
“Until that moment, I was not aware of this funding source. Within a week, we put together a team to plan an application for funding. We selected the project and submitted a strong request within a few weeks. We received $750,000. This seeding funding helped us launch a major new surgical program for small bowel transplant.”
As an academic medical center, a hospital for children, and a major research center, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center is a complex organization. Jim’s leadership style is to build consensus among the various and sometimes conflicting cultures. He has created business units in which physicians, nurses, and managers work together to define and achieve shared objectives.
“The best outcome for our patients depends on teamwork among health professionals who deliver care and the multitude of others who provide the environment in which care is delivered. Our team must be able to work together for the best interest of our patients, so achieving consensus is a very good idea; it helps if we agree about our goals and methodology.
“I would say that my leadership style is to be a good listener and to seek consensus when possible. My willingness to listen and learn, and to work to achieve consensus, is not the same as abandoning the need to make decisions. I seek input from others, but ultimately as president and CEO, I make the decisions and take responsibility for them.”
Jim believes good decisions are based on the facts. But is there a danger of being too reliant on data? What about trusting your gut?
“We collect and analyze data so that we are in the best possible position to make knowledgeable, informed decisions. But data is not a straight jacket. It does not control the decisions. Of course instinct plays a part, as does the recognition that we have a responsibility to the community and to the well being of children.
“For example, in recent years our community has experienced a crisis-in the availability of mental health services for adolescents, because adult hospitals that had offered psychiatric services for teens closed their inpatient units due to low reimbursement rates.
“We understood the data as well as they did, but we recognized that Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center has an obligation to the community. As others abandoned their responsibility, we filled the gap.
“Not only did we expand psychiatric services on our main campus, but we also purchased and renovated a facility and staffed up to open a specialized hospital for residential psychiatric care. Instinct tells me that ultimately, our stepping up to the plate to meet the community need will be in our best interest, even if business data does not support that perception.”
Additional leadership advice from Jim Anderson:
  • Listen. Do not jump to conclusions.
  • Focus on growth and vision.
  • Build a leadership team that can work together.
  • Be nimble. Be ready to seize opportunities.
  • Recognize mistakes early and correct them.
  • When there are obstacles, look for alternative pathways to the goal.
  • Never compromise organizational ethics for economic gain.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Leadership Secrets

A good leader makes sure he is surrounded by the right people.
“Success is not achieved totally by leadership alone,” says Gene Abbott, CEO of contracting firm Abbott and Associates. “A good leader makes sure he is surrounded by the right people, that there are open lines of communication in all matters, and that there is a strong commitment by all.

“I have been a mechanical contractor for 34 years. One of our more prominent projects was the TARP project, better known as The Deep Tunnel, for the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago.
“The project was 300 feet below grade level, and all of our heating and cooling equipment and material had to be lowered to that level. It was to be installed, at an elevation of 55 feet, in an equipment room the size of a football field.

“I received a call that we had a serious problem. The room was equipped with a permanently installed overhead crane, which was in the way of our scaffolding.

“After several meetings, we were able to convince the tunnel coordinators of the necessity to build an extension platform from the overhead crane. We then used this platform to assemble and install our equipment above the elevation of the crane. Through leadership, communication, and dedication, we took a critical situation and turned it into a positive result that was appreciated by all

“Another significant project for us was the Argonne National Laboratory in Lemont, Illinois. The facility is for scientific use and has a one-and-a-half mile circumference.

“Our contract was for $6 million. Once the project got underway, there were interferences due to design and having available access to move productivity.

“Through our communication, leadership, and dedication, our team managed to take 13 sections of this facility and orchestrate them as one typical section. This process allowed us to fabricate all the material on a typical basis, to be aggressive, and to have the material already in place before the facility was even roofed.

“The Argonne people were awed by our hard work and dedication to be so far in advance of the project schedule. In fact, we were recognized and thanked personally for our performance, not only for our work on the project, but also for the safety that was instilled. Argonne prepared a safety video, using our personnel’s performance and exhibits, which was mailed to every Argonne facility in the world.”

Gene’s conclusion: “Only through one’s willingness and dedication to give one’s self, and strive solely to be the best, not the biggest, can one become a better leader.”

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