Skip to main content

A New Conversation with Jack Welch

Burn out is theoretical, psychological, a fuzzy thing. Burn out is standing at a lathe for 10 hours doing the same thing. (In) an exciting job, you are turned on every minute and wanting more and more and more.... Jack Welch

Jack Welch has never been one to pussyfoot around when it comes to discussions of leadership, and he doesn’t break from form during a lively give-and-take with MIT Sloan Dean David Schmittlein and an audience of Sloan students.

Schmittlein starts with a series of questions involving the reasons why some top corporations lose their market leadership positions. “Complacency and arrogance,” Welch believes, clearly lie behind these drops in stature -- believing you “know it all” when in fact you always have to “know somebody’s doing it better than you.” Managers and their staff must understand “somebody’s always shooting at you,” and “you have to always find a better way of doing it.”




















When Schmittlein suggests a “worthwhile purpose” may help motivate people in any organization toward a goal, Welch says forget social responsibility as a mission: “Your obligation is to win, because it’s after you have resources and money that you can give back.” Management “fads” such as “thinking and dreaming time” (this means you, Google) don’t strengthen businesses long-term, believes Welch. Just innovate and produce better products that can beat the competition.

In tough times, such as the recent recession, a company’s challenge “is to come out stronger than when it came in,” and managers must acknowledge not only that “it’s awful,” but “what it will look like on the other side.” Some “jackass” CEOs like to launch major change during such periods, but fail to “explain to people what’s in it for them.” Key to setting a direction and maintaining it through the inevitable bumps of economic and political change, says Welch, is “the right team,” where everyone knows their roles, and how they are performing. This means committing to a process of “differentiation,” where top, middling and failing employees learn exactly where they stand in the eyes of top management, and get compensated (or terminated) on the basis of ability. It’s “cruel” not to be brutally honest with employees, believes Welch. People can make mistakes, of course, but concealment is an error, and admission of failures while risk-taking a kind of heroism. “Never punish someone for taking a swing,” Welch says. And he doesn’t buy the idea of “burn out,” because this simply doesn’t happen in exciting jobs where you’re “turned on every minute, and always want more.”

To a student who wonders if the right way to enter the job market involves “blending in and not rocking the boat,” Welch simply responds: “Yuck, yuck, yuck.” For tips and an in-depth education on managing and winning, Welch suggests visiting his new online MBA program, the Jack Welch Management Institute.

Source: http://mitworld.mit.edu/video/916
April 26, 2011
Running Time: 0:57:40

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Moving from Basic DAD Scrum Based LifeCycle to Continues Delivery (Kanban Based) Lifecycle

I was thinking what the title of this blog post could be, I had couple of options to select from and decided to use a title that uses Disciplined Agile (DA 2.0) Lifecycle. Other options for titles were: Moving From Scrum to Kanban From High Performing Scrum Teams to Hyper Performing Kanban  The bottom line is that at some point you may want to move away from Time boxes to a flow of work and service oriented teams and improve performance and throughput without massive and sudden organisational change.  As always, I only share my experience and this may not apply to all situations, context is important.  Another reason that I selected “Moving from Basic DAD Scrum Based LifeCycle to Continues Delivery (Kanban Based) Lifecycle” as the title, was that for many it is a question mark how to navigate through DAD life cycles. and I think this blog post could be one of the ways to navigate.  Context: A Delivery Team started with Type A Scrum with 2 weeks Sprints. After a while,

Stay Fitter

1st edition of Fit for Purpose: How Modern Businesses Find, Satisfy, and Keep Customers from David J Anderson and Alexei Zheglov was published in Nov 2017. They wrote the first edition in 7 weeks during summer 2017. I had a chance to provide feedback to them as they were writing and editing their chapters. The book basically talks about what a product and service is made up of, how customers measure the product or service and what metrics company managers must apply at different levels to be always fit for customer purpose (the Why's of the customer). If I want to summarise the book in one statement, it would be like: Align your business to how your customers measure your product and service. When I was reading the chapters, four guys came to my mind: Peter Drucker, Jack Trout, Eliyahu M. Goldratt and Clayton Christenson. The book reminded me of Peter Drucker; because he once made a profound observation that has been forgotten by many, his observation goes like this: "B

Escalate, Escalate, Escalate!

What is escalation at organizations? Is it a way to solve problems? Is it a way to report things? Is it a way to put more pressure? Is it a CYA technique? What is it? How do you use it at your organization? How other colleagues of yours use escalation? Really, think about it and observe. At IT service companies, leadership measures the performance of IT Help Desk by number of escalated work items over a period of time. The less escalation the better . The reasons are simple: It is cheaper for companies if an IT Help Desk Specialist resolves an issue than an experienced technical specialist at one or two level higher. This is simple math, one gets $X and the other get $X*2 And when client gets result fast, he/she will be happier. So, less escalation equals happier client in IT Services. Client raise an issue, IT Help Desk Specialist resolve it, BOOM, Next! At organizations, It is amazing (sadly) to see how much lower level managers escalate problems, that they and thei