SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  43
Télécharger pour lire hors ligne
Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the
Leap and Other’s Don’t
#1 BESTSELLER
by JIM COLLINS
Some takeaways from the book of
Jim Collins
“Good to Great”
by Md Badiuzzaman
The Debrief
What makes a company GREAT?
150 millions of companies are started each year.
MOST do not MAKE it, Some MAKE it, some
SURVIVE while some THRIVE!
It is NOT how much the CEO makes, the
TECHNOLOGY or WHO they merge with.
It is DISCIPLINE – In PEOPLE, in THOUGHT and
in ACTION.
Transition from Good to Great
Audio Book Review
GOOD TO GREAT – Management book by James
C Collins.
Transition from being good companies to great
companies.
GREATNESS: Financial Performance which is
way better than the MKT average over a
sustained period – at least 15 YEARS.
HOW GREAT: Cumulative stock returns that beat
the general stock MKT by an AVG of 7 times in 15
years, better than the twice the results delivered by
the world’s great companies including Coca-Cola,
Intel, GE, and Merck.
The 11 Great Companies
The G2G Companies
Good is the enemy of great
- G2G companies focused on what not to do and what to
stop doing.
- Technology had nothing to do with transformation
from good to great.
- Mergers and acquisitions played virtually no role in a
transformation from good to great.
- Good to great companies had no name or program to
signify their transformations.
- Good to great companies were not in a great
industries.
Good to Great
Greatness is not a function or circumstance
Greatness it turns out, is largely a matter of conscious
choice & discipline
Jim Collins
Good to Great
Collins “framework of ideas” from steering a company from good
to great involved six key learnings wrapped in continual process he
called the FLYWHEEL.
Good to Great
Level 5
Leadership
First Who…
Then What
Confront the
Brutal Facts
Hedgehog
Concept
Culture of
Discipline
Technology
Accelerators
Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action
Buildup
Level 5
Leadership
Good to Great
Level 5 Leadership
5–Level 5 Executive
4–Effective Leader
3–Competent Manager
2–Contributing Team Member
1–Highly Capable Individual
Level 5 Leadership
 Leaders who employ a paradoxical mix of
personal humility and professional will
 Set up successors for even greater
success
 Compelling modesty, self-effacing,
understated
5–Level 5 Executive
4–Effective Leader
3–Competent Manager
2–Contributing Team Member
1–Highly Capable Individual
 Fanatically driven to
produce sustainable
results
 More plow horse than
show horse
Level 5 Leadership
5–Level 5 Executive
4–Effective Leader
3–Competent Manager
2–Contributing Team Member
1–Highly Capable Individual
 Look in mirror and
take full responsibility
for poor decisions
 Many people have the
potential to evolve
into Level 5
 Attribute success to
other than themselves
Level 5
Leadership
First Who…
Then What
Confront the
Brutal Facts
Hedgehog
Concept
Culture of
Discipline
Technology
Accelerators
Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action
Buildup
First Who…
Then What
Good to Great
First Who . . . Then What
 Leaders began the
transformation by
first getting the
right people on the
bus (and the
wrong people off
the bus).
“Who” questions came before “what”
decisions - before vision, strategy,
organization structure, and tactics.
First Who . . . Then What
 Three practical disciplines for being
rigorous:
When in doubt, don’t hire
When you know you need to make a
people decision, act
 Put your best people
on your best
opportunities, not
biggest problems
 Leaders were rigorous, not ruthless in
people decisions.
First Who . . . Then What
 Management teams debate vigorously
to find best answers, yet unify behind
decisions.
“Right” person has
more to do with
character traits and
innate capabilities
than with knowledge,
background, or skills.
Level 5
Leadership
First Who…
Then What
Confront the
Brutal Facts
Hedgehog
Concept
Culture of
Discipline
Technology
Accelerators
Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action
Buildup
Confront the
Brutal Facts
Good to Great
Confront the Brutal Facts
 Must create a culture
wherein people have a
tremendous opportunity
to be heard and,
ultimately, for the truth
to be heard.
 Setting off on the path
to greatness requires
confronting the brutal
facts of current reality.
Confront the Brutal Facts
 Lead with questions, not
answers
 Engage in dialogue and
debate, not coercion
 Conduct autopsies,
without blame
 Build red flag
mechanisms where
information cannot be
ignored
 Four basic practices:
Confront the Brutal Facts
 Stockdale Paradox:
Retain absolute faith
that you can and will
prevail in the end,
AND at the same time
confront the most
brutal facts of your
current reality,
whatever they might
be.
Level 5
Leadership
First Who…
Then What
Confront the
Brutal Facts
Hedgehog
Concept
Culture of
Discipline
Technology
Accelerators
Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action
Buildup
Hedgehog
Concept
Good to Great
Hedgehog Concept
 Hedgehogs simplify a
complex world into a
single organizing idea,
a basic principle or
concept that unifies
and guides everything.
 Hedgehogs see what is
essential, and ignore
the rest.
Hedgehog Concept
 The Hedgehog Concept is a deep
understanding of three intersecting
circles translated into a simple,
crystalline concept:
 What you are deeply
passionate about
 What you can be best
in the world at
 What drives your
economic engine
Hedgehog Concept
What you are deeply
passionate about
What you can
be the best in
the world at
What drives
your
economic
engine
Simplicity
within
the three
circles
Hedgehog Concept
 Getting the Hedgehog Concept takes an
average of four years.
 The right people
 Engaged in vigorous
dialogue and debate
 Infused with the
brutal facts
 Guided by questions
formed by the three
circles
 It is an iterative process by The Council:
Hedgehog Concept
The
Council
All Guided by
the Three Circles
Ask Questions
Dialogue &
Debate
Autopsies
& Analysis
Executive
Decisions
An Iterative
Process
Level 5
Leadership
First Who…
Then What
Confront the
Brutal Facts
Hedgehog
Concept
Culture of
Discipline
Technology
Accelerators
Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action
Buildup
Culture of
Discipline
Good to Great
Culture of Discipline
 People who “rinse their
cottage cheese”
 Not about a tyrant who
disciplines
 Getting disciplined people
who engage in disciplined
thought and who then take
disciplined action,
fanatically consistent with
three circles
Culture of Discipline
 Requires people who
adhere to a consistent
system.
 Gives people freedom and
responsibility within
framework of that system.
 Involves a duality.
Culture of Discipline
 Budgeting is to decide which arenas fit
Hedgehog Concept and should be fully funded
and which should not be funded at all.
 “Stop doing” lists are
more important than “to
do” lists.
 “Anything that does not
fit with our Hedgehog
Concept, we will not do.”
 Includes willingness to shun opportunities
that fall outside the three circles.
Level 5
Leadership
First Who…
Then What
Confront the
Brutal Facts
Hedgehog
Concept
Culture of
Discipline
Technology
Accelerators
Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action
Buildup
Technology
Accelerators
Good to Great
Technology Accelerators
 Yet they often become pioneers in the
application of carefully selected
technologies.
 Does it fit directly with
your Hedgehog Concept?
 Good-to-greats used
technology as an
accelerator of momentum,
not a creator of it.
 Good-to-greats avoid technology fads and
bandwagons.
Technology Accelerators
 Technology by itself is never a root cause of
either greatness or decline.
 “Crawl, walk, run”
can be a very
effective approach,
even during times of
rapid and radical
technological
change.
Level 5
Leadership
First Who…
Then What
Confront the
Brutal Facts
Hedgehog
Concept
Culture of
Discipline
Technology
Accelerations
Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action
Buildup
Flywheel
Good to Great
The Flywheel
 Good-to-great
transformations never
happened in one fell
swoop.
 There was no single defining action, no
grand program, no one killer innovation, no
solitary lucky break, no miracle moment.
 Instead they followed a predictable pattern
of buildup and breakthrough.
 Like pushing on a giant, heavy flywheel, it
takes a lot of effort to get the thing moving
at all, but . . .
The Flywheel
 With persistent pushing . . .
 In a consistent direction . . .
 Over a long period of time . . .
 In good-to-great companies problems of
commitment, alignment, motivation, and
change largely take care of themselves.
 Alignment follows from results and
momentum, not the other way around.
 The flywheel builds momentum . . .
 Eventually hitting a point of breakthrough.
Level 5
Leadership
First Who…
Then What
Confront the
Brutal Facts
Hedgehog
Concept
Culture of
Discipline
Technology
Accelerators
Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action
Buildup
Good to Great
Elevate the Average
Mediocre people + Great Strategy = Mediocre Results
In reality, our world consists mostly of average
performers, therefore the realistic formula is
Average performers + consistent execution
= Excellent results
Learnings
- Celebrity executives almost never lead good companies to
greatness: Level 5 leadership.
- You can not achieve great things without great people: First
who… then what.
- Simplicity rules: the Hedgehog concept.
- Enterprise –wide discipline is essential: Culture of discipline.
- Technology is an accelerator
References
- https://www.dropbox.com/s/frm9pyw65vqmwq0/GoodtoGreatW
hySomeCompaniesMaketheLeap...AndOthersDont_ep6_APUB5
A2F849Q0.mp3?dl=0
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_to_Great
- https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-06-662099-2
- Other online sources
HAPPY READING!
Your comments
- badiuzzaman@gmail.com

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Good To Great - Concepts
Good To Great - ConceptsGood To Great - Concepts
Good To Great - ConceptsVanessa Tan
 
Good to great book review (GNVS IOM)
Good to great book review (GNVS IOM)Good to great book review (GNVS IOM)
Good to great book review (GNVS IOM)nikhil shelar
 
Level 5 leadership
Level 5 leadershipLevel 5 leadership
Level 5 leadershipGlen Alleman
 
Level 5 leadership slides.pdf
Level 5 leadership   slides.pdfLevel 5 leadership   slides.pdf
Level 5 leadership slides.pdfAnne Dodd
 
Good to great book summary
Good to great book summaryGood to great book summary
Good to great book summaryFarzin Fardiss
 
360 Degree Leadership
360 Degree Leadership360 Degree Leadership
360 Degree LeadershipNaveen Dandge
 
Growth Mindset- Role of a leader.pptx
Growth Mindset- Role of a leader.pptxGrowth Mindset- Role of a leader.pptx
Growth Mindset- Role of a leader.pptxAnand Reddy
 
Built to last
Built to lastBuilt to last
Built to lastZK22
 
Good To Great - Summary
Good To Great - SummaryGood To Great - Summary
Good To Great - SummaryKhaleel Rahman
 
Execution: The discipline of getting things done
Execution: The discipline of getting things doneExecution: The discipline of getting things done
Execution: The discipline of getting things doneabhishek singh
 
Executive Presence: Why It Matters & How to Build It Among a Diverse Group of...
Executive Presence: Why It Matters & How to Build It Among a Diverse Group of...Executive Presence: Why It Matters & How to Build It Among a Diverse Group of...
Executive Presence: Why It Matters & How to Build It Among a Diverse Group of...Monica Marcel
 
Summary -First Break All The Rules
Summary -First Break All The RulesSummary -First Break All The Rules
Summary -First Break All The RulesGMR Group
 
Book review: Good to great
Book review: Good to greatBook review: Good to great
Book review: Good to greatJaimeen Rana
 
Presentation good to great by leke oshiyemi_for slideshare
Presentation good to great  by leke oshiyemi_for slidesharePresentation good to great  by leke oshiyemi_for slideshare
Presentation good to great by leke oshiyemi_for slideshareLeke Oshiyemi
 
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of LeadershipThe 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of LeadershipSameer Mathur
 
Leadership: A Need for Developing a Growth Mindset
Leadership: A Need for Developing a Growth MindsetLeadership: A Need for Developing a Growth Mindset
Leadership: A Need for Developing a Growth MindsetVeronica Carroll, MBA CFRE
 

Tendances (20)

Good To Great - Concepts
Good To Great - ConceptsGood To Great - Concepts
Good To Great - Concepts
 
Good to great book review (GNVS IOM)
Good to great book review (GNVS IOM)Good to great book review (GNVS IOM)
Good to great book review (GNVS IOM)
 
Level 5 leadership
Level 5 leadershipLevel 5 leadership
Level 5 leadership
 
Good To Great
Good To GreatGood To Great
Good To Great
 
Good to great PPT Slides
Good to great PPT SlidesGood to great PPT Slides
Good to great PPT Slides
 
Level 5 leadership slides.pdf
Level 5 leadership   slides.pdfLevel 5 leadership   slides.pdf
Level 5 leadership slides.pdf
 
Good to great book summary
Good to great book summaryGood to great book summary
Good to great book summary
 
360 Degree Leadership
360 Degree Leadership360 Degree Leadership
360 Degree Leadership
 
Growth Mindset- Role of a leader.pptx
Growth Mindset- Role of a leader.pptxGrowth Mindset- Role of a leader.pptx
Growth Mindset- Role of a leader.pptx
 
Built to last
Built to lastBuilt to last
Built to last
 
Good To Great - Summary
Good To Great - SummaryGood To Great - Summary
Good To Great - Summary
 
Execution: The discipline of getting things done
Execution: The discipline of getting things doneExecution: The discipline of getting things done
Execution: The discipline of getting things done
 
Executive Presence: Why It Matters & How to Build It Among a Diverse Group of...
Executive Presence: Why It Matters & How to Build It Among a Diverse Group of...Executive Presence: Why It Matters & How to Build It Among a Diverse Group of...
Executive Presence: Why It Matters & How to Build It Among a Diverse Group of...
 
Summary -First Break All The Rules
Summary -First Break All The RulesSummary -First Break All The Rules
Summary -First Break All The Rules
 
Book review: Good to great
Book review: Good to greatBook review: Good to great
Book review: Good to great
 
Presentation good to great by leke oshiyemi_for slideshare
Presentation good to great  by leke oshiyemi_for slidesharePresentation good to great  by leke oshiyemi_for slideshare
Presentation good to great by leke oshiyemi_for slideshare
 
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of LeadershipThe 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership
 
8 Tips for Managing Your Boss
8 Tips for Managing Your Boss8 Tips for Managing Your Boss
8 Tips for Managing Your Boss
 
Leadership: A Need for Developing a Growth Mindset
Leadership: A Need for Developing a Growth MindsetLeadership: A Need for Developing a Growth Mindset
Leadership: A Need for Developing a Growth Mindset
 
Leader Development Roadmap by CCL
Leader Development Roadmap by CCLLeader Development Roadmap by CCL
Leader Development Roadmap by CCL
 

Similaire à Good to Great by Jim Collins - A brief book review in PPT format.

Similaire à Good to Great by Jim Collins - A brief book review in PPT format. (20)

Good to Great
Good to  GreatGood to  Great
Good to Great
 
Good To Great
Good To Great Good To Great
Good To Great
 
Good togreat
Good togreatGood togreat
Good togreat
 
Book Review Good2Great
Book Review Good2GreatBook Review Good2Great
Book Review Good2Great
 
Good to great book review-ver 1.5
Good to great book review-ver 1.5Good to great book review-ver 1.5
Good to great book review-ver 1.5
 
Good togreat
Good togreatGood togreat
Good togreat
 
Transforming From Good To Great Company By Ravinder Tulsiani
Transforming From Good To Great Company By Ravinder TulsianiTransforming From Good To Great Company By Ravinder Tulsiani
Transforming From Good To Great Company By Ravinder Tulsiani
 
Good To Great
Good To GreatGood To Great
Good To Great
 
Good To Great 1208178911410103 9
Good To Great 1208178911410103 9Good To Great 1208178911410103 9
Good To Great 1208178911410103 9
 
Good to great
Good to greatGood to great
Good to great
 
Good To Great
Good To GreatGood To Great
Good To Great
 
Good to great
Good to greatGood to great
Good to great
 
Good to great-Talha sifat
  Good to great-Talha sifat   Good to great-Talha sifat
Good to great-Talha sifat
 
Good to great (ty version 2008)
Good to great (ty version   2008)Good to great (ty version   2008)
Good to great (ty version 2008)
 
Level 5 leadership 2
Level 5 leadership 2Level 5 leadership 2
Level 5 leadership 2
 
FROM GOOD TO GREAT
FROM GOOD TO GREATFROM GOOD TO GREAT
FROM GOOD TO GREAT
 
Good to Great-1.ppt
Good to Great-1.pptGood to Great-1.ppt
Good to Great-1.ppt
 
Good To Great
Good To GreatGood To Great
Good To Great
 
Good togreat
Good togreatGood togreat
Good togreat
 
Girija - Good to great.pptx
Girija - Good to great.pptxGirija - Good to great.pptx
Girija - Good to great.pptx
 

Dernier

Critical thinking categorical syllogism pptx
Critical thinking categorical syllogism pptxCritical thinking categorical syllogism pptx
Critical thinking categorical syllogism pptxcalinagavris17
 
Mastering Management Insights from First Break All the Rules.pptx
Mastering Management Insights from First Break All the Rules.pptxMastering Management Insights from First Break All the Rules.pptx
Mastering Management Insights from First Break All the Rules.pptxAS Design & AST.
 
The Role of Box Plots in Comparing Multiple Data Sets
The Role of Box Plots in Comparing Multiple Data SetsThe Role of Box Plots in Comparing Multiple Data Sets
The Role of Box Plots in Comparing Multiple Data SetsCIToolkit
 
BoSUSA23 | Chris Spiek & Justin Dickow | Autobooks Product & Engineering
BoSUSA23 | Chris Spiek & Justin Dickow | Autobooks Product & EngineeringBoSUSA23 | Chris Spiek & Justin Dickow | Autobooks Product & Engineering
BoSUSA23 | Chris Spiek & Justin Dickow | Autobooks Product & EngineeringBusiness of Software Conference
 
Operations Management -- Sustainability and Supply Chain Management.pdf
Operations Management -- Sustainability and Supply Chain Management.pdfOperations Management -- Sustainability and Supply Chain Management.pdf
Operations Management -- Sustainability and Supply Chain Management.pdfcoolsnoopy1
 
The Role of Histograms in Exploring Data Insights
The Role of Histograms in Exploring Data InsightsThe Role of Histograms in Exploring Data Insights
The Role of Histograms in Exploring Data InsightsCIToolkit
 
Management 11th Edition - Chapter 11 - Adaptive Organizational Design
Management 11th Edition - Chapter 11 - Adaptive Organizational DesignManagement 11th Edition - Chapter 11 - Adaptive Organizational Design
Management 11th Edition - Chapter 11 - Adaptive Organizational Designshakkardaddy
 
Overview PMI Infinity - UK Chapter presentation
Overview PMI Infinity - UK Chapter presentationOverview PMI Infinity - UK Chapter presentation
Overview PMI Infinity - UK Chapter presentationPMIUKChapter
 
Mind Mapping: A Visual Approach to Organize Ideas and Thoughts
Mind Mapping: A Visual Approach to Organize Ideas and ThoughtsMind Mapping: A Visual Approach to Organize Ideas and Thoughts
Mind Mapping: A Visual Approach to Organize Ideas and ThoughtsCIToolkit
 
Exploring Variable Relationships with Scatter Diagram Analysis
Exploring Variable Relationships with Scatter Diagram AnalysisExploring Variable Relationships with Scatter Diagram Analysis
Exploring Variable Relationships with Scatter Diagram AnalysisCIToolkit
 
Leveraging Gap Analysis for Continuous Improvement
Leveraging Gap Analysis for Continuous ImprovementLeveraging Gap Analysis for Continuous Improvement
Leveraging Gap Analysis for Continuous ImprovementCIToolkit
 
How Technologies will change the relationship with Human Resources
How Technologies will change the relationship with Human ResourcesHow Technologies will change the relationship with Human Resources
How Technologies will change the relationship with Human ResourcesMassimo Canducci
 
Yokoten: Enhancing Performance through Best Practice Sharing
Yokoten: Enhancing Performance through Best Practice SharingYokoten: Enhancing Performance through Best Practice Sharing
Yokoten: Enhancing Performance through Best Practice SharingCIToolkit
 
Adapting to Change: Using PEST Analysis for Better Decision-Making
Adapting to Change: Using PEST Analysis for Better Decision-MakingAdapting to Change: Using PEST Analysis for Better Decision-Making
Adapting to Change: Using PEST Analysis for Better Decision-MakingCIToolkit
 
Hajra Karrim: Transformative Leadership Driving Innovation and Efficiency in ...
Hajra Karrim: Transformative Leadership Driving Innovation and Efficiency in ...Hajra Karrim: Transformative Leadership Driving Innovation and Efficiency in ...
Hajra Karrim: Transformative Leadership Driving Innovation and Efficiency in ...dsnow9802
 
Flowcharting: The Three Common Types of Flowcharts
Flowcharting: The Three Common Types of FlowchartsFlowcharting: The Three Common Types of Flowcharts
Flowcharting: The Three Common Types of FlowchartsCIToolkit
 

Dernier (16)

Critical thinking categorical syllogism pptx
Critical thinking categorical syllogism pptxCritical thinking categorical syllogism pptx
Critical thinking categorical syllogism pptx
 
Mastering Management Insights from First Break All the Rules.pptx
Mastering Management Insights from First Break All the Rules.pptxMastering Management Insights from First Break All the Rules.pptx
Mastering Management Insights from First Break All the Rules.pptx
 
The Role of Box Plots in Comparing Multiple Data Sets
The Role of Box Plots in Comparing Multiple Data SetsThe Role of Box Plots in Comparing Multiple Data Sets
The Role of Box Plots in Comparing Multiple Data Sets
 
BoSUSA23 | Chris Spiek & Justin Dickow | Autobooks Product & Engineering
BoSUSA23 | Chris Spiek & Justin Dickow | Autobooks Product & EngineeringBoSUSA23 | Chris Spiek & Justin Dickow | Autobooks Product & Engineering
BoSUSA23 | Chris Spiek & Justin Dickow | Autobooks Product & Engineering
 
Operations Management -- Sustainability and Supply Chain Management.pdf
Operations Management -- Sustainability and Supply Chain Management.pdfOperations Management -- Sustainability and Supply Chain Management.pdf
Operations Management -- Sustainability and Supply Chain Management.pdf
 
The Role of Histograms in Exploring Data Insights
The Role of Histograms in Exploring Data InsightsThe Role of Histograms in Exploring Data Insights
The Role of Histograms in Exploring Data Insights
 
Management 11th Edition - Chapter 11 - Adaptive Organizational Design
Management 11th Edition - Chapter 11 - Adaptive Organizational DesignManagement 11th Edition - Chapter 11 - Adaptive Organizational Design
Management 11th Edition - Chapter 11 - Adaptive Organizational Design
 
Overview PMI Infinity - UK Chapter presentation
Overview PMI Infinity - UK Chapter presentationOverview PMI Infinity - UK Chapter presentation
Overview PMI Infinity - UK Chapter presentation
 
Mind Mapping: A Visual Approach to Organize Ideas and Thoughts
Mind Mapping: A Visual Approach to Organize Ideas and ThoughtsMind Mapping: A Visual Approach to Organize Ideas and Thoughts
Mind Mapping: A Visual Approach to Organize Ideas and Thoughts
 
Exploring Variable Relationships with Scatter Diagram Analysis
Exploring Variable Relationships with Scatter Diagram AnalysisExploring Variable Relationships with Scatter Diagram Analysis
Exploring Variable Relationships with Scatter Diagram Analysis
 
Leveraging Gap Analysis for Continuous Improvement
Leveraging Gap Analysis for Continuous ImprovementLeveraging Gap Analysis for Continuous Improvement
Leveraging Gap Analysis for Continuous Improvement
 
How Technologies will change the relationship with Human Resources
How Technologies will change the relationship with Human ResourcesHow Technologies will change the relationship with Human Resources
How Technologies will change the relationship with Human Resources
 
Yokoten: Enhancing Performance through Best Practice Sharing
Yokoten: Enhancing Performance through Best Practice SharingYokoten: Enhancing Performance through Best Practice Sharing
Yokoten: Enhancing Performance through Best Practice Sharing
 
Adapting to Change: Using PEST Analysis for Better Decision-Making
Adapting to Change: Using PEST Analysis for Better Decision-MakingAdapting to Change: Using PEST Analysis for Better Decision-Making
Adapting to Change: Using PEST Analysis for Better Decision-Making
 
Hajra Karrim: Transformative Leadership Driving Innovation and Efficiency in ...
Hajra Karrim: Transformative Leadership Driving Innovation and Efficiency in ...Hajra Karrim: Transformative Leadership Driving Innovation and Efficiency in ...
Hajra Karrim: Transformative Leadership Driving Innovation and Efficiency in ...
 
Flowcharting: The Three Common Types of Flowcharts
Flowcharting: The Three Common Types of FlowchartsFlowcharting: The Three Common Types of Flowcharts
Flowcharting: The Three Common Types of Flowcharts
 

Good to Great by Jim Collins - A brief book review in PPT format.

  • 1. Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap and Other’s Don’t #1 BESTSELLER by JIM COLLINS Some takeaways from the book of Jim Collins “Good to Great” by Md Badiuzzaman
  • 2. The Debrief What makes a company GREAT? 150 millions of companies are started each year. MOST do not MAKE it, Some MAKE it, some SURVIVE while some THRIVE! It is NOT how much the CEO makes, the TECHNOLOGY or WHO they merge with. It is DISCIPLINE – In PEOPLE, in THOUGHT and in ACTION.
  • 4. Audio Book Review GOOD TO GREAT – Management book by James C Collins. Transition from being good companies to great companies. GREATNESS: Financial Performance which is way better than the MKT average over a sustained period – at least 15 YEARS. HOW GREAT: Cumulative stock returns that beat the general stock MKT by an AVG of 7 times in 15 years, better than the twice the results delivered by the world’s great companies including Coca-Cola, Intel, GE, and Merck.
  • 5. The 11 Great Companies
  • 7. Good is the enemy of great - G2G companies focused on what not to do and what to stop doing. - Technology had nothing to do with transformation from good to great. - Mergers and acquisitions played virtually no role in a transformation from good to great. - Good to great companies had no name or program to signify their transformations. - Good to great companies were not in a great industries.
  • 8. Good to Great Greatness is not a function or circumstance Greatness it turns out, is largely a matter of conscious choice & discipline Jim Collins
  • 9. Good to Great Collins “framework of ideas” from steering a company from good to great involved six key learnings wrapped in continual process he called the FLYWHEEL.
  • 11. Level 5 Leadership First Who… Then What Confront the Brutal Facts Hedgehog Concept Culture of Discipline Technology Accelerators Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action Buildup Level 5 Leadership Good to Great
  • 12. Level 5 Leadership 5–Level 5 Executive 4–Effective Leader 3–Competent Manager 2–Contributing Team Member 1–Highly Capable Individual
  • 13. Level 5 Leadership  Leaders who employ a paradoxical mix of personal humility and professional will  Set up successors for even greater success  Compelling modesty, self-effacing, understated 5–Level 5 Executive 4–Effective Leader 3–Competent Manager 2–Contributing Team Member 1–Highly Capable Individual  Fanatically driven to produce sustainable results  More plow horse than show horse
  • 14. Level 5 Leadership 5–Level 5 Executive 4–Effective Leader 3–Competent Manager 2–Contributing Team Member 1–Highly Capable Individual  Look in mirror and take full responsibility for poor decisions  Many people have the potential to evolve into Level 5  Attribute success to other than themselves
  • 15. Level 5 Leadership First Who… Then What Confront the Brutal Facts Hedgehog Concept Culture of Discipline Technology Accelerators Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action Buildup First Who… Then What Good to Great
  • 16. First Who . . . Then What  Leaders began the transformation by first getting the right people on the bus (and the wrong people off the bus). “Who” questions came before “what” decisions - before vision, strategy, organization structure, and tactics.
  • 17. First Who . . . Then What  Three practical disciplines for being rigorous: When in doubt, don’t hire When you know you need to make a people decision, act  Put your best people on your best opportunities, not biggest problems  Leaders were rigorous, not ruthless in people decisions.
  • 18. First Who . . . Then What  Management teams debate vigorously to find best answers, yet unify behind decisions. “Right” person has more to do with character traits and innate capabilities than with knowledge, background, or skills.
  • 19. Level 5 Leadership First Who… Then What Confront the Brutal Facts Hedgehog Concept Culture of Discipline Technology Accelerators Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action Buildup Confront the Brutal Facts Good to Great
  • 20. Confront the Brutal Facts  Must create a culture wherein people have a tremendous opportunity to be heard and, ultimately, for the truth to be heard.  Setting off on the path to greatness requires confronting the brutal facts of current reality.
  • 21. Confront the Brutal Facts  Lead with questions, not answers  Engage in dialogue and debate, not coercion  Conduct autopsies, without blame  Build red flag mechanisms where information cannot be ignored  Four basic practices:
  • 22. Confront the Brutal Facts  Stockdale Paradox: Retain absolute faith that you can and will prevail in the end, AND at the same time confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whatever they might be.
  • 23. Level 5 Leadership First Who… Then What Confront the Brutal Facts Hedgehog Concept Culture of Discipline Technology Accelerators Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action Buildup Hedgehog Concept Good to Great
  • 24. Hedgehog Concept  Hedgehogs simplify a complex world into a single organizing idea, a basic principle or concept that unifies and guides everything.  Hedgehogs see what is essential, and ignore the rest.
  • 25. Hedgehog Concept  The Hedgehog Concept is a deep understanding of three intersecting circles translated into a simple, crystalline concept:  What you are deeply passionate about  What you can be best in the world at  What drives your economic engine
  • 26. Hedgehog Concept What you are deeply passionate about What you can be the best in the world at What drives your economic engine Simplicity within the three circles
  • 27. Hedgehog Concept  Getting the Hedgehog Concept takes an average of four years.  The right people  Engaged in vigorous dialogue and debate  Infused with the brutal facts  Guided by questions formed by the three circles  It is an iterative process by The Council:
  • 28. Hedgehog Concept The Council All Guided by the Three Circles Ask Questions Dialogue & Debate Autopsies & Analysis Executive Decisions An Iterative Process
  • 29. Level 5 Leadership First Who… Then What Confront the Brutal Facts Hedgehog Concept Culture of Discipline Technology Accelerators Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action Buildup Culture of Discipline Good to Great
  • 30. Culture of Discipline  People who “rinse their cottage cheese”  Not about a tyrant who disciplines  Getting disciplined people who engage in disciplined thought and who then take disciplined action, fanatically consistent with three circles
  • 31. Culture of Discipline  Requires people who adhere to a consistent system.  Gives people freedom and responsibility within framework of that system.  Involves a duality.
  • 32. Culture of Discipline  Budgeting is to decide which arenas fit Hedgehog Concept and should be fully funded and which should not be funded at all.  “Stop doing” lists are more important than “to do” lists.  “Anything that does not fit with our Hedgehog Concept, we will not do.”  Includes willingness to shun opportunities that fall outside the three circles.
  • 33. Level 5 Leadership First Who… Then What Confront the Brutal Facts Hedgehog Concept Culture of Discipline Technology Accelerators Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action Buildup Technology Accelerators Good to Great
  • 34. Technology Accelerators  Yet they often become pioneers in the application of carefully selected technologies.  Does it fit directly with your Hedgehog Concept?  Good-to-greats used technology as an accelerator of momentum, not a creator of it.  Good-to-greats avoid technology fads and bandwagons.
  • 35. Technology Accelerators  Technology by itself is never a root cause of either greatness or decline.  “Crawl, walk, run” can be a very effective approach, even during times of rapid and radical technological change.
  • 36. Level 5 Leadership First Who… Then What Confront the Brutal Facts Hedgehog Concept Culture of Discipline Technology Accelerations Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action Buildup Flywheel Good to Great
  • 37. The Flywheel  Good-to-great transformations never happened in one fell swoop.  There was no single defining action, no grand program, no one killer innovation, no solitary lucky break, no miracle moment.  Instead they followed a predictable pattern of buildup and breakthrough.  Like pushing on a giant, heavy flywheel, it takes a lot of effort to get the thing moving at all, but . . .
  • 38. The Flywheel  With persistent pushing . . .  In a consistent direction . . .  Over a long period of time . . .  In good-to-great companies problems of commitment, alignment, motivation, and change largely take care of themselves.  Alignment follows from results and momentum, not the other way around.  The flywheel builds momentum . . .  Eventually hitting a point of breakthrough.
  • 39. Level 5 Leadership First Who… Then What Confront the Brutal Facts Hedgehog Concept Culture of Discipline Technology Accelerators Disciplined People Disciplined Thought Disciplined Action Buildup Good to Great
  • 40. Elevate the Average Mediocre people + Great Strategy = Mediocre Results In reality, our world consists mostly of average performers, therefore the realistic formula is Average performers + consistent execution = Excellent results
  • 41. Learnings - Celebrity executives almost never lead good companies to greatness: Level 5 leadership. - You can not achieve great things without great people: First who… then what. - Simplicity rules: the Hedgehog concept. - Enterprise –wide discipline is essential: Culture of discipline. - Technology is an accelerator
  • 43. HAPPY READING! Your comments - badiuzzaman@gmail.com