Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chapter 1 Good Is the Enemy of Great Team 2 Shawn Buck Ashley Burnett Whitney Horton Kelly Riester Mickea Smith Sam Snelling Jennifer Shotts.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chapter 1 Good Is the Enemy of Great Team 2 Shawn Buck Ashley Burnett Whitney Horton Kelly Riester Mickea Smith Sam Snelling Jennifer Shotts."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 1 Good Is the Enemy of Great Team 2 Shawn Buck Ashley Burnett Whitney Horton Kelly Riester Mickea Smith Sam Snelling Jennifer Shotts

2 Introduction  The reason we do not have many GREAT things in our society is because we settle for simply GOOD things.  Bill Meehan of Mckinsey & Company challenged Jim Collins by calling his previous book “useless.”

3 Introduction  Collins began by identifying companies who made the leap from good to great and sustained those results for 15 years.  The good to great examples average cumulative stock returns 6.9 times the general market following their transition points.  If you invested $1 in a mutual fund of a good to great company in 1969, by Jan. 1, 2000 it would have multiplied 471 times, compared to the 56 in the general market.

4 Phase 1  21 people in teams of 4-6.  First, the company had to demonstrate the good to great pattern independent of its industry.  Finding companies that went from good to great.  15 year cumulative stock returns at or below the genre stack market, punctuated y a transition point, then cumulative returns at least three times the market over the next 15 yrs.  Such companies as: Boeing, Coca-Cola, GE, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Johnson & Johnson, Motorola, Pepsi, Procter & Gamble, Wal-Mart, Walt Disney  Companies beat the market by only 2.5 times over the yrs. 1985-2000.  Fannie Mae beat GE and Coco-Cola, Walgreens beat Intel.  It is possible to turn good into great in the most unlikely of

5 Phase 1 Company Results from transition point to 15 yrs. Beyond Transition Point Year - Year Abbott3.98 times the market1974-1989 Circuit City18.50 times the market1982-1997 Fannie Mae7.56 times the market1984-1999 Gillette 7.39 times the market1980-1995 Kimberly-Clark3.42 times the market1972-1987 Kroger4.17 times the market1973-1988 Nucor5.16 times the market1975-1990 Philip Morris7.06 times the market1964-1979 Pitney Bowes7.16 times the market1973-1988 Walgreens7.34 times the market1975-1990 Wells Fargo3.99 times the market1983-1998

6 Phase 2: Compared to What? The crucial question is: “What did the good to great companies share in common that distinguished them from the comparison companies?” In comparing, you want to look at the similarities but you want to find what made the company great. In the Chapter Collins gives the Comparison of an Olympic gold metal winner. He says that you may think that a coach can make a Gold metal winner, but if you look at the whole Olympic team they all have coaches. So why did they not win the gold? What made Michael Phelps win 8 gold medals and not his team mates?

7 Phase 2: Compared to What?  In the research, Collins and his group selected two sets of comparison companies 1. “Direct Comparison”: Companies within the same industry, with the same opportunities, and resources. But these companies were not considered “Great” 2. “Unsustained Comparison”: Companies that made a short term jump from good-to-Great but not for 15 years or longer.  This study included 28 Companies Total

8 Good-to-Great Companies Abbot Circuit City Fannie Mae Gillette Kimberly-Clark Kroger Nucor Philip Morris Pitney Bowes Walgreens Wells Fargo Unsustained Comparisons Burroughs Chrysler Harris Hasbro Rubbermaid Teledyne Direct Comparisons Upjohn Silo Great Western Warner-Lambert Scott Paper A&P Bethlehem Steel R.J Reynolds Addressograph Eckerd Bank of America

9 Phase 3: Inside the Black Box  Totals:  10.5 people years  thousands of articles and interview transcripts  millions of bytes of computer data  Essentially, the team sought to build a theory from the ground up, which could identify ways of building and sustaining greatness.  “The dogs that did not bark” were ways in which stereotypical ideas of successful companies were not portrayed in the 11 good to great companies.

10 Lessons learned from the Dogs  Research found: I. Celebrity leaders had a negative correlation on the good to great companies. II. There is no evidence of extravagant long term strategies amongst G2G companies. III. G2G companies pay no attention to motivating and managing their people. IV. G2G companies are not always in high profile, profitable industries. Greatness is a matter of conscious choice rather than shier luck.  Lesson learned: I. Alan McNally: Is there ever any news articles praising or condemning the actions of this man? II. The companies had simple, well defined strategies which lead to sustained profits. III. With the success of the company, comes job security and an internal motivation. IV. Kimberly-Clark? Abbott? Pitney Bowes?

11 Phase 4: Chaos to Concept Data Analyses Debates “Dogs that did not bark” End result – Organized compilation of findings Goal: Process: Developing ideas Testing the ideas against data Revising ideas that did not stand up to the data Building a framework of the ideas that worked cohesively with the data Comparing this framework to evidence Rebuilding the framework with new ideas Repeat until desired result was achieved  The end result are the concepts explored in later chapters of this book

12 Preview of chapter context Level 5 leadership These leaders are not high-profile and do not have big personalities. First who…then what Instead of setting a new vision or strategy, they first got the right people Confront the brutal facts All of the good to great companies found that they had to call the Stockdale paradox. The hedgehog concept( simplicity within the three circles) Transcending the curse of competence is require when going from good to great companies.

13 Preview of chapter context A culture of discipline All companies have culture and some companies have discipline. Technology accelerators Technology is never a cause of a decline or greatness in a company. The flywheel and the doom loop The transformation never happens all at once. From good to great to built to last Good to great is a prequel of built to last. Good to great concepts sustain great results +built to last concepts = enduring great company.

14 Conclusion  Search for timeless physics  “There’s nothing new under the sun”  Not about old or new economy  Applying timeless principles  Science behind creating great organizations of any type  A human problem

15 Key Ideas 1. Good is the enemy of great. 2. There’s no need for a famous CEO, innovative technology, or a solid industry to launch or become a great company. 3. Engineering may change, but the human aspects will endure.


Download ppt "Chapter 1 Good Is the Enemy of Great Team 2 Shawn Buck Ashley Burnett Whitney Horton Kelly Riester Mickea Smith Sam Snelling Jennifer Shotts."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google