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Page 1: Good to Great Takeaways

Good to Great TakeawaysGroup 3 Cory LoganDavid HaywardNick WatkinsGary TaylorLindsey PacatteMayra Garcia Garrett Matthews

Page 2: Good to Great Takeaways

Good to GreatThe commonalities between all the good to great companies:•Level 5 leadership •First who… Then what•Confront the Brutal facts (yet never lose faith)•The Hedgehog Concept (simplicity within the three circles)•A culture of Discipline •Technology Accelerators •The Flywheel and the Doom loop•From Good to Great to Built to Last

Page 3: Good to Great Takeaways

Level 5 leadershipLevel 5 leaders:• Were at the head of all the good to great companies

during their transition from good to great• Are characterized by personal humility while still

remaining professionally ambitious with their ambition being for the organizations success before their own success

• They are exceedingly modest while the leaders of the comparison companies were egocentric and self-centered

• Are fanatically driven for to see sustained success while level 4 leaders are only focused on their personal achievements

Page 4: Good to Great Takeaways

Level 5 leadershipLevel 5 leaders:• Do whatever it takes to make the company great• Are more plow horse than show horse• Attribute success to others rather than

themselves• Set up the leaders that came after them for

success while level 4 leaders set the leader that took their place up for failure

• Most companies in trouble look for the celebrity CEO to swoop in and save the day instead of hiring a level 5 leader

Page 5: Good to Great Takeaways

When in doubt, don’t hire-keep looking•No company can grow revenues faster

than its ability to get enough of the right people

• To Build great companies its not about MARKETS, TECHNOLOGY, COMPETITION

•ABITLITY TO GET AND KEEP PEOPLE!!•Invest in the right people from the

beginning.

Page 6: Good to Great Takeaways

Confront the Brutal Facts•Good-to-Great Companies confront the

brutal facts of their current realities•With honest and diligent efforts; right

decisions are self-evident•People should be allowed to be heard;

truth should be heard

Page 7: Good to Great Takeaways

Confront the Brutal Facts•Hit realities head-on; emerge from

adversity stronger•Retain faith that you can and at the same

time confront the most brutal facts•Be careful with charisma; liability or asset•If you have the right people, they will be

self-motivated

Page 8: Good to Great Takeaways

The Hedgehog Concept• The key is to understand what your organization

can be the best in the world at, and equally important what is cannot be the best at-not what it “wants” to be the best at.

• Not a goal, strategy, or intention; it is an understanding

• To get insight into the drivers of your economic engine, search for the one denominator that has the single greatest impact.

• Each good-to-great company built a great economic engine, regardless of the industry

• Good-to-great companies set their goals and strategies based on understanding

Page 9: Good to Great Takeaways

•It took four years on average for companies to get a Hedgehog Concept

Page 10: Good to Great Takeaways

Denominator Question• If you could pick one and only one ration—profit

per x– to systematically increase over time, what x would have the greatest and most sustainable impact on your economic engine?

• Serves as a mechanism to force deeper understanding of the key drivers in your economic engine

• The point of having the denominator is to gain insight which will ultimately lead to more robust and sustainable economics

• Companies do not need to be in a great industry to become a great company

Page 11: Good to Great Takeaways

A Culture of Discipline•A culture of discipline involves a duality

•It requires people to stick to a consistent system with clear constraints

•It also has to give people freedom and responsibility within the framework of that system

Page 12: Good to Great Takeaways

A Culture of Discipline•A culture of discipline is not just about

action.•It has to deal with building a culture full

of disciplined people that engage in disciplined thought and then take a disciplined action

•If you get the right people on the bus, and the wrong people off, you don’t need stultifying bureaucracy

Page 13: Good to Great Takeaways

A Culture of Discipline

•The most essential form of discipline for sustained results is dedicated faithfulness to the Hedgehog Concept and the eagerness to reject opportunities that fall out side the three circles

Page 14: Good to Great Takeaways

TECHNOLOGICAL ACCELERATIONS•Good to great organizations think

differently about technology.

•Good to great organizations avoid technology fads and bandwagons, yet they become pioneers in the application of carefully selected technologies.

Page 15: Good to Great Takeaways

Technological Acceleration•Technology as an Accelerator, Not a

Creator, of Momentum

•The Technological Trap

•Technology and The Fear of Being Left Behind

Page 16: Good to Great Takeaways

Built to Last •Good to Great is a cumulative process

that takes time to develop•Analogy of Profits and Cash as the blood

and water to a healthy body•Enduring Great companies adapt with

change while keeping core values and purpose intact