Book Short: Plain Talk
Book Short: Plain Talk
An HR rock star I met with recently told me that “You can say anything you want to your people, as long as it’s true,” which of course is great advice. Plain Talk: Lessons from a Business Maverick (book, kindle), by Ken Iverson, the long-time CEO of Nucor, pretty much embodies that. If you’re not familiar with Nucor, it’s a steel company – right, steel – and the most successful one of the last 50-75 years, at that. You may think an industrial company like this offers no lessons for you. If so, you are wrong.
The reason Nucor has been so successful, if you believe their long time leader, is that they run the people side of their business differently than most companies like them. Reading this book from the perspective of a knowledge worker business CEO was particularly interesting, since I had to transform my frame of reference a bit (and do a little mental time travel as well) in order to understand just how revolutionary Nucor’s practices were at the time.
But then I realized – they’re still revolutionary today. How many companies – even the most progressive ones – don’t have performance reviews because they don’t need them in order to create a high performing environment? Companies that spend a good percentage of their time and energies thinking about how to get their employees to do their best work, as opposed to focusing only on the goals of the business, do better than those who don’t. It doesn’t matter what industry you’re in. As Patrick Lencioni would say, you can outbehave the competition.
Plain Talk is a really short book, and a good, authentic read if you’re a leader who cares about your people and wants to learn a few nuggets here and there from one of the 20th century masters of that discipline. Anyone that can link a high degree of delegation to authority has a story worth telling.
Book Short: Which Runs Faster, You or Your Company?
Book Short:Â Which Runs Faster, You or Your Company?
Leading at the Speed of Growth, by Katherine Catlin at the Kauffman Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership is a must read for any entrepreneur or CEO of a growth company. It’s one of the best books I’ve ever read targeted to that audience – its content is great, its format is a page-turner, and it’s concise and to the point.
The authors take you through three stages of a growth company’s lifestyle (Initial Growth, Rapid Growth, and Continuous Growth) and describe the “how to’s” of the transition into each stage:Â how you know it’s coming, how to behave in the new stage, how to leave the old stage behind.
I didn’t realize it when I started reading the book, but Brad had one of the quotes on the back cover that says it all: “There are business books about starting a company, but they tend to deal with the mechanics of business plans and financing. Then there are books about ‘how to be the CEO of a Fortune 500 company.’ This is the first book I’ve seen that details the role of the CEO of a small but growing company.” Thanks to my colleague George Bilbrey for pointing this one out to me.
UPDATE:Â Brad corrects me and says that I should mention Jana Matthews, who co-wrote the book with Katherine Catlin and is actually the Kauffman Center person of the duo.
Book Short: Getting to MVP
Book Short:Â Getting to MVP
Usually, when we hear the term MVP, we think Most Valuable Player. But in my line of work, that acronym has come to mean something entirely different: Minimum Viable Product. Running Lean: Iterate from Plan A to a Plan That Works, by Ash Maurya, is an incredibly useful, practical how-to guide for any entrepreneur with an idea from concept through to MVP, or the smallest bit of functionality that you can get customers to pay for. This is one of the best books I’ve read that encapsulates most of the contemporary thinking and writing about product development in the early stages of a startup’s life from thought leaders like Steven Gary Blank and Eric Ries.
I read the book recently, as I was writing Startup CEO (original outline here), and I quoted liberally from it, including using his Lean Canvas graphic:
The basic principle behind the Lean Canvas is that the old way of doing a business plan was a ton of up front planning work, assuming you’re right, then building to spec. The new way of doing a business plan is a really short series of hypotheses on a single page, then the time is spent de-risking the plan by systematically testing each element of it out. The book includes several lists of checklists that walk you through how to test each box on the Lean Canvas. As I’ve written about before, checklists are a really powerful management tool.
This is an essential read for entrepreneurs just starting a business. But it’s also an excellent read for anyone running a growth company. We have adopted more and more agile/lean methodologies over time at Return Path, and all of our product teams use the Lean Canvas with any major new features and projects.
(Side note – I’m writing this post on Friday, May 10, which is the 9th anniversary of my publishing this blog – 760 posts and one draft book later, it’s still an integral part of my business life!)
Good Meeting Behavior
Good Meeting Behavior
I've been in meetings with large groups of people at big companies where they're all on laptops the whole meeting, no one makes any eye contact with the speaker/facilitator, and it's hard to get a pulse out of the group as a result.
I almost entirely stopped bringing laptops and smartphones into business meetings a few years back. There's nothing I find more irritating than when other people are using them when it's my meeting. Even if they're taking notes, I never know if they're really taking notes or sneaking a peek at email. And in my experience, people who are on laptops and phones in meetings, whatever they're doing on those devices and however good they are at multi-tasking, aren't paying as close attention to the meeting as the other people in the room.
What I do instead is take notes on paper and spend 2 minutes after the meeting handling whatever data entry I need to handle on my computer.
I was very excited to see Brad's post about how he is now going to take paper notes in Board meetings rather than use his smartphone and be tempted to check email (and otherwise be distracted). Everyone should do this for every meeting. Board meetings are important examples, but they're not alone. It's just good meeting behavior. If you have other things to do, step out of the meeting and do them.
Book Short: Required Reading, Part II
Book Short:Â Required Reading, Part II
Every once in a while, a business book nails it from all levels. Well written, practical, broadly applicable to any size or type of organization, full of good examples, full of practical tables and checklists.  The Leadership Pipeline, which I wrote about here over six years ago, is one of those books — it lays out in great and clear detail a framework for understanding the transition from one level to another in an organization and how work behaviors must change in order for a person to succeed during and on the other side of that transition. In an organization like Return Path‘s which is rapidly expanding and promoting people regularly, this is critical. We liked the book so much that we have adopted a lot of its language and have built training courses around it.
The book’s sequel, The Performance Pipeline (book, Kindle), also by Stephen Drotter but without the co-authors of the original book, is now out — and it’s just as fantastic. The book looks at the same six level types in an organization (Enterprise Manager, Group Manager, Business Manager, Functional Manager, Manager of Managers, Manager of Others, and Self Managers/Individual Contributors) and focuses on what competencies people at each level must have in order to do their jobs at maximum effectiveness — and more important, in order to enable the levels below them to operate in an optimal way.
This book is as close to a handbook as I’ve ever seen for “how to be a CEO” or “how to be a manager.” Coupled with its prequel, it covers the transition into the role as well as the role itself, so “how to become a CEO and be a great one.” As with the prequel, the author also takes good care to note how to apply the book to a smaller organization (from the below list, usually the top three levels are combined in the CEO, and often the next two are combined as well). No synopsis can do justice to this book, but here’s a bit of a sense of what the book is about:
- Enterprise Manager:Â role is to Perpetuate the Enterprise and develop an Enterprise-wide strategic framework – what should we look like in 15-20 years, and how will we get the resources we need to get there?
- Group Manager:Â role is to manage a portfolio of businesses and develop people to run them
- Business Manager:Â role is to optimize short- and long-term profit and develop business-specific strategies around creating customer and stakeholder value
- Functional Manager:Â role is to drive competitive advantage and functional excellence
- Manager of Managers:Â role is to drive productivity across a multi-year horizon, and focus
- Manager of Others:Â role is to enable delivery through motivation, context setting, and talent acquisition
- Self Managers/Individual Contributors:Â role is to deliver and to be a good corporate citizen
I could write more, but there’s too much good stuff in this book to make excerpts particularly useful. The Performance Pipeline is another one of those rare – “run, don’t walk, to buy” books. Enjoy. For many of my colleagues at RP – look out – this one is coming!
Book Short (and great concept): Moments of Truth
Book Short (and great concept): Moments of Truth
TouchPoints:Â Creating Powerdul Leadership Connections in the Smallest of Moments, by Douglas Conant, former CEO of Campbell’s Soup Corporation, and Mette Norgaard (book, kindle), is a very good nugget of an idea wrapped in lots of other good, though only loosely connected management advice around self awareness and communication — something I’m increasingly finding in business books these days.
It’s a very short book. I read it on the Kindle, so I don’t know how many pages it is or the size of the font, but it was only 2900 kindles (or whatever you call a unit on the device) and only took a few Metro North train rides to finish. It’s probably worth a read just to get your head around the core concept a bit more, though it’s far from a great business book.
I won’t spend a lot of time on the book itself, but the concept echoes something I’ve been referring to a while here at Return Path as “Moments of Truth.” Moments of Truth are very short interactions between you and an employee that are high impact and, once you get the hang of them, low effort. At least, they’re low effort relative to long form meetings.
Here are a few thoughts about Moments of Truth:
- They are critical opportunities to get things both very right and very wrong with an employee
- They are more powerful than meets the eye – both for what they are and because they get amplified as employees mention them to other employees
- They can come to you (people popping into your office and the like), you can seek them out (management by walking around), and you can institutionalize them (for example, one of the things I do is call every employee on their Return Path anniversary to congratulate them on the milestone)
- They are no different than any other kind of interaction you have, just a lot shorter and therefore can be more intense (and numerous)
- Their use cases are as broad as any management interaction — coaching, positive or negative feedback, input, support, etc.
What can you as a manager or leader do to perfect your handling of Moments of Truth?
First, learn how to spot them when they come to you, and think about a typical employee’s day/week/month/year to think about when you can find opportunities to seek them out. Their first day on the job. When they get a promotion. When they get a great performance review, or new stock options. Maybe when they get a poor performance review or denied a promotion they were seeking.
Second, learn to appreciate them and leave space for them. If you have zero free minutes in every single day, you not only won’t have time to create or seek out Moments of Truth, you’ll be rushed or blow them off when they come to you.
Finally, like everything else, you have to develop a formula for handling them and then practice that formula. The book does talk about a formula of “head, heart, hand” (e.g., being logical, authentic, and competent) that’s not bad. Although I’d never thought about it systematically before writing this post, I have a few different kinds of Moments of Truth, and each one has its own rhythm to it, and its own regular ending.
But regardless of how you handle them, once you think about your day through this lens, you’ll start seeing them all over the place. Recognize their power, and dive in!
Book Short: Sloppy Sequel
Book Short:Â Sloppy Sequel
SuperFreakonomics, by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner, wasn’t a bad book, but it wasn’t nearly as good as the original Freakonomics, either. I always find the results of “naturally controlled experiments” and taking a data-driven view of the world to be very refreshing. And as much as I like the social scientist versions of these kinds of books like Malcolm Gladwell’s The Tipping Point and Blink (book
; blog post), there’s usually something about reading something data driven written by a professional quant jock that’s more reassuring.
That’s where SuperFreakonomics fell down a bit for me. Paul Krugman has described the book in a couple different places as “snarky and contrarian.” I typically enjoy books that carry those descriptors, but this one seemed a bit over the top for economists — like a series of theories looking for data more than raw data adding up to theories.Nowhere is this more true than the chapter on climate change. It’s a shame that that chapter seems to be swallowing up all the public discussion about the book, because there are some good points in that chapter, and the rest of the book is better than that particular chapter, but such is life.
As with all things related to the environment, I turned to my friend Andrew Winston’s blog, where he has a good post about how the authors kind of miss the point about climate change…and he also has a series of links to other blog posts debunking this one chapter. If you’re into the topic, or if you read the book, follow the chain here for good reading. My conclusion about this chapter, being at least somewhat informed about the climate change debate, is that the book seems to have sloppy writing and editing at best, possibly deliberately misleading at worst. (Incidentally, the reaction in the blogosphere seems highly emotional, other than Andrew’s, which probably doesn’t serve the reactors well.)
But I’ll assume the best of intentions. Some of the points made aren’t bad – there is no debate about the problem or the need to solve it, the authors express legitimate concern that current solutions, especially those requiring behavioral change, will be too little too late, and most interestingly, they show an interest in alternative approaches like geo-engineering. I hadn’t been familiar with that topic at all, but I’m now much more interested in it, not because it’s a “silver bullet” approach to dealing with climate change, but because it’s a different approach, and complex problems like climate change deserve to have a wide range of people working on multiple types of solutions. I met Nathan Myhrvold once (I almost threw up on him during a job interview, which is another story for another day), and it makes me very happy that his brilliance is being applied to this problem as a general principle.
As I said, though, beyond this one chapter, the book is good-not-great. But it certainly is chock full of cocktail party nuggets!
Book Short: Chip Off the Old Block
Book Short: Chip Off the Old Block
I have to admit, I was more than a little skeptical when Craig Spiezle handed me a copy of The Speed of Trust, by Stephen M. R. Covey, at the OTA summit last week. The author is the son of THE Stephen Covey, author of the world famous Seven Habits of Highly Effective People as well as The Eighth Habit (book, post). Would the book have substance and merit or be drafting off the dad’s good name?
I dog-ear pages of books as I read them, noting the pages that are most interesting if I ever want to go back and take a quick pass through the book to remind me about it (and yes, Ezra, I can do this on the Kindle as well via the bookmark feature). If dog-ear quantity is a mark of how impactful a book is, The Speed of Trust is towards the top of the list for me.
The book builds nicely on Seven Habits and The Eighth Habit and almost reads like the work of Stephen the father. The meat of the book is divided into two sections: one on developing what Covey calls “self trust,” a concept not unlike what I blogged about a few months ago, that if you make and keep commitments to yourself, you build a level of self-confidence and discipline that translates directly into better work and a better mental state. The other core section is one on building trust in relationships, where Covey lists out 13 behaviors that all lead to the development of trust.
In fact, we just had a medium-size trust breach a couple weeks ago with one of our key clients. Reading the book just as we are struggling to “right the wrong” was particularly impactful to me and gave me a number of good ideas for how to move past the issue without simply relying on self-flagellation and blunt apologies. This is a book full of practical applications.
It’s not a perfect book (no book is), and in particular its notion of societal trust through contribution is a bit weak relative to the rest of the book, but The Speed of Trust is an excellent read for anyone who wants to understand the fastest way to build — and destroy — a winning culture. It reads like a sequel of Covey senior’s books, but that’s a good thing.
The Facebook Fad
The Facebook Fad
I’m sure someone will shoot me for saying this, but I don’t get Facebook. I mean, I get it, but I don’t see what all the fuss is about. I made similar comments before about Gmail (here, here), and people told me I was an idiot at the time. Three years later, Gmail is certainly a popular webmail service, but it’s hardly changed the world. In fact, it’s a distant fourth behind Yahoo, Microsoft, and AOL. So I don’t feel so bad about not oohing and ahhing and slobbering all over the place about Facebook.
Facebook reminds me of AOL back in the day. AOL was the most simple, elegant, general purpose entree for people who wanted to get online and weren’t sure how in the early days of online services, before the Internet came of age. It was good at packaging up its content and putting everything “in a box.” It was clean. It was fun. People bragged about being an AOL member and talked about their screen name like it was on their birth certificate or something. And the company capitalized on all the goodwill by becoming a PR machine to perpetuate its membership growth.
Now Facebook — it’s the most simple, elegant, general purpose social networking site here in the early days of social networking. It’s pretty good about packaging up its applications, and certainly opening up its APIs is a huge benefit that AOL didn’t figure out until it embraced the open web in 1999-2000. It is pretty good about putting everything in a box for me as a member. And like AOL, the company is turning into a PR juggernaut and hoping to use it to perpetuate its registration numbers.
But let’s look at the things that caused (IMO) AOL’s downfall (AOL as we knew it) and look at the parallels with Facebook. AOL quickly became too cluttered. It’s simple elegance was destroyed by too much stuff jammed into its clean interface. It couldn’t keep up with best of breed content or even messaging systems inside its walled garden. Spam crushed its email functionality. It couldn’t maintain its “all things to all people” infrastructure on the back end. Ultimately, the open web washed over it. People who defected were simply having better experiences elsewhere.
The parallels aren’t exact, but there are certainly some strong ones. Facebook is already too cluttered for me. Why are people writing on my wall instead of emailing me — all that does is trigger an email from Facebook to me telling me to come generate another page view for them. Why am I getting invitations to things on Facebook instead of through the much better eVite platform? The various forms of messaging are disorganized and hard to find.Â
Most important, for a social network, it turns out that I don’t actually want my entire universe of friends and contacts to be able to connect with each other through me. Like George Costanza in Seinfeld, I apparently have a problem with my “worlds colliding.” I already know of one couple who either hooked up or is heavily flirting by connecting through my Facebook profile, and it’s not one I’m proud to have spawned. I think I let one of them “be my friend” by mistake in the first place. And I am a compulsive social networker. It’s hard to imagine that these principles scale unfettered to the whole universe.
The main thing Facebook has going for it in this comparison is that its open APIs will lead to best of breed development for the platform. But who cares about Facebook as a platform? Isn’t the open web (or Open Social) ultimately going to wash over it? I get that there are cool apps being written for Facebook – but 100% of those applications will be on the open web as well. It’s certainly possible that Facebook’s marrying of my “social network” with best of breed applications will make it stickier for longer than AOL…but let’s remember that AOL has clung to life as a proprietary service for quite a while on the stickiness of people’s email addresses. And yet, it is a non-event now as a platform.Â
It will be interesting to see how Facebook bobs and weaves over the coming years to avoid what I think of as its inevitable fate. And yes, I know I’m not 18 and if I were, I’d like Facebook more and spend all day in it. But that to me reinforces my point even more — this is the same crew who flocked to, and then quickly from, MySpace. When will they get tired of Facebook, and what’s to prevent them moving onto the next fad?
Book Short: The Challenger Sale
Book Short:Â The Challenger Sale
I’ve written a couple times in the past about how we sell at Return Path. I’ve written about our principle sales methodology for the past decade, SPIN Selling, by Neil Rackham (and Major Account Strategy, also by Rackham, which is basically SPIN Selling for Account Managers), which focuses on a specific technique for solution selling by using questioning to get the prospective client to identify his or her own needs, as well as Jeffrey Gitomer’s two short books, the Little Red Book of Selling and Little Red Book of Sales Answers, which are long on sales questioning techniques. And I also wrote this post about another book called Why People Don’t Buy Things, by Kim Wallace and Harry Washburn. The great thing about this book is that it dives into the need for variation in sales communication strategies based on BUYER personae, such as The Commander, The Thinker, and The Visualizer.
While both these principles are good – asking questions and tailoring communication styles based on the buyer – anyone who has ever tried to run a whole sales call by asking questions knows that it’s REALLY HARD and can sometimes just outright flop. There’s a new movement that I’ve been reading articles about for a few months now called The Challenger Sale, and I finally finished the book about it this past week.
If you run a company or a sales team that has any kind of complex sale or a hybrid software/service model, then you should read The Challenger Sale: Taking Control of the Customer Conversation, by Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson. Whether you adopt the methodology or not, there are a few really great insights in the book that will help you recruit and manage a sales team. Some of the insights include:
- Understanding the five types of sales reps and why/when they’re successful/not successful. The labels are telling in and of themselves: the Lone Wolf, the Hard Worker, the Relationship Building, the Reactive Problem Solver, and the Challenger
- Why sales reps can be trained as Challengers, and how important it is to rally an entire organization around this sales model, not just train sales reps on it (that’s probably a good reminder for any sales methodology)
- The ingredients of the Challenger sale – Commercial Teaching for Differentiation, Tailoring for Resonance, Taking Control of the Conversation. I found the section on Commercial Teaching the most enlightening, particularly in our business, where we’re not selling an established category with established budget line items
The Challenger Sale feels like the beginning of a wave that will take over a lot of selling organizations in the next decade, either directly as written or as it inspires ancillary works and related techniques. For that reason alone, it’s worth a read.
Book Short: New to the Canon of Great CEO Books
Please go put Decide and Conquer: 44 Decisions that will Make or Break All Leaders by David Siegel on your reading list, or buy it. David’s book is up there on my list with Ben Horowitz’s The Hard Thing About Hard Things. It’s a totally different kind of book than Startup CEO, and in some ways a much better one in that there’s a great through-line or storyline, as David shares his leadership framework in the context of his journey of getting hired to replace founder Scott Heiferman as Meetup’s CEO after its acquisition by WeWork, including some juicy interactions with Adam Neumann, through the trials and tribulations of WeWork as a parent company, through COVID and its impact on an in-person meeting facilitator like Meetup, through to the sale of Meetup OUT of WeWork.
It’s hard to do the book justice with a quick write up. It’s incredibly concise. It’s clear. It’s witty. Most of all, it’s very human, and David shares a very human, common sense approach to leadership. I particularly like a device he uses to reinforce his main points and principles by bolding the key phrases every time they show up in the book: be kind, be confident, be bold, expand your options, focus on the long-term picture, be pragmatic, be honest, be speedy, do what’s right for the business, work for your people and they’ll work for you, be surprised only about being surprised. These all resonate with me so much.
One of the interesting things about the book is that David is a CEO, but not a founder (although he was sort of a re-founder in this case). A lot of CEO books talk about how to run a company, or give stories from the trials and tribulations thereof, but few focus on the elements of interviewing for the CEO job, or taking over the reins of a company in the midst of a turbulent flight. So the book is about getting the job, starting the job, doing a turnaround, leading a company through growth, a buy-out, and managing a company inside of another company. And because Meetup is such an iconic brand and business, it’s easy to understand a lot of the backdrop to David’s story.
I just met David for the first time a few weeks ago. We knew a bunch of people in common from his DoubleClick days. We instantly hit it off and traded copies of our books, and then were reading them at the same time trading emails about the parts that clicked. I just can’t recommend the book enough to any CEO or founder. In my view, it joins a pretty elite canon.