Before I published The Innovator’s Dilemma, I
got a call from Andrew Grove, then the chairman of Intel. He had read
one of my early papers about disruptive technology, and he asked if I
could talk to his direct reports and explain my research and what it
implied for Intel. Excited, I flew to Silicon Valley and showed up at
the appointed time, only to have Grove say, “Look, stuff has happened.
We have only 10 minutes for you. Tell us what your model of disruption
means for Intel.” I said that I couldn’t—that I needed a full 30 minutes
to explain the model, because only with it as context would any
comments about Intel make sense. Ten minutes into my explanation, Grove
interrupted: “Look, I’ve got your model. Just tell us what it means for
Intel.”
I insisted that I needed 10 more minutes to describe how the process
of disruption had worked its way through a very different industry,
steel, so that he and his team could understand how disruption worked. I
told the story of how Nucor and other steel minimills had begun by
attacking the lowest end of the market—steel reinforcing bars, or
rebar—and later moved up toward the high end, undercutting the
traditional steel mills.
When I finished the minimill story, Grove said, “OK, I get it. What
it means for Intel is...,” and then went on to articulate what would
become the company’s strategy for going to the bottom of the market to
launch the Celeron processor.
I’ve thought about that a million times since. If I had been suckered
into telling Andy Grove what he should think about the microprocessor
business, I’d have been killed. But instead of telling him what to
think, I taught him how to think—and then he reached what I felt was the
correct decision on his own.
That experience had a profound influence on me. When people ask what I
think they should do, I rarely answer their question directly. Instead,
I run the question aloud through one of my models. I’ll describe how
the process in the model worked its way through an industry quite
different from their own. And then, more often than not, they’ll say,
“OK, I get it.” And they’ll answer their own question more insightfully
than I could have.
My class at HBS is structured to help my students understand what
good management theory is and how it is built. To that backbone I attach
different models or theories that help students think about the various
dimensions of a general manager’s job in stimulating innovation and
growth. In each session we look at one company through the lenses of
those theories—using them to explain how the company got into its
situation and to examine what managerial actions will yield the needed
results.
On the last day of class, I ask my students to turn those theoretical
lenses on themselves, to find cogent answers to three questions: First,
how can I be sure that I’ll be happy in my career? Second, how can I be
sure that my relationships with my spouse and my family become an
enduring source of happiness? Third, how can I be sure I’ll stay out of
jail? Though the last question sounds lighthearted, it’s not. Two of the
32 people in my Rhodes scholar class spent time in jail. Jeff Skilling
of Enron fame was a classmate of mine at HBS. These were good guys—but
something in their lives sent them off in the wrong direction.
The Class of 2010
As the students discuss the answers to these questions, I open my own
life to them as a case study of sorts, to illustrate how they can use
the theories from our course to guide their life decisions.
One of the theories that gives great insight on the first
question—how to be sure we find happiness in our careers—is from
Frederick Herzberg, who asserts that the powerful motivator in our lives
isn’t money; it’s the opportunity to learn, grow in responsibilities,
contribute to others, and be recognized for achievements. I tell the
students about a vision of sorts I had while I was running the company I
founded before becoming an academic. In my mind’s eye I saw one of my
managers leave for work one morning with a relatively strong level of
self-esteem. Then I pictured her driving home to her family 10 hours
later, feeling unappreciated, frustrated, underutilized, and demeaned. I
imagined how profoundly her lowered self-esteem affected the way she
interacted with her children. The vision in my mind then fast-forwarded
to another day, when she drove home with greater self-esteem—feeling
that she had learned a lot, been recognized for achieving valuable
things, and played a significant role in the success of some important
initiatives. I then imagined how positively that affected her as a
spouse and a parent. My conclusion: Management is the most noble of
professions if it’s practiced well. No other occupation offers as many
ways to help others learn and grow, take responsibility and be
recognized for achievement, and contribute to the success of a team.
More and more MBA students come to school thinking that a career in
business means buying, selling, and investing in companies. That’s
unfortunate. Doing deals doesn’t yield the deep rewards that come from
building up people.
I want students to leave my classroom knowing that.
Create a Strategy for Your Life
A theory that is helpful in answering the second question—How can I
ensure that my relationship with my family proves to be an enduring
source of happiness?—concerns how strategy is defined and implemented.
Its primary insight is that a company’s strategy is determined by the
types of initiatives that management invests in. If a company’s resource
allocation process is not managed masterfully, what emerges from it can
be very different from what management intended. Because companies’
decision-making systems are designed to steer investments to initiatives
that offer the most tangible and immediate returns, companies
shortchange investments in initiatives that are crucial to their
long-term strategies.
Over the years I’ve watched the fates of my HBS classmates from 1979
unfold; I’ve seen more and more of them come to reunions unhappy,
divorced, and alienated from their children. I can guarantee you that
not a single one of them graduated with the deliberate strategy of
getting divorced and raising children who would become estranged from
them. And yet a shocking number of them implemented that strategy. The
reason? They didn’t keep the purpose of their lives front and center as
they decided how to spend their time, talents, and energy.
It’s quite startling that a significant fraction of the 900 students
that HBS draws each year from the world’s best have given little thought
to the purpose of their lives. I tell the students that HBS might be
one of their last chances to reflect deeply on that question. If they
think that they’ll have more time and energy to reflect later, they’re
nuts, because life only gets more demanding: You take on a mortgage;
you’re working 70 hours a week; you have a spouse and children.
For me, having a clear purpose in my life has been essential. But it
was something I had to think long and hard about before I understood it.
When I was a Rhodes scholar, I was in a very demanding academic
program, trying to cram an extra year’s worth of work into my time at
Oxford. I decided to spend an hour every night reading, thinking, and
praying about why God put me on this earth. That was a very challenging
commitment to keep, because every hour I spent doing that, I wasn’t
studying applied econometrics. I was conflicted about whether I could
really afford to take that time away from my studies, but I stuck with
it—and ultimately figured out the purpose of my life.
Had I instead spent that hour each day learning the latest techniques
for mastering the problems of autocorrelation in regression analysis, I
would have badly misspent my life. I apply the tools of econometrics a
few times a year, but I apply my knowledge of the purpose of my life
every day. It’s the single most useful thing I’ve ever learned. I
promise my students that if they take the time to figure out their life
purpose, they’ll look back on it as the most important thing they
discovered at HBS. If they don’t figure it out, they will just sail off
without a rudder and get buffeted in the very rough seas of life.
Clarity about their purpose will trump knowledge of activity-based
costing, balanced scorecards, core competence, disruptive innovation,
the four Ps, and the five forces.
My purpose grew out of my religious faith, but faith isn’t the only
thing that gives people direction. For example, one of my former
students decided that his purpose was to bring honesty and economic
prosperity to his country and to raise children who were as capably
committed to this cause, and to each other, as he was. His purpose is
focused on family and others—as mine is.
The choice and successful pursuit of a profession is but one tool for
achieving your purpose. But without a purpose, life can become hollow.
Allocate Your Resources
Your decisions about allocating your personal time, energy, and talent ultimately shape your life’s strategy.
I have a bunch of “businesses” that compete for these resources: I’m
trying to have a rewarding relationship with my wife, raise great kids,
contribute to my community, succeed in my career, contribute to my
church, and so on. And I have exactly the same problem that a
corporation does. I have a limited amount of time and energy and talent.
How much do I devote to each of these pursuits?
Allocation choices can make your life turn out to be very different
from what you intended. Sometimes that’s good: Opportunities that you
never planned for emerge. But if you misinvest your resources, the
outcome can be bad. As I think about my former classmates who
inadvertently invested for lives of hollow unhappiness, I can’t help
believing that their troubles relate right back to a short-term
perspective.
When people who have a high need for achievement—and that includes
all Harvard Business School graduates—have an extra half hour of time or
an extra ounce of energy, they’ll unconsciously allocate it to
activities that yield the most tangible accomplishments. And our careers
provide the most concrete evidence that we’re moving forward. You ship a
product, finish a design, complete a presentation, close a sale, teach a
class, publish a paper, get paid, get promoted. In contrast, investing
time and energy in your relationship with your spouse and children
typically doesn’t offer that same immediate sense of achievement. Kids
misbehave every day. It’s really not until 20 years down the road that
you can put your hands on your hips and say, “I raised a good son or a
good daughter.” You can neglect your relationship with your spouse, and
on a day-to-day basis, it doesn’t seem as if things are deteriorating.
People who are driven to excel have this unconscious propensity to
underinvest in their families and overinvest in their careers—even
though intimate and loving relationships with their families are the
most powerful and enduring source of happiness.
If you study the root causes of business disasters, over and over
you’ll find this predisposition toward endeavors that offer immediate
gratification. If you look at personal lives through that lens, you’ll
see the same stunning and sobering pattern: people allocating fewer and
fewer resources to the things they would have once said mattered most.
Create a Culture
There’s an important model in our class called the Tools of
Cooperation, which basically says that being a visionary manager isn’t
all it’s cracked up to be. It’s one thing to see into the foggy future
with acuity and chart the course corrections that the company must make.
But it’s quite another to persuade employees who might not see the
changes ahead to line up and work cooperatively to take the company in
that new direction. Knowing what tools to wield to elicit the needed
cooperation is a critical managerial skill.
The theory arrays these tools along two dimensions—the extent to
which members of the organization agree on what they want from their
participation in the enterprise, and the extent to which they agree on
what actions will produce the desired results. When there is little
agreement on both axes, you have to use “power tools”—coercion, threats,
punishment, and so on—to secure cooperation. Many companies start in
this quadrant, which is why the founding executive team must play such
an assertive role in defining what must be done and how. If employees’
ways of working together to address those tasks succeed over and over,
consensus begins to form. MIT’s Edgar Schein has described this process
as the mechanism by which a culture is built. Ultimately, people don’t
even think about whether their way of doing things yields success. They
embrace priorities and follow procedures by instinct and assumption
rather than by explicit decision—which means that they’ve created a
culture. Culture, in compelling but unspoken ways, dictates the proven,
acceptable methods by which members of the group address recurrent
problems. And culture defines the priority given to different types of
problems. It can be a powerful management tool.
In using this model to address the question, How can I be sure that
my family becomes an enduring source of happiness?, my students quickly
see that the simplest tools that parents can wield to elicit cooperation
from children are power tools. But there comes a point during the teen
years when power tools no longer work. At that point parents start
wishing that they had begun working with their children at a very young
age to build a culture at home in which children instinctively behave
respectfully toward one another, obey their parents, and choose the
right thing to do. Families have cultures, just as companies do. Those
cultures can be built consciously or evolve inadvertently.
If you want your kids to have strong self-esteem and confidence that
they can solve hard problems, those qualities won’t magically
materialize in high school. You have to design them into your family’s
culture—and you have to think about this very early on. Like employees,
children build self-esteem by doing things that are hard and learning
what works.
Avoid the “Marginal Costs” Mistake
We’re taught in finance and economics that in evaluating alternative
investments, we should ignore sunk and fixed costs, and instead base
decisions on the marginal costs and marginal revenues that each
alternative entails. We learn in our course that this doctrine biases
companies to leverage what they have put in place to succeed in the
past, instead of guiding them to create the capabilities they’ll need in
the future. If we knew the future would be exactly the same as the
past, that approach would be fine. But if the future’s different—and it
almost always is—then it’s the wrong thing to do.
This theory addresses the third question I discuss with my
students—how to live a life of integrity (stay out of jail).
Unconsciously, we often employ the marginal cost doctrine in our
personal lives when we choose between right and wrong. A voice in our
head says, “Look, I know that as a general rule, most people shouldn’t
do this. But in this particular extenuating circumstance, just this
once, it’s OK.” The marginal cost of doing something wrong “just this
once” always seems alluringly low. It suckers you in, and you don’t ever
look at where that path ultimately is headed and at the full costs that
the choice entails. Justification for infidelity and dishonesty in all
their manifestations lies in the marginal cost economics of “just this
once.”
I’d like to share a story about how I came to understand the
potential damage of “just this once” in my own life. I played on the
Oxford University varsity basketball team. We worked our tails off and
finished the season undefeated. The guys on the team were the best
friends I’ve ever had in my life. We got to the British equivalent of
the NCAA tournament—and made it to the final four. It turned out the
championship game was scheduled to be played on a Sunday. I had made a
personal commitment to God at age 16 that I would never play ball on
Sunday. So I went to the coach and explained my problem. He was
incredulous. My teammates were, too, because I was the starting center.
Every one of the guys on the team came to me and said, “You’ve got to
play. Can’t you break the rule just this one time?”
I’m a deeply religious man, so I went away and prayed about what I
should do. I got a very clear feeling that I shouldn’t break my
commitment—so I didn’t play in the championship game.
In many ways that was a small decision—involving one of several
thousand Sundays in my life. In theory, surely I could have crossed over
the line just that one time and then not done it again. But looking
back on it, resisting the temptation whose logic was “In this
extenuating circumstance, just this once, it’s OK” has proven to be one
of the most important decisions of my life. Why? My life has been one
unending stream of extenuating circumstances. Had I crossed the line
that one time, I would have done it over and over in the years that
followed.
The lesson I learned from this is that it’s easier to hold to your
principles 100% of the time than it is to hold to them 98% of the time.
If you give in to “just this once,” based on a marginal cost analysis,
as some of my former classmates have done, you’ll regret where you end
up. You’ve got to define for yourself what you stand for and draw the
line in a safe place.
Remember the Importance of Humility
I got this insight when I was asked to teach a class on humility at
Harvard College. I asked all the students to describe the most humble
person they knew. One characteristic of these humble people stood out:
They had a high level of self-esteem. They knew who they were, and they
felt good about who they were. We also decided that humility was defined
not by self-deprecating behavior or attitudes but by the esteem with
which you regard others. Good behavior flows naturally from that kind of
humility. For example, you would never steal from someone, because you
respect that person too much. You’d never lie to someone, either.
It’s crucial to take a sense of humility into the world. By the time
you make it to a top graduate school, almost all your learning has come
from people who are smarter and more experienced than you: parents,
teachers, bosses. But once you’ve finished at Harvard Business School or
any other top academic institution, the vast majority of people you’ll
interact with on a day-to-day basis may not be smarter than you. And if
your attitude is that only smarter people have something to teach you,
your learning opportunities will be very limited. But if you have a
humble eagerness to learn something from everybody, your learning
opportunities will be unlimited. Generally, you can be humble only if
you feel really good about yourself—and you want to help those around
you feel really good about themselves, too. When we see people acting in
an abusive, arrogant, or demeaning manner toward others, their behavior
almost always is a symptom of their lack of self-esteem. They need to
put someone else down to feel good about themselves.
Choose the Right Yardstick
This past year I was diagnosed with cancer and faced the possibility
that my life would end sooner than I’d planned. Thankfully, it now looks
as if I’ll be spared. But the experience has given me important insight
into my life.
I have a pretty clear idea of how my ideas have generated enormous
revenue for companies that have used my research; I know I’ve had a
substantial impact. But as I’ve confronted this disease, it’s been
interesting to see how unimportant that impact is to me now. I’ve
concluded that the metric by which God will assess my life isn’t dollars
but the individual people whose lives I’ve touched.
I think that’s the way it will work for us all. Don’t worry about the
level of individual prominence you have achieved; worry about the
individuals you have helped become better people. This is my final
recommendation: Think about the metric by which your life will be
judged, and make a resolution to live every day so that in the end, your
life will be judged a success.
http://hbr.org/2010/07/how-will-you-measure-your-life/ar/1
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