A Bit of Optimism - Joy with Marco Bizzarri
Episode Date: December 1, 2020Gucci CEO, Marco Bizzarri, finds joy in the little things. This is his secret. His secret to a happy life, also his secret to leadership. And it works. This is… A Bit of Optimism. YouTube: http://y...outube.com/simonsinekFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/simonsinekLinkedin: https://linkedin.com/in/simonsinek/Instagram: https://instagram.com/simonsinek/Twitter: https://twitter.com/simonsinekPinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/officialsimonsinek/Â
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When I talk to Marco Bizzari, I just have this amazing sense of joy.
Even his name, Marco Bizzari, sparks joy.
But who knew that joy could actually be a leadership principle?
It is joy and humility that Marco has brought to Gucci as the new CEO.
And he's completely transformed that company.
It's humanity and finding
joy in little things
that has been his secret.
This is a bit of optimism.
Thank you so much
for doing this. It's
such a pleasure to see you, I have to say.
It's a pleasure for me.
You know, we've only had the chance to interact a few times,
but I have to say, every time I've walked away inspired.
You're well-known, obviously, in the fashion world
because most of your career has been in the fashion world.
But to me, you're one of those CEOs, honestly,
that deserve to be celebrated everywhere.
You're one of those few CEOs that, that deserve to be celebrated everywhere. You're one of those few CEOs
that with all of the pressures upon you to make all your short-term financial numbers like
so many others, you're so committed to people. And when you came into Gucci, you came into a culture
of fear and turned it into this culture of inspiration and empowerment. Please tell me
how you did it. I'm so fascinated by this story. You know, I mean, I was lucky in a way because,
I mean, I was part of the group already because I started working in caring like 15 years ago
already. So I knew what was happening in Gucci. It was famous for this kind of a culture of,
what was happening in Gucci.
It was famous for this kind of a culture of, you know,
fear, authority, et cetera, but it's not what I am.
And I really believe that you cannot pretend to be someone else.
So it's like when you do an interview, right,
where you try to think what they expect from you.
And so you try to pretend to be a different person.
You can also make it.
The problem is that it's not going to lie when you're going to be hired.
So at the very end, you're going to be fired.
So it's better to be yourself from the beginning. Always being
very optimistic,
very believing in people,
et cetera, et cetera. And also,
first and foremost, I really believe that
creativity, especially for fashion,
I think overall, cannot
be fostered in an
ambience of fear.
Let me push back there a little bit.
Because your industry is
big egos.
This is like a lot of creative,
personality-driven industries.
It could be a chef in a
famous restaurant. It's big egos
that do operate out of fear
and they do have success.
Some of these brands were built
with these fear environments.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
I think times have changed as well.
In the 70s, I believe that that was the norm.
They think that they can be creative people and doing amazing collection because they're blessed from God in a way.
Because they're the only ones that can do these kinds of things.
In reality, you have teams that are amazing below them.
And these people, most of the time, they are very, very good.
In reality, you have teams that are amazing below them.
And these people, most of the time, they are very, very good.
I have stories that were incredible, like creative people,
I mean, creative directors going to work like 10 p.m.
and working until 4 in the morning, asking the team to be present,
or asking meetings at 9 a.m. and then, in reality,
showing up like in the afternoon.
So all these kinds of things, maybe some more subtle,
something more evident like this one,
but something that I don't believe is fair,
first and foremost,
because I mean, there's no respect for people.
And I've been told by my parents from the beginning,
if you keep respect for people,
that is going to pay off.
So this is the way in which I wanted to live my life, always. This is amazing to me, by the way,
that people actually got away with this,
that you said they wanted to go to work at 10 p.m.
and stay till 4 a.m.
and they made the team come in
or call these meetings for the morning
and don't show up till the afternoon.
How did people even get away with this?
Maybe in this case, you just want to keep your job.
You feel that there's no other life
than the one that you are living,
that you are like in a bubble.
So I just want to be part of a different situation
where I go to work with smile.
That doesn't mean that I'm not asking for results.
It's completely the reverse.
I mean, especially in fashion company,
to have someone that is exactly like you,
feels like you, because otherwise it doesn't work.
Meaning you need a partner
who shares your philosophy of people first.
Exactly, same. Same values.
Exactly.
And I so appreciate that you believe in this idea of partnership, that it's kind of like what you just said before, these creative egos that come in, you know, with a gift from
God.
Yeah.
But even at the CEO level, that it's not one person either.
It has to be a partnership.
Absolutely.
These are so different, you know, capabilities.
I mean, I would never be able to design a dress.
So I need to rely on someone else.
And normally these people, they don't have a clue about the processes and finance.
It's such a combination that needs to work together.
Otherwise, there's no way in which a company can be successful.
Oh, you can be successful, but it's not going to last.
Right, right.
So tell me some of the specific things that you did to change the culture.
Because I think that's the thing that I find particularly interesting, that you did some very simple but very powerful things.
The very, very, very first day when I joined the company, I was used to going to the corridors of Gucci as a partner coming from other brands.
I was watching in the corridors, in the meeting rooms, or everywhere, both in design and in business offices.
There were all these pictures of all these celebrities of the 60s and the 70s, all in
black and white.
And I was thinking to myself, but there's no joy.
I mean, it's all legacy and no future.
And considering this transition
that we were living in our world at that time
was 2015, and I really thought
that the world was going into the direction
that was completely different from the past.
I said to myself, what should I do
to tell the people in Gucci
that we are going to move to
the future
respecting the past,
but not revering the past?
And that's to say,
I should ask all the people
across the board in all offices worldwide,
we have 500 shops
and many buildings in all the regions,
geographical region of the world,
get the very first day at nine o'clock
Italian time,
when I entered for the first time in Gucci,
they take out all the pictures
of all these people everywhere without telling anybody what we were doing.
You can imagine the kind of impact that this guy is crazy.
He doesn't respect our past, what he thinks it's going to be or what he's going to do, etc., etc.
But the fact is, I was not going against the past of Gucci.
That actually is the strength of the brand.
But the way which you use it needs to be to talk to people that are relevant today.
If you want to keep these things as they are, you need to change continuously.
Because, I mean, if you want to keep your leadership, you cannot think that if you stay as you are, you're going to keep your leadership.
You need to continue to change if you want to maintain the leadership.
So it's a continuous change that you need to instill in the company.
And to create a continuous change, you need to create an ambience where people are willing to take a risk, that they're not killed if they make a
mistake. And that is the most difficult thing because that fosters creativity
for sure. But on the other side, you need to make sure that the company continues to go
in the direction that makes sense.
And with a company like ours,
that we have 20,000 people today,
I mean,
this is the most difficult thing
that you need to fight
every single day
in order to make sure
that the people are free
to express themselves.
So you took all the old
black and white pictures
of the past
with these mostly dead
celebrities on the wall,
a company that mistook legacy for a museum.
It's good to have a legacy,
but you don't want to put it in a museum,
put it all in formaldehyde, and you can't grow.
So what did you have put up on the walls instead?
For one year, everything remained the same.
So white corridors.
Oh, so you had nothing on the walls for a year.
Zero.
No, because we wanted to restart the story.
And, you know, in fashion, to restart the story, it takes at least 12, 18 months.
Because from the moment in which Alessandro did the first show to the moment in which we have the product in the shops, it takes like seven, eight months.
But then we started not to cover all the shop with the products of Alessandro because, I we didn't really know if that was successful so we decided to take a risk but to take a risk on like 35 percent of the shops 40 percent of the
shops and we kept the owners and eyes in the others in order to see what was the the feedback
of the consumers because the point is that when you want to change so dramatically the static
you don't know you cannot do focus groups.
Because at the beginning,
everybody was not happy about the collection of Alessandro.
Because I mean, there was such a shift.
People were a little bit disconnected.
So we felt that was the right choice to do.
We felt that was going to have a good impact.
I must say that the most creative people in the industry,
I could say about Anna Wintour or Business of Fashion or WWD,
the people managing, they saw immediately the talent of Alessandro. They were the ones
that praised the new aesthetic of Alessandro and Gucci. The consumers, they were more reluctant
to accept this. So this is really interesting. In the sort of outside the fashion world,
everybody's obsessed with focus groups. You would never take that financial risk to completely
throw out the old, put in the new, and then just cross your fingers and hope it goes. And you said we just
had to trust our feeling. Yeah, exactly. That takes a tremendous amount of courage.
No, this kind of courage comes as well when you have a situation where you can really see
that the business is not going well. The beauty of changing when things go well is the best.
Because, I mean, you can, you know, you make a mistake, you don't really care.
Because, I mean, you're going to be offset by the rest of the company that's going with many projects in the right direction.
But the business of Gucci at that time was going down quite dramatically in the sense that every single day we were at minus 30, minus 35%.
I was clearly seeing that the business was going down.
And when in fashion, you lose appeal, it's like you go down from a mountain very, very quick.
So there was not even a choice.
So, and you cannot do in this dramatical change, you cannot do focus groups.
You're talking about Alessandro Michele, the creative director of Gucci.
Yeah.
For something that's about profound turnaround, pivoting, a reinvention, you have to have
some sort of guiding principle, some vision, something or other, and that's the thing you're
trusting in.
That's the gut thing.
Yes.
How did you resist the pressure?
I mean, there were massive pressures internally.
You weren't popular when you showed up. What I did, especially at the beginning,
maybe that goes a little bit against what you are teaching, but now I do exactly what you're
teaching. So that's fine. At the beginning, because I needed to make a change very, very quick,
I told all my people, especially to my direct reports, that was not a democracy in the sense that I took the responsibility of the change.
You are not going to be responsible.
You just follow.
Don't question.
Because, I mean, in these kind of changes, if you start asking, you start compromising, then you, I mean, the message that is going to come at the end is going to be too denoted.
So I didn't want that.
Then I started traveling because for the first three months, I traveled everywhere.
I met 6,000, 7,000 people personally, at least.
I made presentation of the strategy to everybody because I wanted, especially for the talents to remain in the company.
So I needed to show myself personally and to tell people that I was confident on the change. And they needed to
know me as well, to understand I was not crazy as well, because that was a kind of a possibility.
By the way, that is exactly what I preach. And I went through something very similar.
When COVID hit, we had to pivot. And the old way is where we made most of our income from live
events. I mean, I could tell you what the numbers looked like.
They were pretty steeped down.
And so I gave the exact same speech,
which is, I have a vision.
I'm very confident in this vision.
This is not up for discussion or debate.
This is not a democracy.
I didn't necessarily say it in those terms.
But at the end of the day, I had to rely on the team.
I knew I had the vision, but I couldn't implement it by myself. And so just like you did, you went around and you built the confidence in you and your vision that they would support and they would help.
I think what a lot of CEOs mistake, which is having vision and telling people how to do it
are two different things, which is you said, I this vision, and this is where we're going.
Okay, how are we going to get there?
You asked for buy-in, and you asked for support.
You stayed focused on where you were going in the future,
as opposed to dictating, I need you to do this specific thing.
You have no creativity, you have no bandwidth, you have nothing to contribute.
Absolutely. Exactly.
And following up what you're saying,
you did that in the period of crisis, as I did.
So it's exactly the same.
So because you are forced to do something that is different.
You have no choice.
No choice.
And the vision needs to be extremely clear,
but then the people need to be completely empowered,
completely empowered to make it.
So they need to have the autonomy
to express their creativity at the max.
How did you get like this?
How did you become vision-focused, people-focused?
You know, where did you grow up?
You grew up, I know you grew up in Italy,
but where did you grow up in Italy?
I grew up in the same house where I still live,
close to Reggio Emilia with my family.
I mean, I was born in the same house where I stay now
with my kids and my wife.
That's amazing.
And I kept these rules.
I mean, I always decided not to move the family despite the fact that I lived like five years in Paris, five years in London, one year in Sydney.
So I was commuting when I was there.
From Monday to Friday, I was traveling everywhere and then back, always back Friday night and then staying on the weekend.
So this idea of not changing despite the success,
trying not to change your personality,
because what I hate in people that they become successful or famous
or rich or whatever, that they change their behavior.
Their old friends are not anymore old friends,
and they lose completely the reason why they became successful.
But the reason they became successful is because they had this kind of,
you know, ground, and they need to keep that.
And these are the value that matters.
All the rest is just superficiality.
I don't want my kids to grow in that direction.
So that's the reason why I wanted them to stay there, get a little bit of what I was
able to learn from my parents.
And what did you learn from parents?
Were you closer with your mother or your father?
I was close with both of them.
I lost my mother quite early
because she was 55 when she died.
But I mean, both of them
had different characteristics.
My mother was like someone
helping everybody.
I remember when a new business
started in this small town, Rubiera,
she was always going there
like either to buy a newspaper
or to buy meat or whatever.
Every new business that was happening, she was going there
in order to help the business. Amazing.
I remember when she died, we went to the church. The church was full of people. Many people didn't
even know. She did everything without telling anybody, helping people. So that, of course, shared me a lot in terms of values, in terms of giving back and trying to remain as I was.
And my father was the same, a very good character, different in terms of characteristics and more business-driven, etc.
So I think I took a little bit of both.
You learned the business from your dad and the humanity from your mother.
Yeah, yeah, probably.
I mean, I was lucky because, I mean, despite the fact that my parents didn't go to school,
none of them, because, I mean, at that time in Italy, I mean, it was not as easy to go to school.
So they didn't, they went to the elementary school, both of them, for three years.
I was lucky because, I mean, as soon as I started the school I
was always the best. So I was I mean I had this kind of possibility to to learn very very fast.
You know I had the chance to build on that because it was for me was very easy to learn things and
then to. Do you have brothers and sisters? Do you have brothers and sisters? No. Only child? Only
child. Very very pampered from the beginning.
Can you give me an example, something that you did in your career?
It didn't have to be a commercial success that you loved being a part of.
And that if everything you did in your career from this point on was like that, if you could do that again, you'd be the happiest person alive.
There was a kind of a turning point. If I think about my career, I mean, I was not born extremely talented.
I was very, very shy from the beginning, very, very shy.
But there was a moment that really shaped the future of my career, I think,
that at the beginning of my career, I started working for 10 years.
I was in Accenture.
I didn't speak very much English at that time.
I mean, I learned English in Italy
from school. So I learned grammar, but I never spoke. So I joined this international company
in Bologna and the company had, or still has, I think, a kind of a university in Chicago,
close to Chicago, St. Charles. And at a certain point, after four years, I asked my
manager, I said, look, I would like to improve my English.
Send me to St. Charles to spend like a week and do a kind of a marketing course or whatever it's going to be.
So I went there.
And I really started the week.
And I didn't understand one single word of the guy speaking.
And, you know, you, America, they treated me like the monkey of the of the bunch so they didn't
give me the information because nobody wanted you on their team no no no so the last day the very
last day I finally understand a little bit of the conversation so I went to the bathroom and at the
same time the teacher came came to the bathroom as well.
We were standing together, imagining what we were doing.
And I told the teacher, you know what?
Today I understood 80% of what you said.
And what he answered to me was, you know what?
The most important thing were the remaining 20%.
So I went back to Italy and I started started because i was moving from my little town to
bologna every day by car so 50 minutes drive going back and forth i bought audiobooks possible in
english i started listening all everything that was possible watching movies after one year i went
to attend the same course the same teacher i. I mean, my English was amazing.
And at the end of the seven days, the guy, the same teacher,
stood up in front of all the others and said, you know what?
I was so impressed because in one year,
I met someone that didn't speak a word,
and now he's able to teach all of you Americans
how to put together a sentence.
That, to me, gave me the point that you can really do whatever you want. And now he's able to teach to all of you Americans how to put together a sentence.
And that, to me, gave me the point that you can really do whatever you want if you put a hard work behind it.
It's not just about talent.
Of course, talent is important.
But 90% is about hard work and being there and being constant. Then you can overcome all the difficulties or all the missing things that you have
because you were born in a situation
that was not ideal, by the way.
So I apply all of that in everything.
That, of course, helps you as well to feel better
because you feel a lot of holes in your personality.
You mean your confidence grows?
My confidence grows, exactly.
My confidence grows a lot.
And that's the reason why I was able to take that risk in Gucci.
Because I had all this experience before me in terms of career, in terms of person, in terms of family.
So I was not nervous at all about the change.
Because at the very end, first of all, and what I said at the very, very beginning, the very first day when I joined Gucci, the very first meeting,
I was supposed to give a speech to all the communication teams of Gucci. So I started to meet like 25 people,
30 people. There were 500 people waiting for me for the speech. The climate was a disaster. I mean,
it was this kind of fear because they were used to have presentation of five hours more or less
about numbers, about KPIs and numbers it's not about emotion or the rest.
So at certain point I started my speech and I was watching the faces, all sad, and say,
you know what, please start smiling because I mean, remember, you are privileged.
You work in fashion in one of the best, most interesting industry in the world.
Creativity can blossom, but we are not saving lives. So we can improve
lives, but we're not saving lives. We're not inventing
medicine. We're not inventing penicillin.
So relax. Take it easy.
Take a big breath.
And then start smiling.
Because I don't want to have these faces in front of me.
But by the way,
that little dose of reality,
there is only a few industries
that are really essential and important.
As you said, medicines or the cure for cancer, that stuff is important stuff.
Yeah, exactly.
And as you said, you can improve lives, but you're not saving lives.
No.
By any stretch of the imagination. And I think sometimes people in business
treat their employees as if this is cancer.
Yeah, exactly.
And the KPIs become like, if we don't hit this, someone's going to die.
Exactly. It's like a war.
And listen, if you talk to many people in the fashion industry,
if I tell them we are not saving lives, they say, no, no.
I mean, fashion, I mean, we change the attitude, we change the behavior.
Yeah, you help people to feel more confident because they dress better, of course.
But relax. I mean, we have been without fashion for like thousands of years and the people that
keep on being, maybe they're even happier than now. So, I mean, let's put everything in perspective.
This is such a great little insight. So, I'll give you an example. So, I had the opportunity
to eat at 11 Madison Park, which used to be the best restaurant in the world in New York City.
And everybody's so nice and happy and all the servers are just lovely and it's not stuffy.
I asked the server, I said, I'm looking around, everybody's smiling.
I said, do you ever get customers that are not nice?
He said, occasionally.
He says, usually it's when their assistant
booked them some restaurant
and they don't know where they're going
or they show up and they don't realize
that it's a chef's tasting menu
and they're upset that they didn't get
to choose their own food.
Then they're a little grumpy.
I said, well, what do you do in those circumstances?
He said, we may just make them whatever they want.
We just make them food.
And then he says, he sort of paused for a second.
He goes, it's just food.
Who cares? Right. And like he says, he sort of paused for a second. He goes, it's just food. Who cares?
Right.
And like, this is one of the best restaurants in the world.
And they're just like, eh, it's food.
Like we take pride in it.
We believe in it.
We chose a career in this.
But the reality is it's food.
And by the way, between Gucci and Eleven Madison Park, these are two of the best brands, the best quality in the world.
And yet both don't take themselves too seriously.
I love that.
It's true.
Tell me an early specific childhood memory.
An early specific happy childhood memory.
Something that really stands out to you.
My childhood has been very happy. I mean, I don't know. I mean, it was a poor family.
The one that came up from my mind as soon as you asked me, when I was living in this house,
I had a friend that was close to me. We didn't have television. We didn't have an eating system,
anything. So of course, we were always outside to play football
or to try to make any kind of silly games.
Once we discovered a bunch of eggs,
I mean, many, many eggs, fresh eggs,
and sometimes we went to the cinema during the theater on Sunday.
We said, why don't we do the theater in our house?
So we started to throw the eggs in the house, inside the house,
to make it like a movie, like the screen. So you were throwing eggs against the wall
to make a movie screen. To make a movie screen, exactly. We were four years old, three years,
four years old. And then my grandmother, she was following me because, I mean, my parents were working.
She realized that at the end of the crash, so we were like 100 days, we were completely crashed in front of the wall.
So we started running away and we closed my grandmother inside the house.
We take out the key.
So I don't know why I remember that.
I think it's the first time that I said this kind of story
in my entire life.
But I mean, when you asked me, there is a moment,
we were laughing like crazy because we were two little kids.
Yeah.
And we thought that was very funny.
Do you have a sense of what is it about that story?
Because you did lots of funny things that were fun when you were kids.
Do you have a sense of what it is about that story that really,
that you still think about it, that you still remember it?
I think it's about the fact that I mean, I think that despite the fact that you don't
have anything, you can have fun a lot with little things.
You don't need to have a lot of money to do it.
I mean, at the end, how much money do you need to have in your life?
And at the very end, you're going to eat three times a day like everybody else.
So I mean, you need to put everything in perspective so you can really have fun.
And I remember the laugh with my friends.
We were laughing like crazy.
I mean, if you think about it at the end, what do you really need to be happy?
Simplicity and basic things are the most important.
You have to appreciate the irony that you come from these humble roots.
You have this intense humility, this belief in the simple things,
and you work at the highest levels of luxury.
It's kind of funny, you have to admit.
Like, you didn't work for some mass market brand,
and yet you bring this intense sense of groundedness
and humility and gratitude.
I just find it so interesting.
Thank you.
And if you look at what Gucci has done,
you know, from this stodgy old-fashioned museum brand, the best way to describe what you have
brought to this company is fun. What's so fascinating is what the humility translates.
You can work at the highest levels, but what you're bringing is joy and fun and don't take
life too seriously. This is the value of humility.
It's actually translatable everywhere.
And the gratitude you have from where you came from.
I love the fact that you still are in your home that you grew up in,
that you still commute from this little town in Italy.
And I guess it's a reminder, right?
You don't want to forget.
You fear that if you left, you would become jaded
and you would forget your roots.
Yeah, absolutely. Every weekend when I go back, I go back to talk to my friends
that were doing school with me in the same time. Completely different careers, completely
different backgrounds, etc. But we keep on talking about the stupid things that we were
doing when we were kids, playing football and all the rest, and I feel at home. I feel
relaxed. All my adrenaline goes down.
So it's perfect.
So good.
So nice to talk to you.
So nice to see you.
I'm such a fan.
I really am.
I'm really happy to hear that from you.
I'm really happy to hear that.
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