Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Andreas Widmer on Why Principled Entrepreneurship Creates Enduring Value EP 198

Episode Date: October 6, 2022

Andreas Widmer joins us on the Passion Struck podcast to discuss principled entrepreneurship and how it creates enduring value for the customer through your own excellence. Thank you InsideTracker (ht...tps://insidetracker.com/passionstruck) and Dry Farm Wines (https://www.dryfarmwines.com/passionstruck/) for sponsoring. Principled entrepreneurs unite people to their passion by creating value for their customers through inspired teams. They do this by seeing businesses as being made for people’s benefit and not the other way around. For the principled entrepreneur, the company is focused on others even when it is fueled by self-interest. Andreas Widmer is a seasoned entrepreneur passionate about helping business professionals find deeper meaning in their work and sustainable success through principled entrepreneurship. Andreas has taught entrepreneurship at the Catholic University of America’s Busch School of Business since 2012. He is the author of the new book: The Art of Principled Entrepreneurship: Creating Enduring Value. He is also the author of The Pope and the CEO, Good Profit, and Human Ecology.   -►Order a copy of The Art of Principled Entrepreneurship: https://amzn.to/3ecDkN9  (Amazon Link) -► Get the full show notes for all resources from today's episode: https://passionstruck.com/andreas-widmer-on-principled-entrepreneurship/  --► Prefer to watch this interview: https://youtu.be/_iKw4tILHJw  --► Subscribe to Our YouTube Channel Here: https://www.youtube.com/c/JohnRMiles --► Subscribe to the Passion Struck Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/passion-struck-with-john-r-miles/id1553279283  Thank you, Dry Farm Wines and InsideTracker, For Your Support InsideTracker is the ultra-personalized performance system that analyzes biomarker data from your blood, DNA, lifestyle, and fitness tracker to help you optimize your body and reach your health & wellness goals. InsideTracker transforms your body's data into true knowledge, meaningful insights, and customized action plans of evidence-based nutrition, fitness, and lifestyle recommendations.  Just go to https://insidetracker.com/passionstruck.  Dry Farm Wines have No Chemical Additives for Aroma, Color, Flavor, or Texture Enhancement. Dry Farm Wines - The Only Natural Wine Club That Goes Above and Beyond Industry Standards. For Passion Struck listeners: Dry Farm Wines offers an extra bottle in your first box for a penny (because it’s alcohol, it can’t be free). See all the details and collect your wine at https://www.dryfarmwines.com/passionstruck/. Where to Follow Andreas Widmer Website: https://andreas-widmer.com/  Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andreaswidmer/  Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/AndreasWidmerAuthor  -- John R. Miles is the CEO, and Founder of PASSION STRUCK®, the first of its kind company, focused on impacting real change by teaching people how to live Intentionally. He is on a mission to help people live a no-regrets life that exalts their victories and lets them know they matter in the world. For over two decades, he built his own career applying his research of passion-struck leadership, first becoming a Fortune 50 CIO and then a multi-industry CEO. He is the executive producer and host of the top-ranked Passion Struck Podcast, selected as one of the Top 50 most inspirational podcasts in 2022. Learn more about John: https://johnrmiles.com/  ===== FOLLOW JOHN ON THE SOCIALS ===== * Twitter: https://twitter.com/Milesjohnr * Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/johnrmiles.c0m * Medium: https://medium.com/@JohnRMiles​ * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/john_r_miles * LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/milesjohn/ * Blog: https://johnrmiles.com/blog/ * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/passion_struck_podcast * Gear: https://www.zazzle.com/store/passion_sruck_podcast

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Coming up next on the Passion Struck Podcast. We greatly impoverished the concept of entrepreneurship if we reduce it to starting a company. I'd like to think of the world as having two kinds of people in it that's creators and harvesters and the entrepreneurs are the creators. There are people who come up with ideas who find solutions to opportunities and problems, who think always as the glass half full and find a way to go forward in a
Starting point is 00:00:26 positive sense in up building and lifting up. Welcome to PassionStruck. Hi, I'm your host, John Armiles, and on the show, we decipher the secrets, tips, and guidance of the world's most inspiring people and turn their wisdom into practical advice for you and those around you. Our mission is to help you unlock the power of intentionality so that you can become the best version of yourself. If you're new to the show, I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays. We have long form interviews the rest of the week with guest-ranging from astronauts to authors, CEOs, creators, innovators, scientists, military leaders, visionaries, and athletes. Now, let's go out there and become PassionStruck.
Starting point is 00:01:11 Hello, everyone, and welcome back to episode 198 of PassionStruck. Recently, ranked by Apple is one of the top five alternative health podcasts. And thank you to each and every one of you who come back weekly to listen and learn how to live better, be better, and impact the world. In case you missed it, earlier this week, I interviewed the one and only Daniel Pink, who is the author of five New York Times bestsellers,
Starting point is 00:01:34 including his latest, the power of regret, a looking backwards moves us forward. He is also the author of the number one New York Times bestsellers drive and to sell as human. In case you missed my solo episode from last week, it was on cognitive biases and six ways that you can break through their trap. I also want to say thank you so much for your continued support of your ratings and reviews which goes such a long way to improving the popularity of the show. And if you're new to the show, thank you so much for being here. Or you would like to introduce it to a friend or family member. We now have starder packs on both Spotify, as well as the Passion Struck website, which
Starting point is 00:02:09 are collections of our favorite episodes that give any new listener a great way to get acquainted to everything we do here on the show. Just go to passionstruck.com slash starder packs to get started. Now, let's talk about today's guest. Andreas Widmer is a seasoned entrepreneur entrepreneur with a passion for helping business professionals find deeper meaning in their work and sustainable success through principled entrepreneurship. Andreas has taught entrepreneurship at the Catholic University of America's Bush School of Business since 2012. He is the author of the new book, The Art of Principled Entrepreneurship, Creating Enduring Value. He is also the author of the Pope and the CEO, Good Profit, and Human Ecology.
Starting point is 00:02:48 In our interview today, Andreas shares his philosophy on how to start and do business in a way that's both virtuous and profitable. He recounts his favorite success stories and pays special tribute to his dear friend and prominent business leader, Art Sioka, who is best known for inventing wine box and forming the wine group, which is one of the largest wine companies in the world. Whitmer also illustrates some of these principles with stories from French tire manufacturer, Michelin, and Bangladesh's Grameen phone. Thank you for choosing PassionStruck and choosing me. Be your host and guide on your journey to creating an intentional life. Now let that journey begin. I am so excited to welcome Andreas Widmer
Starting point is 00:03:34 to the PassionStrike podcast. Welcome, Andreas. Thanks for having me, John. Well, I know the audience always loves to get to know our guests before we dive into the main topic, which today is going to be your new book, which is right behind you in this picture. And we'll make sure we put this on YouTube for the viewers who are out there, but we're going to get into principled entrepreneurship throughout most of the episode. But I did want to start out with this question. We all have moments that define us. What is a moment that shaped who you are today?
Starting point is 00:04:08 Well, good question. I have to say I'm starting with I was born in Switzerland in a small village and I grew up on the youngest of six. I grew up with that really understanding or or unknowing who I am. As the youngest I sort of tried always to live up to my older siblings. I tell you I just couldn't find my role or my position in life when I was in Switzerland. And the only thing I excel that I'm six foot nine I'm a pretty big guy and I excelled in the military in Switzerland. And so after my recruit school I'm an on-commissioned officer in Switzerland. I saw that I could go into foreign leech and to become a bodyguard and I thought I'm going to do that. That's the coolest thing I can.
Starting point is 00:04:45 There is to do, especially if you're somebody like me who excels physically. And I signed up to become one of the bodyguards for the Pope. There's a unit, the oldest existing military unit in the world is called the Swiss Guards in the Vatican. And they protect the Pope. And lower behold, I applied. I never thought they would take me and they accepted me.
Starting point is 00:05:06 And so I go there with this mix of being really excited about it. Also not really doing it for religious reasons because I grew up kind of Catholic, but not in a big way. But then also with this kind of insecurity about myself that I felt everything I did was sort of always putting on a mask and sort of pretending that I knew what I was doing or pretending I was a tough guy. And I sort of on the meat had an existential crisis as I joined. And it turned out that when you're a bodyguard to somebody, you hang out with that person a lot. And for me, that was jump all a second. The Pope
Starting point is 00:05:45 with that person a lot. And for me, that was jump all a second, the Pope in those days, in the 80s, 90s. And first time we met, he noticed it right away. And he actually started to talk with me and model for me what it means to be a person who's store of themselves. In terms of this is who I am am and I live fully out my humanity. And he changed my life. He saw that I was struggling with this and he introduced me to mental prayer, to prayer in general. He introduced me to a way of looking at the world and that has me in the world to bring my excellence to it. He gave me this idea that I am willed and I have certain talents and ideas that I could fill out. There was never in the history of the world anybody like me and there will never be anybody like me in the future of the history of the world.
Starting point is 00:06:33 So if I don't become me fully, this opportunity will never come around to do what I ought to do in the world. And going forward that defined everything I did from there on. Well, what an amazing story. And being a military veteran myself, one thing I've always wondered because I've been to the Vatican multiple times to visit is when you see the switch guard there, I never understood kind of the backdrop for the training that they go through. Is it considered to be a special forces unit and you go through some of that type of training? Yeah, it's like the secret service here in the United States. It is considered an elite force. They're, I mean, what you're seeing on the front with the uniforms is sort of the, it's like seeing the Marines in the White House.
Starting point is 00:07:22 That's not fully what they do. They act like secret service, black suit and all that. Well, I want to ask you just a couple more questions about your experience. You wrote a book called The Pope and the CEO, where you discuss your relationship with Pope John Paul II. What qualities made him the most authentically human person you've ever met? First of all, that he paid attention to you in the moment. Every time I met that man, the thing is being a Swiss God looks somewhat glamorous to the outside, but the truth is it's not.
Starting point is 00:07:54 You're a fly on the wall. Your service is done well when nobody notices you. But he did. And whenever he talked to me, I felt like he paid so much attention that I thought like, I'm the reason he got up in the morning. And then I talked to other people and I find out he did the same thing for them. So this living in the moment, when you have come out of this understanding of who you are as a person, you can be authentically present, that made a huge difference in his impact
Starting point is 00:08:21 on other people. And especially his impact on me. It made him so authentic and this genuine interest in who I am. Well, I happened to hear another podcast and you talked about a great story that you shared between the Pope and your parents and I was hoping maybe you could just dive into that because I thought it was really touching. Yeah, so one of the things we have as a tradition is that he invites your parents to come to the Vatican and he thanks them for your service in a sort of symbolic way. And so he knew of my existential crisis and all that and started to just pay attention
Starting point is 00:08:56 to me. And as I walked up with my parents, and this is sort of the change in experience that was when you're younger, you hold your parents hands, but here I am walking up to the Pope with my parents and they held my hand. It was just the other way around. And as I approached, he immediately says, oh, Andreas, and he goes to my mother, he's one of my favorites.
Starting point is 00:09:16 And then he goes through things that I do well. He noticed and he told my mother and my dad what he liked about what I was doing and what he felt my strengths were. And it was genuine. And it's just struck me that I'm six nine. I probably grew a few more inches right then and there. But I'm telling you that this sincerity gave me a fulfillment and the purpose and that and the commitment to work with this man in this organization because remember, he was my boss. Don't put too much religion on this. This is your boss.
Starting point is 00:09:45 You're working with him. And he turns around and he tells your parents, I really like working with him. And here at the Talents, he has, and he's doing a really great job. That kind of build up is worth more than a race. It gave me real commitment to love to work with him. Yes. And for the listeners who might not be familiar with the Pope, he became Pope John Paul II. Very shortly after his predecessor had an unfortunate cardiac arrest after I think it was only 33
Starting point is 00:10:14 days in office. And he took on this name to honor his predecessor who took on the name to honor the two predecessors before him. If I have the you're right. But he had to step into some very uncertain times because there were a lot of Cardinals who were worried at the time that his predecessor's death might not have been from natural causes. And so he is coming into this enclave of Cardinals and has to thrust himself into this anew environment. And then he becomes one of the longest standing popes
Starting point is 00:10:51 in the history, I think the second longest standing. What qualities of leadership did you find in him because he's not only the Pope, but he's also the CEO of the Catholic Church. What made him such a good one? I think it's this again, coming back to recognizing people's true talents, the benefit of doing what he did, of getting to know me and knowing my talents, is that he was able to put a team together where he matched talents and non-talents and put people in positions where they could shine on their talent. Like knowing humans well, you recognize somebody's talent and you put them into a position where they could flourish on their talent. Like, knowing humans well, you recognize somebody's talent
Starting point is 00:11:26 and you put them into a position where they could flourish. So he had something called the Secretary of State, which is a foreign minister basically. He's from Poland, behind the Iron Curtain back then, they had to deal with Russia, the Soviet Union. And that was very, very difficult to do. And it's a long story.
Starting point is 00:11:43 A very perilous situation. there was a polling was always close to Marshall law and the violin put down their protests with their solidarity union and so on and he needed somebody to go in there and to be a great diplomat for it and he found that in a man who actually wasn't exactly like him who actually covered for one of his non-talents with his talent, and sort of in a way created this perfect front, that two people next to each other who represented the Vatican and his foreign minister were able to optimize and become one of the key forces in actually even the demise of the Soviet Union, and that that goes all back to his ability to recognize talent and then put people in the right job for the right talent. We'll be right back to my interview with Andreas Woodmer.
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Starting point is 00:13:25 Just go to inside tracker.com forward slash passion struck. That's inside tracker.com forward slash passion struck. Please consider supporting those who support the show and make it free far listeners. Avertiser deals and discount codes are in one convenient place at passionstruck.com slash deals. Now back to my interview with Andreas Woodmer. Well, an amazing quality for any leader to have, really, because getting the right team on the bus is one of the most important things you can do from leadership perspective.
Starting point is 00:13:57 It is absolutely doable. This is something we can all learn. Well, that leads me to a question I wanted to ask you. And that is there's this age-old debate. Are people born entrepreneurs or can entrepreneurship be learned? What is your perspective on that? It's a yes, but.
Starting point is 00:14:16 So yes, everybody can learn to be an entrepreneur. It depends a bit on your definition of an entrepreneur. One of the points I make in my book is we greatly impoverished the concept of entrepreneurship if we reduce it to starting a company. I'd like to think of the world as having two kinds of people in it that's creators and harvesters and the entrepreneurs are the creators. There are people who come up with ideas who find solutions to opportunities and problems, who think always as the glass half full and find a way to go forward in a positive sense and up building and lifting up. And from that perspective, anybody can learn to do that. It has to do with an inner attitude. If we're saying,
Starting point is 00:14:56 can anybody be a startup person in a company, I would say not everybody has to. That's something sometimes and for different stages in life that you can do something like this and sometimes you can't. But my general answer is that everybody can be an entrepreneur. And I would actually even say everybody ought to be an entrepreneur. Yes, I think you make a good point there because whether it was when I was in big four consulting or when I joined Fortune 500 companies,
Starting point is 00:15:27 we had this concept of an entrepreneur, which I would say I was, because I was always, whether it was at Arthur Anderson, trying to create a new practice or through my time and Fortune 500s, trying to create new products or business ventures, you can absolutely be an entrepreneur in a bigger company. If that's what your goal is, in fact,
Starting point is 00:15:52 I think it's very important especially when we're using things like design principles and critical thinking that you embrace things, such like that. Well, I have a little, on my website, on dristashwitman.com, I have a little quiz you can take, and it tells you at this stage in life, what kind of entrepreneur you are,
Starting point is 00:16:10 because I also make the distinction between being an employee entrepreneur or a franchise entrepreneur, or a startup entrepreneur, and so on. What I'm trying to do is pry open the possibilities to show that this initiative and this realization of creativity is something that we're all called to. Well, I think that's great. And thank you for pointing out the website. I was going to ask you later on in the discussion, but I'm glad you got it out there right now. Well, if we're going to dive into the art of principle, entrepreneurship, I think probably the
Starting point is 00:16:42 best starting point for listeners who might not be familiar with the concept is, can you define what principled entrepreneurship is and its origin? So let me first define it. Principle entrepreneurship is a mindset of creating enduring value for the customer through your own excellence. So the core of principle on the partnership is to say, how may I help you in a business? That's the core sentence of a business. I am going to use my talents to create value for you. And the value I create is of course, with the common value that we create or how we measure value nowadays is with profit.
Starting point is 00:17:25 We measure it financially. And so how can I help you? I use my talents to create value for you. And if I do this on a long term, with a long term focus, I would call that principle entrepreneurship. Now, the original term comes out of a book called Good Profit, by Charles Koch,
Starting point is 00:17:43 who has a management theory called market-based management, and in there he has that term, that point-storage this, these creators, these people in a company, and even for him, it was for more than just a startup creator, but the creator, in a sense, of the solutions to problems in any company at any stage that he would call principal entrepreneur. And I sort of picked that up and took it from there. So I was recently interviewing Jean Allweng. I'm not sure if you're familiar with who she is, but she is Richard Branson's right hand person at Virgin and she runs Virgin Unite,
Starting point is 00:18:19 which is their philanthropic arm. But she is also a teen leader for a group called the B team that Richard Branson founded with Yoke and Zites. And they're a group of well-known leaders like Mark Benioff is one of them who are trying to shift away from short-term gain to balance the long-term benefits for helping people on the planet on topics like
Starting point is 00:18:46 growing inequality unemployment and unsustainable use of natural resources how can being a principled entrepreneur or applying these principles help leaders in the future to recognize the need that leaders in the future not only need to be stewards of shareholder value, but also need to be doing good in the world. I would say the way that leaders, business leaders
Starting point is 00:19:12 to a good in the world is by the business itself. So one of the things I focus on is that we sort of have two ways of approaching business. And this is somewhat of a critique first and then a solution of what I mean. Many times leaders say, well, we need to go out and change the world and this and that, and actually start to focus outside of the company. I would caution against that and say, let's go back to the beginning.
Starting point is 00:19:34 What we need to do is to focus on actually what our business does. We do, unfortunately, too little of that, and we only focus on the outcome of our businesses. So we focus on the profit, and then what do we do with the profit? What we're forgetting is the work itself and the feeling and the culture of meaning inside the company. That has a result that two thirds of our workforce is disengaged. So six out of ten employees in the United States can't wait to get home in the evening. They hate their jobs. Is that their fault?
Starting point is 00:20:07 No, it's not their fault. It's a bit like on a football team, if you send a football team on the field and they're not motivated for it, whose fault is that? That's our fault. That's management's fault, that's the CEO's fault. That in some sense is also our culture's fault. You see what we're doing is with well-maned efforts, we have sort of two paradigms to decide, to define what business is all about.
Starting point is 00:20:29 And the one hand you have to freedman doctrine of saying the only thing that matters is profit. Create shareholder value, that's the only thing you need to do. Then you have this other idea that says, well, it's sort of a caricature of corporate social responsibility, but in that direction that says, well, it's okay to make a profit, but then you have to go out and share the profit and you have to do things beyond that afterwards, almost in a sense to make up for having made the profit. I fundamentally disagree with that.
Starting point is 00:20:58 I think that business itself is a force for good. If you have to go out and make up for having made profit, that you did business wrong. Business itself, we need to go back to learn to focus on the process of business, on work itself. And we do that by looking at just what we talked about when we started our conversation here, to look about each person who's involved in the company and say, how do I help you flourish through your work? Remember the pure question of this is, how may I help you? And so if I am trying to use my challenge to help customers to add value for customers, I need to be well aware of what my talents are, and my company has to help me to live those out and to flourish with it.
Starting point is 00:21:41 When we're doing that, and we're putting teams together, not only do we create companies and teams where one and one is more than two, it becomes three, five, ten, because it's almost like a multiplication of the lows and the fishes, like a miracle kind of thing, because we're starting to flourish as human beings in creating these products and services that we produce. And it gives meaning to us in our work itself. As a result of that, we then turn around and emanate that goodness, because of human flourishing, that goodness into society and into the economy, and that creates the kind of benefit, what I think Richard Branson talks about,
Starting point is 00:22:17 to start to see high and rising wages, to start to see a responsible stewardship of environments on which is a fallout from the proper purpose of the company. Just in summary, to say, what I think we need to do is to focus actually more on the company itself, so that it becomes a good domino effect to the outside, versus trying to push over the dominoes outside of the company, and then internally,
Starting point is 00:22:44 that companies have six out of 10 people who hate the job they're doing. Well, I'm glad you touched on this whole topic because I'm gonna stay here for a couple of minutes. The surveys that I have seen, I cited one in my upcoming book myself, showed that out of the one billion full-time workers globally, 70 to 85% are disengaged.
Starting point is 00:23:07 And then as you look at millennials globally, 66% are disengaged. So it's a huge problem. Prior to starting this, I worked for a company called Bold Business and we were trying to highlight the good that business was doing because people look at a company like Verizon and they think of them only from the sense of profit and loss or the cell phone, but they don't think of all the capabilities that have been enabled because of the software that's on the phone that they're delivering, including life saving support, being able to track your kids, other things like that, that wouldn't be there had it not been for the business. And when I was a senior executive at Dell, one of my peers, Aaron Mulligan, was the CMO,
Starting point is 00:23:52 and she came up with this new branding for the company, which ended up not going forward, but I thought it would have been amazing because the whole concept was Dell, the power to do more. And when we saw the early videos that they were gonna use in commercials, it was all about how different businesses were using Dell's technology to do good for the world, whether that was saving someone's life
Starting point is 00:24:21 or helping with climate change or something like that. Well, long winded, but it leads me to we're really talking about chapter five where you discuss corporate cultures paramount. And how do you think through this lens of this disengagement that corporate culture is impacting employee engagement and what needs to change, do you think? Yeah. I think there's a couple of things. The culture is a discontent of meaning.
Starting point is 00:24:49 People search for meaning. And then, well, meaning management is saying, oh, let me find meaning. Let's go outside of the company and start to fight for, fight climate change. Go outside the company and help poor nations or disadvantaged people and this and that. There's nothing wrong with that, but it is the wrong medicine for the illness that we have. The illness we have is a crisis of meaning for work. Our explanation to work is these two cultures. CSR is a corporate social responsibility and the Friedman doctrine, and I know it's somewhat of a character of both, but this is what sticks in the culture.
Starting point is 00:25:27 Both of these only deal with the outcome of work, not within the work. So what we're doing is we're telling people, almost to go into this hamster wheel, to go around and run and run and run. And the only thing that ever matters is the outcome, but the running itself loses meaning. It becomes sysophus work, like nihilismism that we run and there's no end to it. Then people that becomes depressing, people become depressed and meaningless. And then they get that they start to hate their job. What we need to do is to bring the meaning back into the company. And to say, our objective, my objective with you, John, you with me,
Starting point is 00:26:03 is that we try to help each other become the best version of ourselves. We look at human flourishing. We can measure flourishing in all kinds of ways. In my development of both understanding what my talents are, and then advancing, investing in advance, one of my talents, and then to find my non-talents. And in a sense, instead of making me feel guilty for my non-talents, which is not my fault, it's not my fault that I'm six foot nine and I'm not gonna be a horse chocky. I don't have a talent in that, okay?
Starting point is 00:26:33 Why would you make me feel guilty about that? But what you do is you find people to create teams that complement each other. Then we become a team that actually feeds on each other and becomes more wholesome together. That's how you create a culture of mutual support and common excellence. What we're doing then is to put the focus of our culture
Starting point is 00:26:55 back into the company and on each one of the individuals that is in it, that brings life fulfillment, happiness, and progress. Then we can still talk about doing things outside of the company, but that's something that we're almost dodging the ball by going outside of the company rather than improving the culture and to focus back on work, back on our employees, and make them flourish first. Yeah, I think that's a great answer. In my experience and many of these Fortune 500 companies
Starting point is 00:27:25 and groups that I led, is half the time the employees didn't even know how their job mattered to the benefit of the company. So the first thing I always tried to do was lead them on an exercise where they had a line of sight into how each one of their jobs impacted our course strategies that we were trying to go after. Because if they're not feeling passionate about what they're doing, that's going to impact all other elements of their performance.
Starting point is 00:27:50 It was interesting. I'm not sure if you're familiar with Claude Silver or not, but she is the right-hand person for Gary V. At VaynerX. She used to be on the ad side of the business, but she saw this issue in VaynerX and asked if he could create a new role for her and she is the first chief heart officer in any company and her role is really, she's overall of HR,
Starting point is 00:28:16 but it's really to figure out how do you keep a pulse on the heart of employees? And so she is very dedicated, yeah, not only to their work life, but more importantly, she's trying to understand what are their goals bigger than work that they want to pursue and how do we make both come together, which I think is a great way to start tackling this issue. I'm not saying that I don't care about profitability or so. No, I think we can walk in Chugum at the same time. I just think that profitability is the result. Good profit is the result of a system that produces it
Starting point is 00:28:52 as it almost like a side effect. It's a bit like white blood cells to the human body or like profit to the corporations. You're not, the two of us are sitting here. We're not thinking about profit about white blood cells in our body. Even though if they weren't there, we'd be dead in a couple of days, right? So you're not thinking about it, but why don't you have to think about it? Because you ate your breakfast, you ate your lunch, you drink, you move, you get good air and movement and exercise and everything, and the white blood cells will take care of themselves. They will be there. That's how profit is for a company. We are sort of obsessed with the outcome only. We should focus on the process internally.
Starting point is 00:29:27 The hidden secret here, John, is that we think about investment and going on Wall Street and everything, but I'm telling you all these companies should remember one thing and one thing only, is that the only investment that has the possibility of infinite return is the human person. And so all companies need to come back to their employees and invest in them and make them allow them to become their competitive advantage.
Starting point is 00:29:56 I completely agree with you and you see this play out so much, especially in companies over the past decade who've been going through digital transformation. And oftentimes when you think about the transformations, whether it's that or they've been around for a while like PNG or Nestle or the Home Depot, you can't just sit there on your laurels and what you've done in the past. And the only way you're going to change that is to get into the hearts and minds of the employees of the company. Because it's not technology that's going to do the ultimate change. Some of it comes down to the processes and procedures that you implement, but my experience was overwhelmingly, if you didn't get the hearts and minds of the people and get them to contribute
Starting point is 00:30:41 to where the company is going, you're never going to reach that next point. I think that's why so many companies that were once on Fortune 500 no longer exist or have been acquired. Excellence is something that never is. It's only always becoming. As long as we have a free market, we guarantee that excellence never is. It's only becoming, because we allow the next person to come to take over in a way to become more excellent. That is what progress consists. I think that the economy, I sort of applauded the idea, even though I was a soldier in everything, I applauded the idea that the economy or businesses like war, business is nothing like war, business is like the Olympics, where we all compete and it actually is good for all of us and competition. I run fast if there's somebody running next to me and I don't always have to be first in order for me to have
Starting point is 00:31:29 a personal win and the personal best. And so this whole idea of the absolute best is something that is being overrated. I think that I'm more into saying I want you to achieve the best version of yourself. I think you I think you're talking one of your previous podcasts about this obsession with excellence versus mediocrity and it's saying, well, I don't have to be the best at everything, right? And I totally agree with it with this. The only thing that I need you to be the best at
Starting point is 00:31:58 is that being you and that may, and that doesn't really matter how this compares to anybody else, as long as you flourish up with your talents and your possibilities, then that is the best for you. And in that sense, the business is much more like the Olympics than it is like war. The economy is never a zero-sum game. Yeah, I'm glad you brought that up because I think it's something that a lot of people miss is they're constantly trying to achieve the state that they see of influencers or
Starting point is 00:32:32 business leaders or sports athletes that are around us. But I think you made a great point very early in our discussion that we are all put here for a defined reason where the only person who can achieve what we're designed here to become. And so what we should hold ourselves to is being what we are supposed to be. And to me, if you achieve that, then you are exemplary because you're living out who you've intended to be. Now, it doesn't... Maybe you don't have the wealth of Elon Musk or the fame of someone else, but to me, it doesn't matter if you're making an impact, because if you're doing what God created you for, then you are impacting society, and all you have to do is impact one person
Starting point is 00:33:17 and you're making a difference, because it can have a tidal wave of cascading effects. Well, John Paul was talking about, he says, don't waste your life trying to be somebody else. If you have the only opportunity of anybody in human history to be you, that's a unique opportunity that nobody else gets. Now, whether that has more money than Elon Musk or not doesn't matter because the goal of your life is actually your happiness.
Starting point is 00:33:43 And I don't mean physical happiness in that sense. I mean flourishing that you use fire on all cylinders and you can all you can be to borrow a famous slogan. You want to achieve that happiness. If you would try to be Elon Musk, first of all, you want because Elon Musk is already Elon Musk. And second of all, that measurement of excellence doesn't apply to you. Therefore, that's not the food of your soul, that's not what's going to make you happy. The only thing that's going to make you happy is what you were created to be happy with. And that's why it's so important that you go up your trajectory and not somebody else's, because you will not find happiness in somebody else's life.
Starting point is 00:34:23 Well, and I think to that exact point is why so many people today are experiencing whether it's chronic hopelessness or helplessness or loneliness. It all stems from what you said earlier on. We wear this mask of pretense trying to be something that we're not instead of being ourselves. Look, I've done it for a long time and that's why I shared it and I want to share with everybody, hey, this is a great solution to this and it makes you so much more peaceful and calm by discerning who you are and then living that out.
Starting point is 00:34:54 It's finding peace, right? Well, I think that's a great lead in and yes, it is finding peace. And I think it's a great lead in to discussing your long-term mentor, Art Sioka, because he was someone who lived his best life and became the person he was intended to be. Can you discuss why art made such a major impact on your life? So, Art Sioka I met many years ago, he was a CEO, I was a CEO at the time, but he was a much bigger deal than I was. He built the second largest wine company in the world. Most of you would know some of his products, even though you've never heard of him or his company. The company is called
Starting point is 00:35:35 the wine group and the kind of inventions and things he brought to market over his 40, 50-year career. He's the guy who invented the box wine. Francia is one of his brands. He made popular wine coolers and wine spritzers. He made the concept of Italian table wine. Vino d'Atavola, he made it palpable for the American palate. That's his great achievement. To create this huge market of American table wine, not like French fufu wine, shot on F.D. Papa, whatever, but Italian table wine. You didn't do it by creating this one product. What he did is he created a company that had a culture in it that were conducive to innovation and progress.
Starting point is 00:36:18 People, once they joined him, they stayed with the company. It was a management-owned company. So everybody in the company could get into management in that sense, and the management owned the company. It was a management-owned company. So everybody in the company could get into management in that sense, and the management owned the company. And their focus was, as he declared, principled entrepreneurship and long-term value creation of the company. And he had many very contrarian approaches to it, but we can maybe cover that afterwards. The meaning he had for me is that he and I, once when we were still CEOs, got together and tried to bring some college professor and university professors together to show them, to argue with them that business is a force for good by itself.
Starting point is 00:36:57 Business as an activity is a good thing for society. It's not a negative, it's a positive. And we did two years or three years in a row, we did these seminars with these professors, and I'm telling you we couldn't make a dent. They hated business afterwards as much as they did before. And then I got this offer and this opportunity to start a business school with some friends here in Washington, DC at the Catholic University of America. And I called Ard and I said, you wouldn't believe the opportunity I have. And he's like, I'm all in. I was a part of the of starting this business school. And I created a center for Principal Donald the Pinochet and Art became my partner in
Starting point is 00:37:33 this and my founder, my donor for it. And we've worked on that center now for the last ten years. And then as it pertains to this book, I basically wanted to write the book about what we do at the center and how one does the art principal entrepreneurship and I thought, well, who better to use as a model than art who is the art of principal entrepreneurship to me. And so I called him and was actually just before Covid I was teaching in Rome for the semester and I called him and I said, I have an idea, I want to write this book. I want to make you sort of the red thread to add it. And if you would just agree. And he says, I'd love to, but I have some good news and some bad news. And I said, well, give me the bad news first.
Starting point is 00:38:14 And he says, my cancer has come back. I have two months. And I said, I said, well, what's the good news in light of that? And he says, I have a lot of time. All my time till then, I can dedicate to it. I have no appointments until then. And this sort of arts you of the creator, right? And I said, look, if you want to do it, I'm happy to do it,
Starting point is 00:38:35 if you're in and said that I would record our conversations and so that I could use them afterwards when he passes away. And it actually turned out that he didn't pass away in two months. He lived for two more years, and I have hundreds of hours of recorded conversations and interviews with him, and he died three days before the book went to print. So he saw the final book, he saw the result that you can see in the book now. He loved the cover, and I had this huge privilege to sit at the feet of a man who was 87 years old, who shared with me what he learned over a long and successful career. When you know you're
Starting point is 00:39:13 going to die, you're not going to play politics. You basically just give the net net of what's there used to be said about the business and the economy. And I have this privilege now to share this with all of you to say, here's what this man told me. And I hope I did it justice in the book. Yeah, the great thing about getting advice from someone like him, and I'm sorry, he has passed away, is you're getting it at that point in their life without any filter at all, except what he believes is the authentic truth of what it takes to accomplish. What I loved about it is, with Art Sioka, you know how the story played out.
Starting point is 00:39:48 I mean, his company today, he quit a CEO like 15 years ago or 20 years ago, and his company is still number two, and his culture still endures in the company and everything. Whereas we don't know what the end of Elon Musk is going to look like, or Bill Gates and so on. I mean, this is somebody who's the whole whole thing has blacked through and we see the result. It's almost like making the, talking about the result of the whole thing when it's finished. Whereas often we hold people up, we're in the middle of their career, which we don't know how long
Starting point is 00:40:15 live that is going to be and how it's going to end up. With art, we know. Well, in many ways, you can look at Bill Gates' legacy, which was Steve Bommer's legacy, and the company had really lost its way and was bleeding money. Satya Nadalia came in, and he's had to completely reinvent the company and the corporate culture. So I think you bring up a great point. I'm also from that industry.
Starting point is 00:40:39 All my companies were high tech, and I competed and collaborated with Microsoft, and there you have it. There was a culture, even a toxic culture in my opinion in the company that the new CEO have to revise and make much better, which I understand is much better now. Yes, and I have a great Steve Bommer store. I've got a few of them from both my time at Loes and Dell, but I'm not going to go there perhaps we can discuss some later on. I did wanna go into your center that you're running now because in the book you lay out that there are three components of teaching principled entrepreneurship and I was hoping that you could go through those
Starting point is 00:41:16 because I thought they were a great framework. That's my codification in a sense of that how may I help you. I keep going back to this because business is not complicated. Business is all the direct. How may I help you? So I need to first find out what is my talent. And I work with my students. Every one of my students starts a business
Starting point is 00:41:37 because business school is the only place where you can get even an MBA and everything without ever having touched a patient. You'd never give somebody a doctor, a medical doctor, without them having done surgery. But in business school, we do this all the time. That makes no sense to me. So in the first day of business school, I get up
Starting point is 00:41:56 and I say, you're starting a business today. It's like going into the pool to learn to swim. I'm not gonna do this on dry land. And the way to find your talents is by me starting to do stuff with you. How would you know which instrument to play if I didn't let you handle them? I'm starting a business or they start a guide to students to start a business every one of them, 200 people a semester. And what I'm doing it is when an eye towards helping you find your talents. And for that, I sort of have a method to go quickly through.
Starting point is 00:42:25 It's almost like touching each instrument to see if you like the sound of it or so. Because when you have a talent, something resonates with you right away. It's a bit like listening to good music or tasting good food. Your palate will tell you if it likes it right away. And so it is with business.
Starting point is 00:42:39 So let's practice some business, do some business, and then you find out what your talents are. Once you find that talent, the key to business is a very simple thing. How do you create value for others, not for you, create value for others with that talent? That takes a fundamental shift. We're all born naval gazing. We're all focused on ourselves. What we need to do is put the head up and say, look at the other person and say, what's it to them? Like what I'm doing here, how does add value to you? It's actually a very Christian approach to say, how can I help you? And when you help somebody well,
Starting point is 00:43:18 then you create value that wasn't there before. It's one of the great insights of the economy. So for example, this is a pen from Switzerland. It's a car on dash pen. It's very nice. It's a fountain pen. It probably costs that company, I don't know, 10 bucks in materials to make with their talents and everything. They sold this to me for like $150.
Starting point is 00:43:40 That money or even if it costs them $50 and $100 more. That $100 extra is the value that this adds to me. Otherwise, I would just buy the pieces and put it together myself. But the value they add to me by doing this is $100, and that $100 is new money. This $100 has never been there before. It's what we call profit, but I like to call it new money, just to make people understand that this money isn't I'm taking it from you. No, it's new. It's something that's created new. That's what I mean by creating value for others. How might I help you? Once you figure that out, you have figured out the conundrum or the riddle of business, and once I teach this to you,
Starting point is 00:44:27 you will go and figure out the rest on your own. Sorry to go so long about this, but this is the core, the core passion at topics I have. Well, throughout the book, you bring up this idea of creativity. And in my upcoming book, I have a chapter where I have the five plateaus on your way to becoming passion struck. And the last plateau is the need to become a creative amplifier. And in your book, he mentioned that human creativity fuels the American dream. Why is that? And how do you incentivize
Starting point is 00:45:05 sustainable value creation instead of value redistribution? So value creation is important because to what I explained now, we need to make sure that our economy is a pizzeria or not a pizza. Redistribution is when there's one pizza and if there's three more people coming into the party, we're going to have to reassign the slices. But the truth is that the party, we're going to have to reassign the slices. But the truth is that the economy, the more business you make, the more money you make. We literally make money. We make new money.
Starting point is 00:45:33 There's not a fixed amount of money in the world. We need to make sure that that stays like this. And the only way this stays like this is if we have a free economy, a market-based economy, where I can start a business and I'm I free to compete against anybody I want to go better, faster, cheaper, and farther. When we do that, it gives social mobility because people who weren't winners before can become the winners and therefore go up in society and socio-economic status. And that is the fuel of the American Dream because it attracts other people doing the same thing.
Starting point is 00:46:05 So we need to have this constant, constant rolling over in social classes so that we become what America is mixing pot of everybody and anybody. Everybody gets a chance, which is the American dream. The reason why creativity is important for that is that unless you create more value than the guy before you, you're not going to win in competition. But there's another aspect to this that has to do with a fundamental idea of who we humans are. But animals can't create. I'm not talking about a gorilla banging two stones together to break a nut or something like that. I'm talking about the internet or a Boeing 747 or a penicillin or so. Did you ever notice that animals can't do that? We can do that as humans, but biologically we are exactly the same like the animals and that
Starting point is 00:46:53 tells you that our creativity is something higher than nature. Chop Hall would say the reason why the animal cannot create, and I can't create, is because I am of course made in the image and likeness of the creator. We humans become more human when we create. Jumple had this famous sentence that when we work, we don't just make more, we become more. Creativity is a part of humanity, of humanness, that necessarily when you create, you actually become better at being human, and that is why it is central to who we are, and we cannot lose creativity. Yeah, I think everything you have just laid out is so important.
Starting point is 00:47:38 And I think another key component of it is when you do that, you go from a self-centric view to a world-centric view, and that's what we need more of today. Well, I kind of wanted to end today by you talking about art and some of his achievements. And you write about in the book that the craft of wine making is inseparable from its finished product. How can we apply that analogy to our own personal journey? And what would arts advice be on this topic? He loved talking about this. This wording I used earlier about creators and harvesters that actually comes from him. And he would say there's two kinds of wine makers,
Starting point is 00:48:23 there's creators and harvesters. If all I do when I get the vineyard, it's just harvest harvest harvest harvest and I just focus on the outcome of it and I just grab the and just make my wine right away. And then after the agricultural cycle of like six, seven years, is after one of these cycles, the vineyard will be in shreds. Like it will not produce good grapes anymore. But I'm a creator. What I do is actually, of course, I harvest, but my focus of my business is actually on the grape growing and wine making in the first place. So I invest in the soil, I invest in pruning the vines, I invest in the people who do all
Starting point is 00:49:02 of this to make sure that the vineyard gets the best care. I water it and all of that. And he says, this is an analogy to your business, to any business. Any business is a vineyard. And the product of it is the wine. And this is what I mean by saying that our focus needs to go back inside the company, tend your vineyard, be a creator in your vineyard because if you're just a harvester and you're just looking at what comes down the river, then pretty soon the source of your prosperity will dry up. And we're starting to see that one of the canary in the coal mine on this is our workforce. And we can see that that two thirds of our workforce has turned off. And that's a sign that we have stopped being creators and we're not tending the vineyard.
Starting point is 00:49:48 And I hope that this book is a contribution to inspire people to pay attention to the inside of the company, to the vineyard, so to speak. Yes, well, it's interesting. And as I've done my research whether you look at Brookings or other organizations that are out there, entrepreneurship rates have actually been in decline since the 1970s. And that has a huge ripple effect on business fatality because if new businesses aren't being created and turned over and that people aren't flourishing,
Starting point is 00:50:20 like we were when the United States and much of Western culture was being so much more innovative in what we were doing. And so I think maybe that's a great lead in to the last question I wanted to ask you. And that's in chapter eight, you discuss the importance of inspiring the next generation. And you talk about something called the trading game and how it gauges happiness. And I was hoping I could just use that as a lead in to some parting words that you want to give to this new generation, many of whom are listeners to this show. So that's a tall order. My core calling to you, when you're listening to
Starting point is 00:51:00 this, is that stop trying to live somebody else's life, do not measure yourself on other people in the sense of how much money do they make and so on. I see it in my classes here at the university all the time. The best time you can spend as a young person is to find out who am I and what are my talents and then, honestly, immediately and without any hesitation, pursue an investment in those talents. I often go with my own example that I absolutely suck at numbers. I have not a numerical mind at all. And so I tried to make up for this and felt bad about it half of my life and tried to cover my weakness on this, which only ends in disaster. Instead, what I started to do, and that is the part of the
Starting point is 00:51:46 solution, is to identify, actually, to say, look, my non-strengths have to do with details and numbers, and sort of very nitty-gritty stuff. My talents are much more in the big sense, in speaking, in concepts, and stuff like this. And then because I understand this, I can confidently pursue my strengths, and that actually gives me happiness and fulfillment. And an investment in my strength is actually giving me return on investment much more than trying to mitigate one of my weaknesses. It also has created huge friendships where I know that the first thing I need is somebody who is completely detailed oriented and financial and accounting stuff whenever I start a company and some of my best friends have become sort of my young and young friends who make up for my weaknesses and it builds beautiful friendships of complementarity. conflict. And I think the world has been made in perfect unison. And whenever it is much more
Starting point is 00:52:46 of complementarity like competition, it's almost like Michael Porter came up with this sort of co-op petition. What you do is yes, there is a competition part of it, but co-operation is really the seasoning of the American dream. Thank you for that answer. And I just wanted to give one last shout out for your book. I found it to be a very enjoyable read. I love the personal examples. And of course, your story is about art. A few are a person who wants to read this. There's some great things in there such as Ergon's
Starting point is 00:53:17 and a great story about Vermouth. So I don't want to give it all away, but I highly encourage all of you to pick up a copy of this book and I'll put it in the show notes. Well, Andreas, thank you so much for being a guest today and for all that you're doing to lead this next generation of future leaders. Thank you, John. Thanks for having me and thanks for everybody for listening.
Starting point is 00:53:38 I thoroughly enjoyed that interview with Andreas Widmer and wanted to thank Andreas and Zilker Media for the privilege and honor of interviewing him. Links to all things Andreas will be in the show notes at PassionStruct.com. Please use our website links if you buy any of the books from the guests that we feature on the show. All proceeds go to supporting the show and making it free for our listeners. Videos are all in one convenient place on YouTube at John Armiles. We have well over 400 of them for you to take advantage of as well as exclusive content that you will only find there. Advertiser deals and discount codes are in one convenient place at passionstruck.com, slash deals.
Starting point is 00:54:14 Please consider supporting those who support the show. I'm at John Armiles, both on Instagram and Twitter, and you can also find me on LinkedIn. You're about to hear a preview of the Passion Struck podcast interview I did with Laura Vandercam, who is a New York Times best-selling author, highly regarded speaker, host of the podcast before breakfast, and co-host with Sarah Hart Hunger of the podcast Best of Both Worlds. We release and discuss her brand new book Tranquility by Tuesday, Nine Ways to Calm the Chaos and Make Time for what matters. I think everyone needs to recognize
Starting point is 00:54:48 that you have some identity that is apart from work and is apart from family. And we've put a lot of effort into work and family. They require a lot of responsibility, very meaningful things, but they take a lot of energy. And how do we get energy? Well, there's certain things we can do holistically like getting enough sleep and exercising.
Starting point is 00:55:05 But often we draw energy from doing meaningful things that we personally find enjoyable. So I challenge people to take one night for you. One night a week or the equivalent number of weekend hours do something that is not work, that is not family, that you personally find fun. The fee for this show is that you share it with friends or family members when you find something useful. If you know someone who wants to understand a lot more about entrepreneurship and especially principled entrepreneurship,
Starting point is 00:55:36 definitely share this episode with them. The greatest compliment that you can give us is to share this show with those that you care about. In the meantime, do your best to apply what you hear on the show so that you can live what you listen. And until next time, live life Ash and Strong. you

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