The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish - #118 Doug Conant: Leadership With Integrity
Episode Date: August 24, 2021Doug Conant breaks down how putting his employees first made him an internationally renowned business leader atop both the Nabisco Foods Company and the Campbell Soup Company. On this episode Doug dis...cusses why you can’t win in the marketplace if you haven’t won in the workplace, his first 100 days as CEO of Campbell Soup, adjusting to shifting consumer preferences, how to know when you have the right people and the wrong people, and so much more. Conant served as the President of Nabisco from 1999-2001 and then spent a decade as President and CEO of The Campbell Soup Company. In 2011 he founded ConantLeadership, a consulting company focused on championing leadership that works in the 21st century. He’s also the author of The Blueprint: 6 Practical Steps to Lift Your Leadership to New Heights. -- Go Premium: Members get early access, ad-free episodes, hand-edited transcripts, searchable transcripts, member-only episodes, and more. Sign up at: https://fs.blog/membership/ Every Sunday our newsletter shares timeless insights and ideas that you can use at work and home. Add it to your inbox: https://fs.blog/newsletter/ Follow Shane on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/ShaneAParrish Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The key to making hard decisions at the top, you have to be in the black with your emotional
bank account with the culture. As a leader, you have to build that bank account. You have to be
making deposits every day into that account to build trust and to build credibility with the people
that work there, knowing that there are days where you're going to make some giant withdrawal
because you're going to screw up, because you will. And the companies that are doing well in today's
challenging times are the ones that are building trust with their associates that's going to
help them navigate the challenges of the day. We have challenges today. We had challenges yesterday.
We'll have more challenges tomorrow.
I'm your host, Shane Parrish.
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Doug Kahnad is here today.
Doug was the CEO of Campbell Soup
and worked at Nabisco during the toxic leverage bioculture
that prompted the book,
Barbarians at the gate. Doug is full of leadership advice and lessons. We talk about why you
can't win in the marketplace, if you haven't won in the workplace, the first 100 days as CEO of
Campbell's Soup, adjusting to shifting consumer preferences, how to know when you have the right
people and the wrong people, and so much more. It's time to listen and learn.
set the scene for me in the 80s and not only like how did you end up at
Nabisco what was it like working for the LBO largest in history at the time and the
pressure that you must have felt internally and the employees as well and then how you
applied some of this learning from Covey inside well there were two guys that just
they say when the when the student is ready the teacher appears I was ready I was
ready for two people that really had a profound influence on me more than others. One was Stephen
Covey and the other one was Jim Collins. And they both became very good friends. I was wrestling
with my life. I had gone into Nabisco and it was at Nabisco that, you know, the magnitude of the
challenge was overwhelming. And I was realizing without knowing it that I needed to step up my game.
stuff was coming at me as part of the world's largest LBO and KKR, the poster child for
barbarians at the gate.
You're young for this, but it was a huge deal at the time in the corporate world.
We were being challenged to do things that just were more substantial than I'd ever been
challenged before.
And I realized I needed to get better anchored in what I believed in it so that I could
have the courage of my convictions to deal with all of it in a way where I would survive.
because it was challenging.
So that's where I, and I was searching for help,
not knowing I was searching for help,
but I was searching for help
and I discovered Steven's book
and I read it on a trip with my wife
and totally neglected her.
And I ultimately, she said,
what are you reading?
I said, this amazing book.
And she said, why is it so amazing?
Because he thinks just like I do
and it was The Seven Habits by Stephen Covey.
And I wrote a whole book on it in the blueprint,
but I believe you've got to
tend to your own foundations so that when you get put in the thick of thick things and having
to make tough decisions about people and performance and every day where you're pushed to the edge,
you have to be incredibly well anchored and have the courage of your convictions. It's hard to
have the courage of your convictions if you don't know what your convictions are. And most people
are flying by the seat of their pants, especially all the people that were listening to you on
Wall Street. They're doing life by the seat of their pants. They're reacting to what comes
at them, which I do too, 70% of the time. But when you're in these tight, tight situations,
you've got to know where to draw the line and where you stand on things. And I wasn't confident
enough, so I needed to do some inside work to say, well, what do I want to stand for here?
and how do I want to make this work so that I can not only contribute and perform,
but I can do it in a way where I can look at myself in the mirror every day.
And nobody can do that work for you.
And I'll tell you, you can't reading the books about all these great leaders and how they did it
has nothing to do with you.
So I did my homework and I lifted my game.
Talk to me about being inside and the pressures that you felt and learning on the fly.
going through that. I mean, it must have been, you know, you turned around multiple divisions,
you rose up the ranks. It didn't always seem clear that was going to happen. Oh, no, I had been
fired earlier in my career. And it wasn't that I did anything particularly wrong. I just don't think
I did enough right. And, you know, every time I do a Myers-Briggs test, I'm an introvert.
And that's hard, you know, if you're trying to be a leader and influence the direction and you're
uncomfortable in the spotlight, I discovered that I needed to really get anchored and what I stood
for it was even extra hard for me because I had to overcome my introversion and my shyness
and my reserved nature. And so the only way I could do that was to get really firmly grounded
in what mattered most to me. And when I was firmly grounded, I was able to step outside of myself
and express it. And so I spent a lot of time working in this territory more than most because I felt
like I needed to. You know, there's a great Brene Brown quote. You can either walk inside your story
and own it or you can stand outside your story and hustle for your worthiness every day.
And, you know, as a shy, introverted oldest child, I was going through and I was walking inside my
parents' story for me, my teacher's story for me, my coach's story for me, my boss's story for me,
my organization's story. I was walking inside everybody else's story, and I sort of began to realize
when I lost my job in my early 30s, like, this isn't working. I need to figure out what my
story is. And in fact, when I got let go from my job, the first thing my outplacement counselor
did for me. He said, look, I want you to sit down and write your entire life story for me,
handwrite it. And I want every detail in there. And I want it back in two weeks.
But I handwrote 50 pages, front and back, 100 pages, small handwriting. I wish I had that.
I don't know where it ever happened to it. And as I got into my life story, it was like,
wow, look at all this stuff. And I haven't really reflected on any of this. I've just been going
from, you know, one step at a time here to there, boom, boom, boom.
Yet I had this incredible story being exposed to people who had profound influences on me,
but I just sort of left that in the dust and moved on,
although I carried their lessons with me below the surface.
But as I wrote it all down, I realized, wow, this is really rich stuff.
And I started to ruminate on it and manage it.
And then shortly thereafter, I met Stephen Coving.
When I was at Nabisco to get directly to your question, I was doing this covey stuff, and these guys were talking about me doing all this lovy-dovey-covey stuff.
And our mission for the LBO was E-Cube, earnings, earnings, earnings.
And it had nothing to do with people.
It had nothing to do with organization.
You know, you were just expected to manage all that, but I need my quarterly earnings.
You've got to hit our targets.
I just felt that was short-sighted, but I knew I had to deliver the earnings, but I also knew we had to create a roadmap for prosperity that was going to allow me to make the earnings a year from then when I had a lap that quarter and deliver again.
As I was being challenged with all that, I sort of landed on this philosophy that said, look, there are two things that matter here in all the corporate world.
It's a performance in people.
It's not just performance.
It's performance in people.
In fact, you take care of the people, and they'll take care of the performance.
You know, I'm this guy from the Midwest who shows up on the East Coast,
Pollyannish kind of perspective, that you take care of the people.
They take care of the work, and the more I care about them,
the more they'll care about our agenda, and the better we'll do.
I mean, logical to me, but it wasn't the language of the day,
the heyday of the 1990s, and it was countercultural at the time, both within Nabisco and in the broader
world. I just became wildly committed to assembling a world-class team and then to give them all the
tools they needed to fight the fight and to give them air cover when I could because nobody else
agreed with me. And so we started doing that, and I started paying attention to them. Ultimately,
we performed well one year, we performed well the next year,
and the next year I was made president of Nabisco Foods,
and for five years we outperformed any other food company in the United States,
which is how I ultimately ended up getting the Campbell job.
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Before we get to the Campbell job, I want to hone in on two parts of that story that stick out for me.
One is where did you get the courage in an organization to do something different
that goes against what everybody else in the organization is doing right after you were fired from your previous job?
Well, I had time in between. I had one other job before then. I had gone to craft and I got my
sea legs again. And I worked for some pretty tough guys there and I learned I could do it. I mean,
it wasn't an incidental amount of time. It was seven years. But it was seven years I needed to sort of
mature. And, you know, I talk about the importance, my language again, of being tough-minded on
standards of performance and tenderhearted with people. I was inclined to be tenderhearted with people
and I needed to kind of get more comfortable with being tough-minded on performance. And I did that
at craft and I learned you can do both. The culture I grew up in was either your,
you know, either your Vince Lombardi tough or your lovey-dovey-covy. And what I found is, in my opinion,
in the best leaders that create enduring value, have tough standards, and care about people.
They're not mutually exclusive.
And I learned that at Kraft.
I applied it at Nabisco.
And then I really brought it to life when I got to Campbell.
So that's where that came from.
Is there a particular story that comes to mind when you think of a great example of being
tough on standards and kind with people?
Sure.
I got to Campbell, I thought I'd seen everything when I got to the Wild West of the world's
largest LBO and I was there for a decade. I thought I'd seen everything after Barbarians at the
gate. And then I got to Campbell and there was a whole new world. And it turned out to be a very,
very toxic culture. And I was bringing my same philosophy. In fact, day one, when I talked to the
employees at Campbell, I said, you know, we cannot expect you to value our agenda until we
tangibly demonstrate that we value yours. To me, it just doesn't make any sense. So my commitment
is you're going to see that we care about you. And we're going to trust that in the fullness of
time, you're going to care about our agenda and help us lift this company up. And we were in bad
shape. We started in the 19th century, and we were still selling the same products, canned soup.
The leading analyst in the sector was comparing us to a buggy whip. And we were headquartered in the
poorest, most dangerous city in the United States, Camden, New Jersey, where we had a city of 75,000
people and 70 murders a year. And we had razor wire all around our facilities with guard
towers. It looked like a minimum security prison. The razor wire and the guard towers were there
to make sure people felt safe when they got inside. And they had been through several years of
poor performance, a lot of layoffs, no trust, over-promising, under-delivering, churn at the
top, investigations by regulators, you name it, it was happening. So I got there and I said,
you know, here we go. New day. We're going to value you. We're going to trust you're going to
value us. And it's going to take a while. It's going to take us three years to get to a place
where we can really lift our heads up because we're not going to overpromise and under-deliver.
We are not going to be able to talk our way out of something we behaved our way into.
It took us years to get into this mess. It's going to take us years to get out.
And I'm convinced all the leaders were saying, yeah, we'll see how long this works, you know.
you know, here, here comes Mr. Lovi-Dovey Covey again, and he's not tough enough.
We turned over 300 of the top 350 leaders in the company, six out of seven.
We gave them a year and a half or so to get with the program, but if it wasn't working,
they knew, because I was very upfront, we're going to have to make some tough calls here.
And we're either going to find a job that you can do as an individual contributor or reporting to something.
we're going to try and make it work, or else we're going to help you find another job somewhere.
But we've got to be tough-minded on standards here.
We've got to perform.
And in terms of performance, we said there are two things.
It's the what and the how.
The what was we have these standards that we want to hit in terms of our business performance.
And the how, which was more important, quite frankly, is, and here's how we're going to comport ourselves as leaders.
And if you can't sign up for the what and the how, you're probably in the wrong place.
And I think people were saying, oh, yeah, yeah, we've heard this before.
We'll see how long you last.
We turned over 300 of the top 350.
You talk about tough.
That was tougher than anything we did in Nabisco.
We promoted 150 from within, but we had to go outside and find 150 more blue-chip young Turks to come in and transform the company into a 21st century fighting machine.
That was probably the single toughest thing I ever had to do, because some of these people were not poor performers.
they were just in the wrong place and at the wrong time from their career perspective.
But I had a greater good to look after.
I had 20 to 24,000 people counting on me to get it right.
A footnote to this conversation is we started tracking employee engagement every year with Gallup.
And when we first did it, the year one, Gallup said, this is the worst we've ever seen in a Fortune 500 company.
This is horrible.
We had an engagement ratio of, which is how many people are engaged compared to how many people are not of two to one.
The average for Fortune 500 was four people wildly engaged for everyone who wasn't.
We were two to one.
So basically, we had two people doing the job of three everywhere in the world.
And we tracked it every year for the decade.
And while I was making all these changes, I wasn't quite sure how it was going to turn out, you know.
We've made all the changes, and then I didn't know how employee engagement was going to come out,
but I couldn't imagine doing it any other way.
So the chips were going to fall where they fell when we measured it.
Turns out every year we made the changes, employee engagement went up because all the employees knew what needed to be done.
They were just waiting to see if there was a leader who was going to be tough-minded enough to do it.
And we weren't perfect, but we tried to be wildly supportive of everybody we'd moved.
out. I had been fired in a tough way that wasn't particularly caring, and I said, I don't ever
want to do this to anybody else again. I won't be associated with it. So we tried to be really
compassionate with the people we turned over. They didn't all agree with it. But I know we did
the best we could at the time. That's an example of where you, you know, you declare you're going
to commit to building this kind of culture. You damn well better do it.
And if you're going to build a culture that's going to be tough-minded on standards and caring about people,
either you, as Jim Collins would say, either you get on the bus or you don't.
You've got to get the right people on the bus.
I wonder to what extent hard decisions at the top make for easy decisions at the bottom.
You know, the key to making hard decisions at the top, you have to be in the black with your emotional bank account with the culture.
as a leader you have to build that bank account you have to be making deposits every day into that
account to build trust and to build credibility with the people that work there knowing that there
are days where you're going to make some giant withdrawal because you're going to screw up because you
will it's just too complicated but you know that when you have that big withdrawal you're still
going to be in the black then it makes it much easier to make those decisions at the top because
you're not running on empty with the employees. But the key is how do you build that bank account
before you need it and before you have to make those tough calls? I had three years to demonstrate
to all the employees that we cared about and that we were going to upgrade the facilities and that we
cared about their work environment and we cared about how their supervisors treated them. The number
one expectation of a leader at Campbell was that you had to inspire trust. If you couldn't inspire
trust, how could you inspire performance? And if you weren't inspiring trust, you were at risk.
You'd lose your job. So you declare that, you live it, you work it every day. And then if people
aren't able to get with the program, you kindly and gently but firmly move them out. And you do it in a way
wherever possible that honors the individual who's been affected. It's not that they're bad people.
it's just that they're not in the right place at the right time. And they ought to be honored.
Everything I do emanates from a commitment to honoring people. And that's where it all starts.
And so all of the stuff we're talking about is really about, okay, how am I going to honor this person in this situation at this time right now?
and do it in a way that acknowledges whatever has brought them here, what we have to do in the
present, and also sets the table for a more prosperous future conversation. As a leader,
you've got to live in three time zones simultaneously, the past, the present, and the future.
Everything you do has got to honor the past, deliver in the present, set the table for a more
prosperous future. And as you think that way, that's why trust.
building becomes mission critical. And the companies that are doing well in today's
challenging times, the ones that are doing well are the ones that are building trust with
their associates that's going to help them navigate the challenges of the day. We have challenges
today. We had challenges yesterday. We'll have more challenges tomorrow. Walk me through the first
hundred days at Campbell. I think you mentioned in a previous interview you felt like you
had three years to turn it around. What was the first hundred days like? What steps did you take?
Look, as a leader at a senior level, at the outside, you've got three years. The first year,
it's the other guy's fault. The second year, it's our fault, but we're learning. The third year,
you own it. So in that spirit, the first year, I had to declare myself with the organization,
who I was and what I stood for. And I had to bring that to life with tangible actions.
First 100 days, you establish a principal-centered framework for leading, and then you listen
a lot. First 100 days, you lead by listening, to the point where everybody says, my God,
you've listened enough. What are we going to do? They're exhausted. They don't want to talk
anymore. Yeah, you understand. You clearly want to understand. Great. By the second hundred
days, you've got a plan together. And I'll use Campbell as an example. I started January 1st.
I declared myself. We started to set the organization up, made some early hires that started to
set the tone that I was serious about it. And we committed to having a plan by July. So the first
100 days was doing a situation assessment and listening. The next 100 days was building a plan
in a collaborative fashion with the leadership.
And by July, we had launched our revitalization plan for Campbell.
And then we were off to the races implementing the plan.
My experience, you've got 100 days to figure it out,
100 days to operationalize it and get going,
knowing that it's not going to be perfect.
You're going to have to course correct along the way.
That's how I see managing turnarounds,
which I've done everywhere I've been.
There are some people would say that's too slow.
for a turnaround. I find if you go a little slow at first, you can go fast later on because
everybody's felt heard and been part of the process. If you go real fast out of the gate,
it's your idea and nobody owns it. And you're off leading the team only to turn around and
see the team is back at the starting line. So there's an art to this. You've got to bring people
along with you, and I think the first 200 days are the most critical with that. You declare
yourself and then you create a plan to bring it to life. How do you think about the mismatch
timelines between sort of what you do in the first year is probably going to affect the profits
in the second year, but a CEO you're probably wanting to invest for a decade or two decades
in the future, and yet also knowing that the average tenure of a CEO in the SMP 500 is probably
what, three to four years. How do you address these mismatch timelines between immediate results
and long-term performance? Well, I think there are a couple things. First of all, you've got to be,
you've got to know what you want to stand for. When I took this job at Campbell, I had said,
you know, this is a heavy lift. And we can't talk away out of something we'd be having to
we're into, we're going to have to build something that's an enduring proposition. It's going to
take time. And we've got to be willing to live with the results. But we have to have clear
gates of performance, and we have to constantly be getting better. There can be no question
that we're getting better in the workplace and in the marketplace every year. No question.
And then you have to perform and meet or exceed those expectations.
Today, it's easier because when I first started, it was how, what were your earnings this quarter?
Now, we don't even report.
Most people aren't reporting quarterly earnings.
They're doing annual.
They provide guidance.
But they're looking more long term in nature, which is appropriate.
I was willing to not have my job if I had to do it the wrong way.
This is where you have to be incredibly well-anker.
We talked earlier about if you're not well, anchored in the leader you want to be and how you want to lead, you're going to be whipsawed by analysts and Wall Street and boards and activists.
And we were going to build a better company, brick by brick, and we were going to make sure we served all of our stakeholders, not just our shareholders.
And we said that at the beginning, and I basically said it at the end 10 years later.
And I think if you're clear about what you intend to do, and then you do it, and you put points on the board every year, you get the opportunity to do it again.
But if you're worried about saving your job, you're in trouble before you start.
You mentioned the board.
I'm wondering maybe there's a particular story that comes to mind.
But what makes for a helpful board member versus an unhelpful board member?
It's not individual members.
It's the culture of the board because, you know, we had 15 directors, which is a large board.
But they represented all kinds of points of view.
So we could deliberate on anything and look at it in a 360-degree way that I thought was incredibly healthy.
I found it to be a blessing.
We also had members of the founding family on the board who were tethered to the long-term interests of the company, which I also found enormously helpful.
I think it's not one board member or another.
I think the key is to create a culture where all points of view can be heard and where people are comfortable enough to share them.
And that's what we had at Campbell when I was there.
We had people that we would go toe to toe and we disagreed on some things.
But, you know, those points of view, I was better to have it in the boardroom than it was to have it out with Wall Street or the analyst or any activists lurking out there to critique what we were doing.
So I loved having a very candid, a large, candid, arguably unwieldy board.
Everything that mattered came up in those board meetings.
And so we were able to deal with it before we took it outside.
A good board member constructively engages in the dialogue.
I guess the other observation about a good board, in my opinion, a good board member is that they understand their role in the process, and it's one of oversight.
It's not one of execution and management.
Their job is to make sure the organization is properly governed and that the enterprise is living up to the standards that have been set for it.
not to make sure you've done the right job with your marketing that quarter or that year.
Before we get to leadership, I want to ask you how you went about making decisions.
Did you have a particular process, a routine for decisions that matter?
I'm thinking high-stakes decisions.
You know, first of all, this conversation makes all this stuff sound simple.
It's not.
It's messy every day.
and you're anguishing over every decision about a person, every decision about a board meeting.
I'll just use a CEO life, but it could be any life.
I spent more of my time not being a CEO than I did being a CEO.
I was basically in that lane of work for 40 years.
I was only a CEO for 10.
The other 30, I was an entry-level marketing person to a manager, to a leader.
So for me, the decision-making got easy if we created a framework for what mattered most.
If people knew what mattered, it made it easy to decide.
If you know all stakeholders matter and you know that you're expected to do better tomorrow than you did today,
and you know that your enterprise is committed to winning in the workplace before you win in the marketplace.
You create this framework.
Everybody knows what's expected.
You know, the Gallup survey, they ask 12 questions, which get at the hygiene of an organization.
It's called the Q12 survey.
And one of those 12 questions is, I know what is expected of me.
And the more you know what is expected of you, the easier it is to do your job.
So as a leader, the key is make sure the expectations are crystal clear.
And make sure that if it push comes to shove, that if you, if you, if you, if you,
got to pick performance over people, then you better get somebody else in the boat with you
because that's something that's taken very seriously in my organizations. When it came to process,
we would do a strategic process where we would assess the situation every year and revisit our
strategy for the next three years. We would then say, what are the implications for the coming
year. We would then do an annual plan. We would then break that annual plan down into quarterly
expectations. And as we did that in a collaborative way with every leader, it was another
example of where slow, you start slow, you can finish fast because everybody's on the same
page and they all execute against it. Then you're just doing modest course corrections.
The other thing, so there's a planning process you put in place, and then there's a process for
interventions where you find out what's working, what's not, and what's needed in the here
and now. And between the planning process and a simple intervention process, what's working,
what's not, what's needed, you can find your way through almost anything.
What have you learned about leadership that most people miss?
It's all about the people.
you know what we tend to do and I'm guilty of it you know you tend to have these huge jobs
and you got all this list of stuff that has to get done and you get all caught up in the tasks
and you forget about the people because I got to get this done now it's due by the end of the
month and they're not getting it done and and all of a sudden you're compromising the relationships
with the people that work for you and with you I found that leaders get so caught up in the
delivery of performance that they lose sight of taking care of the development of the people.
That's the thing I have to constantly remind myself of, because you still have to perform.
You've got to perform and take care of the people.
But typically where you end up compromising is you just say, well, I don't have time to deal
with him or her right now.
I'm just going to take over this project and get it done because it's got to be done by Friday.
Sometimes you've got to do that.
I mean, that's reality.
Most of the leaders I encounter, they lead by the seat of their pants.
They create great business plans, you know, and financial plans.
And then you say, what's your leadership plan?
I have no idea.
And it's like, wait a minute.
Leading your people is the most important thing you do and you have no plan.
Well, yeah, I just kind of work my way through it.
Well, that's bullshit from my point of view.
You know, I would, I tell people that leading your people, you're on sacred ground.
You're having a profound influence on these people's lives.
And you're doing it by the seat of your pants?
Give me a break.
You know, these people are working all day.
Then they're having dinner with their kids and what are they doing after dinner?
They're getting back on email, working at night, falling asleep, thinking about what they did do and what they didn't do and what they got to do tomorrow.
They get up thinking about what they have to do that day.
squeeze some time in with the kids of the dog, and then do it all over again. And you want them to be
wildly engaged in what you're doing? And you're not thinking about it? Hello? And what I find
is most leaders do it by the seat of their pants. And some of them are better at it than others.
But largely, that's not good enough. Leaders can be born, but they are most certainly all made better.
I think leadership works off a mastery model. I think the world works off a mastery model in terms
all the way from Darwin and the species mastering their environment to leading. And I believe you
apprentice at it, you learn from it, you study it, you study the craft, and then you get better
at it. I can't imagine the first podcast you did was as good as the podcast you do now. You get better.
you work at it. And these leaders, they just think by virtue of making decisions by the seat
of their pants today, they're going to be better at making decisions by the seat of their pants
tomorrow. That may be true, but I just contend it's inadequate. So most leaders I see haven't been
intentional enough and haven't really thought about it. That's where I challenge them to do better.
And to be clear, 75% of my day when I'm leading is by the seat of my pants.
You know, that's just life.
We got a lot of crap coming at us every day, right?
We're overwhelmed by data by stuff coming at us.
But I'm saying 25% of the time, you ought to know what matters most,
and you ought to really be attentive to it every day.
Most leaders haven't done enough in that territory in terms of reflection and study.
to be world-class, to be world-class leaders.
What does a leadership blueprint look like, a leadership plan?
What's the blueprint for that?
I think a blueprint has to be, for your leadership,
has to be anchored in how do you want to lead.
It has nothing to do with anybody else yet, all right?
It's the process we take people through is envision the leader you want to be,
do some reflection of your life because I contend your life story is your leadership story
and then study the world around you and see what other people are doing that might relate
to the way you want to be you know and I've got lots of mentors like Stephen Covey Jim Collins
but the people I've worked for who I've learned from so take that reflection and study
and then actually build what I call a leadership model.
I believe models can be incredibly useful.
You create a mental model for how you want to show up as a leader.
And then as you do that, you build practices into your life
that bring that model to life in a very tangible way.
So it's not just talk and leadership mumbo-jumbo.
It's here's how I show up.
And then you commit to a continuous improvement process
of doing a little better with that model regularly.
So that's what a leadership model is.
But that is not enough because then you've got to take that model, which is all about you
and how you want to walk in the world.
And then you've got to actually go into the real world.
And think about it in terms of the Venn diagrams you had in school.
You have your leadership approach here.
And then over here you have another circle that is the leadership approach that is expected of
you in the world at large or in your organization. In the middle, hopefully, is a cross-hatched
area where there is stuff that you value in how you want to show up, and there is stuff that
the enterprise values on how they want you to show up. And the process we takes you through is
it's putting those two things together so you can show up in a way that's effective for the
enterprise and fulfilling for you. And every enterprise I've been in, I've been in some crazy ones,
There are some things they all want, and that everybody wants in most of their leadership work,
certainly in virtually every sector, but in corporate, I can say, look, there are two things.
Performance and people that you're expected to perform.
If you're a leader, you want to perform, and the enterprise wants you to perform,
and they also want you to perform through people because they're having you manage people.
So, typically, a blueprint for success is thinking about how you want to lead, figuring out
what's expected of you, and then creating a reentry approach that says, okay, here's how
I'm going to lead in a way that meets the needs of my organization.
And we see just wild success with this as people are really tethered to what matters
to them, and they're doing it in a practical way that matters to the enterprise.
And you can do both.
That's my belief.
And what I, where I struggle with is, and I have lots of friends who study leadership and
write about it, but arguably have never really done it.
But they've studied people and done it.
They add a lot of value.
You've got to be able to do this in the real world.
And you've got to be able to work on lifting your leadership in the middle of your
cockamamie life.
and who has time for this stuff?
Nobody has time for it.
So the process that I'm talking about was built so that it could fit in, when you do it, it nests
perfectly in your cockamamie life, and you can do it in a way that speaks to you
and meets the need of the enterprise.
You can do all of that, as long as you do it in small chunks with a continuous improvement
mindset.
That's the concept of a blueprint.
Being true to yourself is at the heart of it, but then you have to walk in the world with others.
So you've got to take that into account while you're being true to yourself.
And that's the bridge we try and help people build when we work with them.
One or the others just won't do.
If you're just trying to meet the needs of others, you're hustling for your worthiness.
And Brunee Brown language, you're not walking inside your story.
We want you to walk inside your story and be effective inside your enterprise.
I have yet to find somebody that can't do both if they are intentional about it
and not just doing it by the seat of their pants.
Talk to me about the things that people who teach or write but haven't done miss
when you're reading that or you're thinking about it.
Is there something that you're like, oh, how do you think about that?
Well, first of all, I think it's more important to realize what they hit
because they're able to step outside of it, they bring perspective and objectivity that I think
enhances understanding, big time.
So I think there's a lot more value addition than I think there is what they quote-unquote
miss.
Totally.
But you never know until you're dealing with these people shoulder to shoulder day in, day
out, grinding away, trying to make it all work amidst all of its complexity and ambiguity
and he said, she said, what do we do?
There's no substitute for living it, you know.
It's just like my friends who are professors.
I can't understand their life either.
I haven't walked in their shoes to the extent that they have.
So what they miss is, I think, the visceral understanding of what it's like to be on that
side of the table and walking in those shoes.
That's what they miss.
but they add so much more value because I've learned so much Stephen Covey never ran anything
and when he did he didn't do it particularly well but his thinking enlarged my world
Jim Collins I mean he sees a lot of stuff but he doesn't want to go run something of any scale
yeah his his perspective was it's just beautiful because he studied the world and really
invested time and energy and research and work and understanding it. And that adds a ton of value,
but you've got to walk a mile in their shoes too. Are there common patterns that you see that
keep people with high potential from achieving their goals or realizing their potential?
Patience is one. You know, we're conditioned now to want change faster and faster. And there's
no substitute for cultivating wisdom through experience. I talk to it when I'm out on the
West Coast or I'm talking to folks in Silicon Valley. It's like my perspective is discounted,
which is annoying, but understandable. And because I'm almost 70 years old. And how could I possibly
understand what this 30-year-old person is going through? And we get in this conversation and I say,
well how much wisdom have you accumulated in the last decade since from 20 to 30 a lot you know
I've learned a lot well how much more do you think you'll accumulate from 30 to 40 or 40 to 50 or 50 to 50
or 50 to 60 there's and there's no substitute for it and there's no way to go faster with it
the demands of society or such that you got to do more better faster now and the leaders today
sort of hunger for the quick fix, just like the Wall Street hungered for the good quarter.
And we're saying, well, you know, you got to look at this a longer-term time horizon.
If you want corporate responsibility, we've got to create room for people to create
corporate, enduring corporate enterprises that can serve society better and not live quarter to
quarter. The same thing is true about young leaders. You don't live quarter to quarter. You've got to
create room for yourself to grow over time and to have patience and to just focus on how can I
help the enterprise do better today than we did yesterday. And how can I grow and be a little better
today than I was yesterday and get into a continuous improvement mindset as opposed to a quick
fix mindset? That's the tough piece. And I was just like them. I wanted more,
better faster too. And I kept track of when I was going to get my next promotion and was I going to
get promoted before this person or that person. But ultimately, that's where I've landed on.
I want to switch gears and ask you a few personal questions before we wrap up. When I was doing
some research, it came up that you wake up between four and five every morning. Pretty much. Yeah,
I'm a morning person. I actually cultivated that habit in an intentional way, interestingly.
Because as I was a company president and then a chair and then a CEO and then a chairman,
my evening life got crazy, but my morning life, I realized that if I wanted to sort of get
centered for my day and everything, I just needed to get up earlier.
And I was early morning anyway.
But I started getting up an hour earlier and gathering myself.
I'd sit up in my garden in New Jersey at the time, where I lived for most of this time,
25 years of my work. And I would have a cup of coffee as the sun came up and reflect on what
was expected that day and gather myself a bit before all hell broke loose. And then I would go
inside, shower, shave, and shine. And I remember putting on my suits every day. And it was
like I was putting on my armor and I was getting ready to go into battle. I found it to be,
a real important part of my life to give myself some space and quiet time to get anchored
in what mattered most. The other thing I did was one of the things that mattered most was
my kids and my family. And so I would be up with them for breakfast and then I would always try
and find a way to take one of them to school before I would go to work. So I tried to be available
in the early mornings knowing that the afternoons and nights were risky. I moved my wake-up time up
and it worked. And to this day, I mean, I was up today. Actually, I slept in the day. I slept
until five today. But I get a ton of work time. You sort of need to figure out what matters most in
my life. And my work was part of it. My family was another part of it. And my own personal well-being.
Those are three of my five cylinders. The other
two were my community and my faith. So I have five cylinders that I work off of. And three of those
cylinders, with the practice of getting up early and reflecting, I was able to center myself
and sort of help manage those three cylinders in a way that served me well, gosh, now for almost
30 years. Well, you were the CEO of Campbell's. You wrote over 30,000 thank you notes. I
or notes of gratitude or thank you notes.
I'm curious as to you, what started that practice
and what have you learned about writing good ones?
When I was fired from my job and I was shy,
my outplacement counselor said,
you're never going to get a job.
You're too shy.
You only answer the questions that you're being asked.
You're not selling yourself.
You're not, you know, I've read your 50 pages of handwritten life story.
You're committed.
you're wildly committed to contributing and excelling yet you show up in such a shy reserved way
and he said you've got to figure out a way to make your job search distinctive and as try as i could
i i i was just horrible at interviewing at least i felt i was so i said i got to do something here so
what i did was when i would go if i came to your building in ottawa and i was interviewing for a job there
and there were, I'd meet six people and I'd meet the receptionist who opened the door for me at the
building. I would get all their names. When I was done, I would walk next door to the coffee shop
and I would handwrite each one a note and I would walk it back over to the receptionist before I left
and asked them to deliver it that day to the people that I had just met. And I would make sure
to thank them for something specific, maybe two or three sentences.
that they did for me as a way of being distinctive.
I got to tell you, it was transformational.
The key to making hard decisions at the top,
you have to be in the black with your emotional bank account with the culture.
As a leader, you have to build that bank account.
You have to be making deposits every day into that account
to build trust and to build credibility with the people that work there,
knowing that there are days where you're going to make some giant withdrawal
because you're going to screw up because you will and that the companies that are doing well in today's
challenging times are the ones that are building trust with their associates that's going to help
them navigate the challenges of the day we have challenges today we had challenges yesterday
we'll have more challenges tomorrow
Welcome to the Knowledge Project podcast. I'm your host, Shane Parrish.
This podcast sharpens your mind by helping you master the best to what other people have
already figured out. If you're listening to this, you're not currently a supporting member.
If you'd like special member-only episodes, access before anyone else, transcripts, and other member-only
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Doug Kanaud is here today.
the CEO of Campbell Soup and worked at Nabisco during the toxic leverage bioculture that prompted
the book Barbarians at the gate. Doug is full of leadership advice and lessons. We talk about
why you can't win in the marketplace, if you haven't won in the workplace, the first 100 days
as CEO of Campbell's Soup, adjusting to shifting consumer preferences, how to know when you have
the right people and the wrong people, and so much more. It's time to listen and learn.
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Set the scene for me in the 80s and not only, like, how did you end up at Nabisco?
What was it like working for the LBO, largest in history at the time, and the pressure that
you must have felt internally and the employees as well, and then how you applied some of
this learning from Covey inside?
Well, there were two guys that just, they say when the student is ready, the teacher appears,
I was ready for two people that really had a profound influence on me, more than others.
One was Stephen Covey, and the other one was Jim Collins, and they both became very good friends.
I was wrestling with my life.
I had gone into Nabisco, and it was at Nabisco that, you know, the magnitude of the challenge was overwhelming.
And I was realizing, without knowing it, that I needed to step up my game.
stuff was coming at me as part of the world's largest LBO and KKR, the poster child for
barbarians at the gate.
You're young for this, but it was a huge deal at the time in the corporate world.
We were being challenged to do things that just were more substantial than I'd ever been
challenged before.
And I realized I needed to get better anchored in what I believed in it so that I could
have the courage of my convictions to deal with all of it in a way where I would survive, because
was challenging. So that's where I, and I was searching for help, not knowing I was searching
for help, but I was searching for help, and I discovered Stephen's book, and I read it on a trip
with my wife, and totally neglected her. And I ultimately, she said, what are you reading? I said,
this amazing book. And she said, why is it so amazing? Because he thinks just like I do, and it was
the seven habits by Stephen Covey. And I wrote a whole book on it in the blueprint, but I believe
you've got to tend to your own foundations so that when you get put in the thick of thick
things and having to make tough decisions about people and performance and every day where
you're pushed to the edge, you have to be incredibly well anchored and have the courage of your
convictions. It's hard to have the courage of your convictions if you don't know what your convictions
are. And most people are flying by the seat of their pants, especially all the people that
we're listening to you on Wall Street. They're doing life by the seat of their pants. They're
reacting to what comes at them, which I do too, 70% of the time. But when you're in these
tight, tight situations, you've got to know where to draw the line and where you stand on
things. And I wasn't confident enough. So I needed to do some inside work to say, well,
what do I want to stand for here? And how do I want to make this work so that I can
not only contribute and perform, but I can do it in a way where I, you know, I can look at myself
in the mirror every day. And nobody can do that work for you. And I'll tell you,
you can't reading the books about all these great leaders and how they did it has nothing to
do with you. So I...