GOOD TO GREAT - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 22
About This Presentation
Title:

GOOD TO GREAT

Description:

GOOD TO GREAT 'Greatness is not a function of circumstance. ... 'Good is the enemy of great. ... GOOD TO GREAT - summary. Disciplined Thought. Confront the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:2811
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: kjasonk
Category:
Tags: good | great | good

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: GOOD TO GREAT


1
GOOD TO GREAT
  • Greatness is not a function of circumstance.
    Greatness, it turns out, is largely a matter of
    conscious choice, and discipline.
  • Jim Collins

2
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • A five-year study determining the difference
    between good companies and great companies.
  • Good is the enemy of great.
  • Main conclusion Almost any organization can
    substantially improve its stature and
    performance, perhaps even become great, if it
    conscientiously applies the framework of Good to
    Great ideas.

3
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • A great organization is one that delivers
    superior performance and makes a distinctive
    impact over a long period of time.
  • For a social sector organization, performance
    must be assessed relative mission, not financial
    returns.

4
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • The Good to Great Process

5
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined People (Level 5 Leadership)

6
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined People
  • Level 5 Leadership
  • Builds enduring greatness through a blend of
    personal humility and professional will.
  • Their ambition is for the institution, not
    themselves.
  • All G2G companies had Level 5 Leadership at the
    point of transition.
  • Level 5 leaders want to see the company even
    more successful in the next generation,
    comfortable that people wont trace roots of
    success back to them.
  • Described as quiet, humble, reserved, modest

7
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined People (First WhoThen What)

8
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined People
  • First Who Then What
  • G2G leaders began the transformation by first
    getting the right people on the bus (and the
    wrong people off the bus) and then figured where
    to drive.
  • Answer the who questions before the what
    decision.
  • G2G leaders were rigorous, not ruthless with
    people.
  • G2G management teams debated in search of best
    answers, and unified behind decisions.
  • When in doubt, dont hire.
  • When a people challenge needs to take place,
    act.

9
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined Thought (Confront the Brutal Facts)

10
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined Thought
  • Confront the Brutal Facts (Yet Never Lose Faith)
  • All G2G companies began the process to greatness
    by confronting the brutal facts of their current
    realities.
  • Honestly and diligently determine the truth of
    your situation, and the right decisions become
    evident.
  • Create a climate where truth is heard. Lead with
    questions, not answers.
  • Engage in dialogue and debate, not coercion.
  • Conduct autopsies, without blame.
  • Build red flag mechanisms that turn information
    into information that cannot be ignored.

11
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined Thought (Hedgehog Concept)

12
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined Thought
  • The Hedgehog Concept
  • Foxes pursue many ends at the same time and see
    the world in all its complexity.
  • Hedgehogs simplify a complex world into a single
    organizing idea, basic principle that unifies
    everything.
  • Three questions
  • What can you be best in the world at?
  • What drives your economic (resource) engine?
  • What are you deeply passionate about?

13
(No Transcript)
14
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined Actions (Culture of Discipline)

15
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined Action
  • A Culture of Discipline
  • Sustained great results depend upon building a
    culture of self-disciplined people who take
    disciplined action, fanatically consistent with
    the three circles.
  • Involves a duality requires a consistent system
    and gives people freedom and responsibility
    within the framework of that system.
  • Fanatically adhere to the Hedgehog Concept and
    shun opportunities that fall outside the three
    circles.

16
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined Actions (Technology Accelerators)

17
GOOD TO GREAT - summary
  • Disciplined Action
  • Technology Accelerators
  • G2G organizations avoid technological fads, yet
    become pioneers in carefully selected
    technologies.
  • Does the technology fit with your Hedgehog?
  • Technology accelerates the momentum, does not
    create it.

18
GOOD TO GREAT - discussion
  • Think of a Level 5 leader you know. What are
    they like?
  • What Level leader are you?
  • What matters most to you, your mission or your
    reputation?
  • Are there Level 5 leaders on your board or on
    your staff?
  • How can you become/continue being a Level 5
    leader?

19
GOOD TO GREAT - discussion
  • How might you tell if the right person is on the
    bus? (board, staff, supporter)
  • How might you tell if the wrong person is on the
    bus? (board, staff, supporter)
  • How might you tell if the right person is in the
    wrong seat on the bus? How do you move them?
  • What are the primary elements of getting and
    keeping the right people on the bus?

20
GOOD TO GREAT - discussion
  • Do you tend to have unwavering faith or face the
    brutal facts?
  • Which would you rather be in, an environment
    where people dont face the brutal facts and no
    one gets a say, or where facts are faced and
    people get a say?
  • Which way does your organization operate?
  • What is your questions to statements ratio?

21
GOOD TO GREAT - discussion
  • What is your organization most passionate about?
  • What can your organization be the best in the
    world at?
  • What drives your resource engine?

22
GOOD TO GREAT - discussion
  • How does your organization make decisions to do
    something now?
  • How often does your organization say no to doing
    something? Why or why not?
  • When making a decision for the organization,
    does the leader allow for dialogue and debate or
    make a decision?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com