Founder's Mentality Blog
Do the Founder’s Mentality Paths Apply to Individuals?
Do the Founder’s Mentality Paths Apply to Individuals?
Great leaders share three traits.
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Founder's Mentality Blog
Great leaders share three traits.
Sandy Ogg, a senior operating partner at Blackstone, is one the best students of business leadership I know. I had breakfast with him in New York City recently, and I spoke with him about what makes a good leader.
Before he joined Blackstone, Sandy was chief human resources officer for two large companies, Motorola and Unilever. One of his main charges was to make sure the best people were in the biggest jobs. “Great leaders can exist in average companies and get vastly superior results than the company as a whole,” he said. “In fact, leaders can emerge from any company and get results for their little patch, even if the overall company is underperforming. But the opposite is true as well—average leaders in great companies can drag down results.” As it turns out, he said, great leaders have a lot in common. According to Sandy:
I was really struck by all these points, and they fit with many of my own observations, especially the idea of great leaders operating within underperforming companies.
Using our language, these leaders create their own Founder’s Mentality within the team they lead. They work hard to follow the right path on our Founder’s Mentality matrix: They try to deliver the benefits of scale and scope to their team, while taking personal responsibility for protecting their teams from the negatives of complexity and bureaucracy.
About two years ago, I visited the head of Chinese operations for a very large multinational, and this is how he described his role: “We have just founded a new organization in China and we need to make it a leader. I want my team to believe they are in complete control of their destiny. But we can’t succeed in China without all the benefits of being a global company. Nor will we succeed in China if we let the global company slow us down or zap our energy.”
This dual task of the leader—to create a sense of Founder’s Mentality while also capturing benefits of scale and scope—has prompted us to think about the Founder’s Mentality matrix, or two-by-two, not just as a framework for how companies manage the benefits of Founder’s Mentality and scale and scope, but also how individual leaders manage the balance. Here’s a starting list of questions we think every leader should reflect on:
1. What am I doing to move my team east, to build and sustain a sense of Founder’s Mentality?
2. What am I doing to bring the benefits of scale and scope to my team?
My guess is that most leaders are good at one of these two dimensions, but great leaders are good at both. With their own people, they create a new company ready to take on the world. But they also make sure their people benefit from being part of a global ecosystem. The two-by-two seems to work well as a framework for evaluating leadership qualities, and we’re eager to explore further. Watch this space.