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The Courage Solution: The Power of Truth Telling with Your Boss, Peers, and Team
The Courage Solution: The Power of Truth Telling with Your Boss, Peers, and Team
The Courage Solution: The Power of Truth Telling with Your Boss, Peers, and Team
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The Courage Solution: The Power of Truth Telling with Your Boss, Peers, and Team

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“Original and wise, this masterful book shows you how to build the honesty and authenticity today’s leaders need, and positions you for success.”
- Marshall Goldsmith, author of #1 New York Times bestseller Triggers

Are there things you’d like to change at your company? Have you found yourself wishing your boss would change? Or your peers? What about the team you lead?

Everyone in the corporate world, from the CEO to the security guard out front, wants to change something about their company. That’s the human condition at work. Where you can get stuck, however, is thinking that things will improve when the “other guy” changes—and waiting for that to happen first.

In The Courage Solution, author, speaker, and CEO advisor Mindy Mackenzie shows us that the conventional approach is wrong. You can’t wait for the “other guy” to change. For true change to occur and for companies to perform better, we must all embrace one simple truth: The only thing you can reliably change or control is yourself. With truth telling the commodity in shortest supply in corporate America today, The Courage Solution challenges business professionals of any level to take actions that are deceptively simple yet require vulnerability and courage. The result? Improved impact on the job, and increased happiness and fulfillment. Drawing on 20 years of demanding executive roles at global corporations, Mindy Mackenzie reveals sharply focused, quick-read strategies in four key areas:

• Part 1, You First: Taking ownership and accountability to create a career and life you love.
• Part 2, Lead Your Boss: Transforming your relationship with your boss.
• Part 3, Lead Your Peers: Accelerating positive peer relationships to improve business results.
• Part 4, Lead Your Team: Building the most effective teams and having fun while doing it.

Whether you’re a seasoned leader or just starting out in your career, The Courage Solution will help you create instant, lasting change and achieve the success you desire at work.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 3, 2016
ISBN9781626343313
The Courage Solution: The Power of Truth Telling with Your Boss, Peers, and Team

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    The Courage Solution - Mindy Mackenzie

    heart.

    Preface

    IN WRITING THIS book, I attempted to balance stories from my experience with stories from my colleagues. When I had completed the manuscript, my editor encouraged me to preface it by sharing my life story so that you, the reader, would know why I believe passionately in courage and truth telling. As both a 20-year veteran of human resources and a trained psychotherapist, I know that every person has a story. Each person you encounter at work, no matter how polished or together they seem, has likely experienced more heartache and trauma and challenge than you’d expect. Myself included.

    This truth was reinforced several years ago at a dinner for executive team members. As we chatted, we began sharing stories of our first jobs (nearly all of us started working at age 12), the humble circumstances of our families, how we scraped through college, and so on. We drew the conclusion that there was a benefit to that early working and scraping and effort—it contributed to the degree of success and accomplishment we had achieved, since our early starts weren’t what would be called easy.

    My childhood in Michigan involved prolonged, severe abuse. It was extraordinarily painful in every sense (physically, mentally, and emotionally) yet easy for others to miss because my family moved every couple of years. The benefit it did provide, however, was my obsessive desire to overcome, move on, and create a completely different experience for myself.

    My solace growing up was the escape I found at school. School was a place where no one could harm me in the way I was harmed at home. I loved school. Loved studying. Loved the competitiveness of vying for the best grades. It was an environment in which I thrived, and I learned that through performing well I got the recognition I craved.

    This early pattern helped me persist as I worked full time while taking full course loads at college and then graduate school. The work ethic I developed would become a cornerstone of future achievements. I have simply always loved going to work. Whether in my career as a newly minted marriage and family therapist or later as I transitioned into business, I found work to be this amazing place to get fulfillment through helping others, solving problems, and getting stuff done.

    I have mentored many young people as they begin their careers and agonize over what postsecondary degrees to pursue (or what degrees they’ve already earned). I’ve always laughed and then shared that I have (1) a theology undergraduate degree and (2) a graduate degree in marriage and family therapy. Without fail, this always shocks them—which will forever amuse me. My message is that, ultimately, it doesn’t matter where you went to school or what your degree is, where you come from or what your story is; what matters is what you accomplish on the job and how you contribute.

    At this point in my life, I have worked for three global corporations, and I am fortunate that the first was Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. It was the quintessential meritocracy. When I joined the company in 1996, I was told to never share that I had any college education because it might be off-putting to coworkers given that many were not college educated, instead rising from the hourly-worker ranks into management. Sam Walton had built a culture where people were promoted based on results—no matter where they came from. Walmart was a place where your past was irrelevant. And given my past, I was delighted to jump in, work my tail off, and see where it went.

    But I never originally envisioned a career in business, let alone in human resources. After graduate school, my plan was to head to Dallas, Texas, to join a multidisciplinary mental health practice that a group of us were forming (a psychiatrist, social worker, psychologist, and me). I felt that being a therapist was my calling, and I was driven to help people overcome their challenges and be healthier and more fulfilled. I couldn’t imagine any other line of work; I considered myself a lifer. And at that point, I had never even heard of human resources (or personnel, as it was then known)—or taken a business management class.

    Due to unexpected circumstances, I was invited to speak to some Walmart executives as a get to know you exercise. When those conversations went well, after much prodding from family and friends to just check it out and see where it goes, I interviewed at Walmart for a personnel role in the Logistics Division.

    My mentor, a fellow marriage and family therapist, advised that while the practice in Dallas was being established by the others, it made sense for me to work for a year at the largest business in the world. He knew how hard it was to get a mental health practice started and profitable, and thought that at Walmart I could get terrific experience that would in turn help me help my patients, while earning good money.

    My mentor’s advice seemed prudent. When I accepted the role, I anticipated spending a year or so with Walmart before rejoining my therapy colleagues in Texas and settling down as a therapist—no harm, no foul.

    I never made it to Dallas.

    The second day on the job as the personnel manager trainee for Walmart’s Transportation Office (mechanics, truck drivers, and dispatchers were now my clients), the woman in the top job went on medical leave. Within 48 hours of my arrival, trainee was dropped from my title and my orientation was over. My adventure in business had begun.

    I quickly discovered that I could get the same charge out of helping people in a corporate setting as I did in a clinical setting. It was fun. And intense. And exciting. And new.

    I had found my home.

    In the next nine years, I made multiple moves, which culminated with my working at headquarters and living in Bentonville, Arkansas. But while my career was flourishing, my personal life was foundering. I had had a disastrous marriage and an excruciating divorce. I was a single working mother to a beautiful baby boy—and I was ready for a change of scenery.

    I toyed with the idea of going back to private practice, but before that thought had a chance to fully form, an executive search firm representing Campbell Soup Company called me. Campbell’s was looking for a global organization effectiveness director to lead leadership and culture initiatives. And my experience was just what they were looking for.

    When I arrived at Campbell’s headquarters in Camden, New Jersey, I was no longer a starry-eyed newbie. Thanks to Walmart’s prominence in the business world, I had had many priceless experiences. I was exposed to the first-rate executive teams at GE and at Motorola, worked on global projects of significant scale, facilitated five-year strategy meetings, and coached senior executives throughout the company. Bottom line? Walmart was a tremendous training ground.

    I was drawn to the Campbell’s job because the role afforded me the opportunity to work closely with the then CEO, Doug Conant. This was a privilege because Doug was a CEO who emphasized that successful business performance was dependent on how it was achieved. In other words, leadership and culture mattered a great deal. And my job was to partner with him to bring his vision to reality.

    By the time I left Walmart, I was a firm believer that who you are as a leader either creates a tremendous positive, far-reaching impact or casts a massive shadow on the organization. That it is critical to create an environment where employees can easily do what they are hired to do. Doug walked that talk.

    During my three years at headquarters, I was given positions of increasing seniority and worked on programs and initiatives that live on to this day. And I made my enthusiasm for and openness to an international role known. So when I was asked to consider the position of vice president, human resources and public affairs, for the Asia-Pacific region, my answer was a resounding yes. This was a dream job in a dream location—Sydney, Australia. I spent two years there.

    The experience was full of learning experiences: what it means to run a global business, how structuring a business can make or break its results, and the importance of empowering business leaders on the front lines with the authority to make the calls on their business, as they are closest to the customer. None of this was theoretical. I was living it every day, all from the vantage point of the southern hemisphere.

    So how did I end up at the liquor giant Jim Beam?

    Again, I received an unexpected phone call from a search firm. The headhunter extolled the virtues of joining an executive team at the Chicago headquarters at the beginning of a major performance turnaround, in an industry with incredible margins and rich heritage. And I was going to be the top banana—global chief human resources officer—something I had aspired to for years.

    As I contemplated this opportunity—and the fact that it would be the 18th move in my life—I wrestled with my sense of loyalty to Campbell’s and my yearning to try my hand at leading from the top job. It would be an opportunity to put to the ultimate test everything I espoused about leadership and running a successful business—and the culture that requires.

    Throughout my career I had experienced the effects of weak leadership. It fueled my burning desire to be in the most senior roles—I felt an obligation to do better. I felt it was my duty to lead because I knew there was a better way and that my behavior as a leader made a difference. A big difference.

    So I left a company I loved, a country I felt at home in, and a happy life I had built for me and my son and uprooted once again... with the intention of making Chicago work, no matter what happened at Jim Beam.

    And oh, the things that happened at Jim Beam! Within a year of arriving, the parent, Fortune Brands, decided to break apart the company, sell off one portion, do a public spinoff of another segment, and reconstitute itself as a pure-play, stand-alone spirits company on the New York Stock Exchange. We renamed ourselves Beam, Inc. Over the next four years, we delivered 106 percent shareholder value return, before being purchased by Japanese conglomerate Suntory Holdings.

    By that time, I not only had been leading human resources and communications globally but had been given strategy and corporate development as well. I’d been invited to join the board of a bank and had begun guest lecturing at Kellogg School of Management, at Northwestern University. My son and I had settled into our community on Chicago’s north shore, and our life had achieved a happy rhythm.

    So how did I end up here, writing this book? Giving speeches? Working at McKinsey as a senior advisor?

    It all started with a blank sheet of paper.

    I had spent months with our Japanese soon-to-be owners in heavy negotiations over how the business would operate, both in the interim and after the deal closed. Given the many hats I wore, I was also intimately involved in negotiating the contracts of the executives who were choosing to stay on.

    There was only one executive contract left to negotiate. Mine.

    I had been deliberating about my future and whether I should stay for the next leg of Beam’s journey. The past several years had been intense, not just because of the business performance we were delivering but also because the board and CEO had begun to speak with me about my taking on larger commercial roles, and my potential as CEO. With Suntory’s entrance, the game changed. And I needed to get clear on what I envisioned for my life.

    I never could have imagined what transpired. A senior executive came from Japan to talk to me. Two messages were conveyed to encourage me to stay: (1) I was a legitimate candidate for the CEO spot once the incumbent moved on and (2) I could name my price.

    Thus the blank sheet of paper. Literally.

    My brain had trouble computing what was happening as he slid across a sheet of white paper and told me that the chairman wanted me to tell him what it would take.

    I thanked the executive profusely and asked for three days before getting back to him with my answer. The next 72 hours were truth time.

    It was a fierce internal battle. My ego screamed for me to stay. My heart yearned to move forward. My head told me I’d never get another shot at the CEO spot if I turned down this one. My gut told me that if I didn’t leave then, I’d regret it the rest of my life.

    In the end I left.

    Why?

    Because I didn’t want to make a difference for just one company—I wanted to make a difference for many. I didn’t want to lead just a few thousand—I wanted to inspire many thousands. And most importantly, I didn’t want to be just a weekend warrior parent to my son—I wanted to be truly available to the one human being who needed me around for those few more years before he left home.

    Writing this book has been an endeavor of the heart and spirit, a way to pay back all the good fortune and blessings I have had in my life by sharing the most important nuggets I have learned as a leader and as a human being so far.

    I hope that knowing my backstory inspires you on your personal and professional journey and reminds you that it really doesn’t matter where you started.

    INTRODUCTION

    An Uncommon Approach to Leading

    WHEN WAS THE last time you reclined in a comfy chair, with a delicious drink at your side, and settled in to read the latest 300-page tome on leadership?

    Whenever I ask fellow members of the corporate tribe this question, they snort and sheepishly admit that they haven’t cracked any book—much less a book on leadership—in a... VERY. LONG. TIME.

    Then they furtively look over their shoulder as if to check that the gods of the Corporate World haven’t overheard their blasphemy.

    You are not alone. Don’t worry. The fact that you’re reading this book is nothing short of miraculous (keeping with the mythical, pseudo-religious theme here).

    When I lecture at Kellogg School of Management or give keynotes at various organizations on the topics covered in this book, professionals consistently ask for simple, practical things they can do to improve their life at work. So that is what I talk about.

    Not more theories.

    Not more research.

    In this book, I’m sharing the handful of tools and techniques that I have found throughout my 20-year-plus career to be game-changing. This book is essentially four short books in one. It is designed so that you can read all four sections sequentially, or you can simply choose the topic area where you are wanting some practical help and go directly there. It is intended to be a just-in-time resource that you can go back to again and again. And it is organized around the four principle relationships that most impact your success in your career: the relationship you have with yourself, your boss, your peers, and those you lead. All underpinned with an uncommon philosophical twist.

    I suspect that many of you readers have had unexpected peaks and valleys in your personal and professional lives. I have as well. In a nutshell, the first 17 years of my life were pretty lousy, in a scary, made-for-TV-special kind of way, and I’ve spent my adult life not only healing from those experiences but deliberately choosing to create a different type of life. In the process of deciding whether I was going to change or continue the patterns of the past, I came to the same conclusion about business as I did about my life: the only thing I can change is myself.

    And that is the singular difference about this book. It is simple because it is based on one unalterable truth:

    The only thing you can reliably control or change at your company is yourself.

    Kind of annoying, isn’t it? But it’s true.

    And we all tend to forget it.

    There is a corollary that is equally as powerful:

    Change is an inside-out job.

    No one can do it to you or for you.

    C’mon... you know this is true too.

    And buying in to both

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