63 pages • 2 hours read
Jim CollinsA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Collins opens this chapter by juxtaposing the examples of Wells Fargo and Bank of America. Wells Fargo, a good-to-great company, placed an uncompromising value on getting the right people on (and off) the bus, while at Bank of America senior leaders would often wait for orders from a CEO with a domineering way of running the company. The tangible results speak for themselves: Wells Fargo outperformed Bank of America in the stock market by a ratio of 5:1 in 1998.
Collins also brings up the leadership of David Maxwell, former Fannie Mae CEO, who led with a “first who” approach, making sure he had the right team before making any major decisions about vision or strategy. At comparison companies that never reached or sustained greatness, Collins found that CEOs would often rely on themselves for big-picture decisions and recruit people who would simply help in executing their predetermined strategy. Furthermore, comparison companies often became ruthless, relying on layoffs and firing in times of adversity. In contrast to these models, good-to-great companies were highly rigorous in trying to maintain the right people at their companies. They also debated solutions, often vigorously, but in a way that led to practical problem solving; their debates helped create unity, not destroy it.
Anecdotally, Collins also adds that many of the leaders in good-to-great companies became lifelong friends. The focus on people in these companies made all the difference, as their shared accomplishments created bonds that transcended the professional. Collins then concludes by arguing that the “idea of ‘first who’ might be the closest link between a great company and a great life” (62). If someone enjoys the work they do, they enjoy it largely because of who they are working with, and according to Collins, a company requires this “first who” approach in order to experience greatness.
Collins extends the theme of the power of people throughout this chapter, as he reveals additional evidence in support of the idea that the “who” ultimately matters much more than the “what” in a good-to-great company. By emphasizing the power of relationships and strategic recruiting, Collins strips the prestige from CEOs who approach their work as a savior or genius tasked with the messianic mission of leading their companies into the promised land. As a natural complement to Chapter 2, Collins therefore argues that Level 5 leaders are those who surround themselves with highly capable teams marked by character and not specific skill sets or experience.
Getting the right people on the bus and the wrong people off is not an optional step in the journey of a company from good to great—it is absolutely essential. In the specific example of Wells Fargo versus Bank of America, the evidence points to the difference that Wells Fargo’s specific leadership model made—a model that involved hiring a talented and resilient team that could withstand any change. At Bank of America, on the other hand, it didn’t matter how strong the leaders were; the executive team was comprised of “yes people,” so the results remained stagnant.
In the closing paragraphs of the chapter, Collins turns again to the notion that the principles of this book are relevant not only in the business world, but in our personal lives as well. In fact, he implies that the two often overlap; by including the anecdotal information that many of the leaders in good-to-great companies forged lifelong friendships with each other, Collins suggests that this is a natural consequence of the vast number of hours that people spend at work.