• • •
Ask yourself: If you were to treat managing people the way you treat managing product, wouldn’t you also want to approach the entire system differently? If you started not with best practices but with what it takes to deliver a fabulous end product to your customers, what system would you invent? Wouldn’t you want your people to be more agile? Wouldn’t you want to be able to rely on their being proactive and staying ahead of the curve, because they know that they’ve got to help you steer the way? Wouldn’t you rather be devoting the full measure of your time and attention to making sure they have the resources and information they need to do that for you and to discussing challenges with them, getting their best input and their pushback, rather than processing forms and approvals and policing them?
I’m not at all saying that teams don’t need direction setting and coaching. They do. But the ways in which they’re given direction and feedback are often far from optimal. At the same time we were experimenting at Netflix with eliminating processes, we were also experimenting with better ways of communicating where the company was heading, what goals to be driving toward, and how people were performing.
The Greatest Motivation Is Contributing to Success 13
IN BRIEF
▶ The greatest team achievements are driven by all team members understanding the ultimate goal and being free to creatively problem-solve in order to get there.
▶ The strongest motivator is having great team members to work with, people who trust one another to do great work and to challenge one another.
▶ The most important job of managers is to ensure that all team members are such high performers who do great work and challenge one another.
▶ You should operate with the leanest possible set of policies, procedures, rules, and approvals, because most of these top-down mandates hamper speed and agility.
▶ Discover how lean you can go by steadily experimenting. If it turns out a policy or procedure was needed, reinstate it. Constantly seek to refine your culture just as you constantly work to improve your products and services.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
• As you survey your company-wide policies and procedures, ask: What is the purpose of this policy or procedure? Does it achieve that result?
• Are there any approval mechanisms you can eliminate?
• What percentage of its time does management spend on problem solving and team building?
• Have you done a cost-benefit analysis of the incentives and perks you offer employees?
• Could you replace approvals and permissions with analysis of spending patterns and a focus on accuracy and predictability?
• Is your decision-making system clear and communicated widely?
CHAPTER TWO
Every Single Employee Should Understand the Business
| Communicate Constantly About the Challenge |
When I advise doing away with as many procedures and approvals as possible, I am inevitably asked, “But how? How can that be possible? What takes the place of rules, processes, approvals, bureaucracy, and permissions?” The answer: Clear, continuous communication about the context of the work to be done. Telling people, “Here’s exactly where we are, and here’s what we’re trying to accomplish.” The more time managers spend communicating and elaborating and being transparent about the job to be done, about the challenges the business is facing and the larger competitive context, the less important policies, approvals, and incentives are.
Even if you’re not at liberty to do away with policies, procedures, bonuses, and formal annual reviews, you can implement much clearer, more open, honest, and continuous communication about the business challenges and how employees are meeting them. This facilitates much more timely improvements in performance as well as more limber adjustments of goals. It also encourages people to ask questions and share ideas, which can lead to extremely valuable insights about how to improve your product, your service to your customers, and the business itself. I came to appreciate how important it is for every single employee to truly understand the business when I myself began to learn deeply about the business at Netflix.
People Don’t Want to Be Entertained at Work; They Want to Learn
When I was at Sun we had 370 people in HR. 370 people! And virtually all of them were divorced from the business; they couldn’t tell you what we made. We were doing initiatives and off-sites and celebrations. We were half entertainment and half happy-face HR. It was really fun but somehow empty. We always wanted more respect and recognition.
I became jazzed about my work in a new way when I became integrally involved in growing the company at Netflix. When I accepted the job, it was on the condition that I would not be siloed off as the HR lady; I would report directly to Reed and be part of the executive team. That meant that I had to step up and learn deeply about how the business worked. As I did that, I came to understand the enormous value of every single employee at the company gaining the same understanding. Reed and I had both been inspired by the argument for open-book management in Jack Stack and Bo Burlingham’s book The Great Game of Business. The importance of transparency was driven home for me by our dramatic shift from the DVD-by-mail model to the subscription model.
One morning when Reed and I were carpooling to work, he started passionately talking about changing from a pay-per-rental service to a subscription model, getting all fired up about it. I told him, “Okay, all right! I can hear it in your voice. I know what happens when you get like this. You are sure you’re right about this, aren’t you?” I knew that most employees weren’t going to like the change, but I also knew that Reed was going to do it anyway because he believed it was the right thing for the business. It was clear that the change would be wrenching. It involved much more than simply changing the terms on the website; we had to change the shipping model and the billing model and the whole structure of the company, its departments and supervisors and salespeople. We also had to bring in lots of new people who could build up our technical capabilities for serving subscribers and making good use of the tsunami of user data we’d be accumulating, and we were facing intense competition for them from our biggest competitor, which was a hundred times bigger than we were: Blockbuster.
The beautiful thing for me was that because the shift in the business was so dramatic, I had to focus very intensively on two things. First, I had to deeply understand the new business model and what was at stake. Subscription is a numbers race, and revenue occurs only over time after an up-front investment. I appreciated what a very big bet it was. We’d have to spend considerable money to sign up a first group of subscribers, which was an investment in getting more customers, and those new customers would allow us to pay for the next expansion. This is the fundamental Netflix model; pay up front for benefits in future years. At this stage in our growth, that considerable up-front expense meant that we didn’t have much time to make the model work. Second, the urgency of getting it right meant that I had to help everyone else in the company understand the new business model too. At the time, the only model any of us knew included due dates and late fees. When Reed proposed a subscription without due dates and late fees, it was truly scary. After all, late fees were the gas in Blockbuster’s engine. When we said weren’t going to charge them, everybody in the company was asking, “How’s that going to work?”
I fell in love with being a businessperson, and I didn’t want to be happy-face HR den mother anymore. I also fell in love with explaining very clearly and fully to everyone in the company why we were making the decisions we were, how they could best participate in achieving our goals, and what the obstacles would be.