"We believe in the simple not the complex...We believe in saying no
to thousands of products, so that we can really focus on the few that
are truly important and meaningful to us," he added.
"We believe in deep collaboration and cross-pollination of our
groups, which allow us to innovate in ways other cannot...And I think
that regardless of who is in what job those values are so embedded in
this company that Apple will do extremely well," he concluded.
It's not what you sell it's what you believe. If there is
one principle that explains why some organizations — Apple, Southwest
Airlines, USAA, Cirque du Soleil, the Marine Corps, Pixar — consistently
and dramatically outperform their rivals, it is that every person in
the organization, regardless of job title or function, understands what
makes the organization tick and why what the organization does matters.
Roy Spence, one of the toughest-minded business thinkers I know, is a cofounder of GSD&M, the legendary advertising agency based in Austin, Texas. In a provocative and saucy book, It's Not What You Sell, It's What You Stand For,
Spence explains the unique beliefs behind many of the one-of-a-kind
organizations he has studied or worked with over the years, from BMW to
Whole Foods Market to Southwest Airlines.
Sure, these and other organizations are built around strong business
models, stellar products and services, and (of course) clever
advertising. But Spence is adamant that behind every great company is an
authentic sense of purpose — "a definitive statement about the
difference you are trying to make in the world" — and a workplace with
the "energy and vitality" to bring that purpose to life.
In a chapter on the mission and culture at Texas A&M, the huge
(48,000 students), rabidly conservative, steeped-in-tradition university
that traces its history to 1871, Spence and his coauthor, GSD&M
"purposologist" Haley Rushing, highlight a saying about the school that
students have been reciting for decades: "From the outside looking in,
you can't understand it. From the inside looking out, you can't explain
it." That's a neat way to capture how it feels to change the sense of
what's possible in your field — and a reminder of why so few leaders
muster the commitment to build an organization with a unique sense of
itself. "The unique culture you encounter when you step foot in
'Aggieland,'" argue Spence and Rushing, "is like nothing you'll
experience on any other college campus."
That's the same feeling I get when I step foot inside business
organizations that stand for something special in their field. I've
written before about the one-of-a-kind strategy and culture at Umpqua Bank,
a fast-growing financial-services company in the Pacific Northwest that
has reimagined how a bank can interact with its customers. Umpqua's
branches are unlike anything you'll find from other banks, and the
culture is rooted in a commitment not just to serving customers but to
entertaining them, surprising them, going beyond their loftiest
expectations. This approach to retail and customer service is not just
about business strategy, though. It's about a set of personal beliefs
that define why the bank does what it does.
Umpqua's corporate "manifesto" explains that what makes the company
tick is a "state of mind," not just a strategy. "It's constantly
surprising the world with what a bank can be and how a bank can actually
be part of a customer's life." It's "equal parts checking account and
knitting club, commercial loan and local music source, IRA and Internet
café." It's "building something that's never been built before."
What do you promise that nobody else in your industry can promise?
What do you deliver that nobody else can deliver?
What do you believe that only you believe?
The organizations that can answer those questions crisply, clearly,
and compellingly are the ones that win big and create the most value.
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