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CHAPTER 1
ON A MISSION
"In business situations we get well prepared and we go in undaunted.
I don't know if this is unique to the Mormon culture. But
we are individuals who have a mission and are absolutely undaunted
by it."
-Dave Checketts, former CEO of Madison Square Garden Corp.
"People do a better job if they respect the leader of the company. I
learned that on my mission-the value of people and how to truly
appreciate them."
-David Neeleman, founder and CEO of JetBlue Airlines
Many JetBlue passengers have had the experience of boarding a
plane, finding a seat, and looking up before takeoff to discover
a middle-aged man standing at the head of the cabin, wearing a
flight attendant's apron and a name tag. "Hi, my name is David
Neeleman. And I'm the CEO of JetBlue. I'm here to serve you
today and I'm looking forward to meeting each of you before we
land."
For the remainder of the flight, Neeleman goes up and down
the aisle, distributing snacks, collecting garbage, and making a
point to meet every passenger. He also writes down their comments
on a small notepad. Although the passengers are complete
strangers to Neeleman, he quickly establishes a rapport with them.
When the flight lands, Neeleman thanks passengers for flying Jet-
Blue and then works with the flight crew to clean the plane and
prepare it for its next flight.
No other airline has a CEO who works as a flight attendant
just so he can serve his customers and get to know them and their
needs better. No other airline has a CEO who works shoulder to
shoulder with flight crews in order to appreciate their job better.
Neeleman does both no less than once a month and sometimes as
often as once a week. For this, he is praised for his business
acumen, his devotion to his company, and for maintaining a
fingertip feel for the direct needs and desires of his customers and
employees.
SERVICE MATTERS
Each time he works a roundtrip flight, Neeleman performs about
ten hours of direct customer service and employee interaction. It's
no surprise that the annual national Airline Quality Ratings study,
which is based on Transportation Department statistics, routinely
ranks JetBlue number one in customer service. "There are so many
things you can do as a CEO to set an example," said Neeleman. "If
the CEO is down there helping employees tag bags and clean airplanes,
employees feel better about going to work. People will go
the extra mile for you. They know I'm not sitting in some part of
the airplane where I don't want to be talked to. Instead, I hang out
with crew members."
Direct service to customers and working in the trenches along-
side employees may be unusual concepts for a CEO or business
manager. That's simply not the way business is done in corporate
America. Neeleman didn't learn this unique approach in business
school or by reading some cutting-edge textbook on how to be a
successful leader. He developed these habits at a very young age,
long before he had any thought of creating an airline.
At nineteen, Neeleman served a full-time mission for the Mormon
Church. Upon graduating from high school, all young men
in the Mormon Church are encouraged to spend two years as missionaries,
which entails teaching the gospel of Jesus Christ to
strangers and performing service for the poor, the elderly, and the
needy. During this time missionaries must completely forgo
schooling, employment, entertainment, and dating in order to
fully devote all their energy and time to service. They receive no financial
compensation, and they are expected to finance as much of
their missionary expenses as possible. As teenagers, Mormon youth
are encouraged to begin saving for their missions. The Church
supplements whatever remaining costs can't be afforded by the
missionary or his parents.
"On my mission I learned so many valuable lessons," Neeleman
said. "The mission gave me this opportunity to serve and
really appreciate people for their contribution."
While on a mission, missionaries are not permitted to return
home on holidays or for vacations. Phone calls to friends back
home are prohibited. Calls to family are limited to specific holidays.
This same opportunity is afforded to young women in the
Mormon Church. But just as the Church strongly encourages its
young men to serve missions, it strongly encourages its young
women to obtain college degrees.
In 2004 the Mormon Church had over 56,000 missionaries
serving full-time missions in over 120 nations and island states.
Virtually all of the Mormon business executives in this book served
full-time missions before starting their business careers. David
Neeleman was assigned to Brazil. After spending roughly two
months learning Portuguese at the Church's language training center
for missionaries in Provo, Utah, Neeleman spent the remainder
of his two-year commitment living among poverty-stricken people
in Brazil. The conditions were starkly different from the community
he grew up in outside Salt Lake City.
On a daily basis Neeleman would put on a white shirt and tie,
along with a name tag, and enter the neighborhoods and homes of
Brazilians. Speaking their language, Neeleman would introduce
himself by saying something along the lines of: "Hello, my name
is Elder Neeleman and I'm a representative for the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints." Then he would talk to them about the
gospel of Jesus Christ and answer their questions.
This experience had a profound impact on the way Neeleman
runs JetBlue. "My missionary experience obliterated class distinction
for me," said Neeleman. "I learned to treat everyone the same.
If anything, I have a disdain for the upper class and people who
think they are better than others."
Neeleman's perspective is evident in JetBlue's business approach.
There is no first-class section on JetBlue planes. All seats
are sold at the same price. All passengers receive the same treatment
and are referred to as "customers."
Evidence of Neeleman's approach is also found in the way he
runs the corporation. All employees are referred to as "crew members"
and wear badges with their name and photograph. Neeleman
wears a crew-member ID badge at all times, too. Neeleman has no
preferred parking space at the office. Nor do any other executives.
When he flies on JetBlue planes, he sits in the jump seat with his
crew. There is no corporate plane.
The most unusual aspect of Neeleman's leadership style is his
compensation package, particularly in today's climate of inflated
CEO salaries. Long before CEOs came under fire for excessive
salaries, Peter Drucker predicted: "In the next economic downturn,
there will be an outbreak of bitterness and contempt for these
super corporate chieftains who pay themselves millions. In every
major economic downturn in U.S. history, the villains have been
the heroes during the preceding book."
Neeleman is an anomaly here. His annual salary is only $200,000
per year, plus an average of between $70,000 and $90,000 per year in
bonuses. He donates his entire salary to a fund for his employees. Financially
independent from the success of his previous business ventures,
Neeleman is able to operate this way. "A fish stinks from the
head," said Neeleman. "There are so many things a CEO can do to
set an example. CEOs are just seen as money grubbers-they want
to build the company on the backs of their people. The value they ascribe
to themselves is so wildly greater than anyone else in the company
that there's this king-type notion."
Before serving a mission, Neeleman didn't plan to create an airline.
In fact, as a teenager he had no idea what he wanted to do. He
struggled through school. "I was in turmoil," Neeleman said. "I
spent most of my early school days with my head out the window.
I didn't have any confidence in my ability to do well scholastically.
I couldn't write memos. I couldn't spell very well. I never read
books. I had a lot of anxiety about it because I didn't know what a
guy could do who couldn't read or write or spell, and who had a
hard time focusing."
Neeleman later discovered that he has attention deficit disorder
(ADD). This hurt his performance in school. It did not, however,
prevent him from serving a full-time mission. The Mormon
Church will accept any young person into missionary service as
long as he meets the age and personal worthiness requirements. "I
didn't have focus," said Neeleman. "For a guy like me with a learning
disability, I had never been disciplined enough to focus on
things. The mission taught me discipline and gave me the opportunity
to serve and really appreciate people."
The Mormon Church sends its young people on missions to
convert people to Christ. But the practical result of the Church's
missionary program is that many Mormon youth who serve missions
become firmly grounded in their religion at a young age and
develop a strong sense of focus and purpose before starting college,
marriage, or their careers. "My mission really saved me," said
Neeleman. "It was the first time in my life that I ever felt like I had
some talent of some kind."
The Mormon mission experience also brought life to Neeleman's
natural abilities and personal strengths, all of which are evident
in his leadership approach at JetBlue. "Being a CEO is
being a people person," said Neeleman. "If an employee knows
that the CEO donates his salary to them-and that employee
then sees the CEO helping him or her tag bags or clean airplanes,
those employees will go the extra mile for me in return. They
know there's not some limo waiting to pick me up and that I'm
not sitting in some part of the airplane where I don't want to be
talked to.
"You have to lead people. They have to buy into your vision
and respect you in a way that they want to perform for you. People
do a better job if they respect the leader of the company. I
learned that on my mission-the value of people and how to truly
appreciate them."
OBEDIENCE LEADS TO SUCCESS
Mormon missionaries are expected to abide by strict rules governing
personal conduct. They rise early in the morning, observe a
nighttime curfew, adhere to a dress and grooming code, are prohibited
from watching television, and are expected to reserve time
each day for personal study. Obedience and hard work, they are
taught, are the keys to a missionary's success. Those keys can lead
to business success, too.
Before being named CEO of Dell, Kevin Rollins developed a
reputation within the company for being a logistics and operational
genius. Those abilities have a lot to do with why Michael Dell initially
hired Rollins. Since moving into the CEO spot, Rollins has
instilled his penchant for discipline throughout the company
through his management style. Many of his personal habits that impact
the way he approaches management were refined while serving
a mission for the Mormon Church.
"Since I was nineteen," said Rollins, "I've gotten up at fivethirty
essentially every morning, unless I'm sick. Since age nineteen
I've gone to bed early. So there's a discipline of how to act. A
mission teaches you to get up, get going, and do things. I also
learned on a mission that if you just work really hard you'll get
good results. But if you're smart and work really hard, you'll get superb
results."
Adjusting to the rigors and self-discipline expected of Mormon
missionaries was not that difficult for Rollins. From the time
Rollins was in third grade, his father would enter his room each
summer morning before 6:00 A.M. and wake him and his older
brother by turning on the light. Rollins' father would then say:
"Here's what you have to do today."
Blurry-eyed, Rollins and his brother would sit up in their beds
and listen as their father outlined a list of chores: weeding flower
beds, working in the strawberry patch, or performing work in their
yard, which encompassed over an acre. "There was a constant
task," said Rollins. "Yard work was just a staple. He expected us to
perform."
Rollins' father was a civil engineering professor at Brigham
Young University, and he had his own engineering firm. He would
leave for work very early each morning and put in long hours at
his office. When he returned home after work each day, he would
gather Kevin and his brother and inspect their work. "He'd go out
and look in the yard or wherever our assignment was," said
Rollins. "He expected things to look perfect."
By the time Rollins reached high school, his father's assignments
at home increased in scope and would sometimes take
days or weeks to complete. For instance, one summer his father
instructed Kevin and his brother to build a walkway. But his was
no ordinary walkway. Rollins' childhood home was situated on a
lot that had a large, steep hill that ran down the property behind
the house. Rollins' father, a skilled carpenter and cement mason,
decided he wanted a walkway constructed from the top of the
hill to the bottom. Before construction could begin, however, the
hill had to be cleared of brush and rock. The entire task-from
preparation to construction-fell to Rollins and his brother. "It
was tough," said Rollins. "We had to cut a walkway down that
hill, then through the brush and through the soil and rock. It
taught me the value of doing something every day, sticking to
task orientation, which I have inherent in my management style
today."
On his mission, Rollins developed other daily habits, such as
studying the scriptures. As a result, he still makes time to read for
personal enrichment on a daily basis. On a mission he dutifully
followed the Church's instructions to proselyte, a practice that typically
entails knocking on doors. Although this is not the most
fruitful method of convincing people to join the Mormon Church,
Rollins followed this course out of his desire to be obedient. "I believe
that whether or not you are actually doing things that lead to
success, through obedience you will get success," said Rollins.
"There's a jump that occurs just through doing it. So I'm a big proponent
of discipline, activity, never say die, really hard work, and
never admitting defeat. A lot of that is mission based."
The never-say-die, hard-work approach to missionary service
had a carry-over effect to Rollins' business aspirations. Rollins
served his mission in Alberta, Canada, in the early 1970s. While
there he noticed a very successful soft-drink franchise. After his
mission he decided to set up a soft-drink franchise of his own in
Utah. He had no knowledge of the industry or what it would take
to create a beverage company. At age twenty-one he enrolled in
business courses at Brigham Young University and married his
wife, Debbie. With financing from his father, Rollins opened the
Pop Shoppe, a soft-drink distributorship.
Debbie quit school immediately to work full time at the business.
"We started selling our beverage before we got our plant up
and running," Debbie Rollins said.
Kevin purchased bottling equipment, arranged for trucking
and shipping throughout the state, and built a bottling plant.
Since he was a full-time student at BYU, he had the plant constructed near the campus, enabling him to race home from school
at lunchtime each day to check on operations at the bottling plant.
If equipment was down, Kevin would hurry to the plant and fix it
in order to keep the operation moving.
"He wouldn't even change his clothes," Debbie recalled. "He
would just dive into the grease and fix whatever wasn't working.
He didn't even know anything about equipment. But he had this
sense of what needed to be done and he did it."
Within a year, Debbie Rollins was pregnant with their first
child and Kevin was pitching his product to grocery stores in an
attempt to expand sales. Little by little he convinced more and
more stores until his soft drink was being distributed throughout
the state of Utah. To accommodate demand, he had to create a distribution
plan for delivery and contract with trucking companies
to move his product. "If something needed to be done, Kevin just
did it," said Debbie. "If he didn't know how, he figured it out."
CONSISTENCY COUNTS
Missions can also be a powerful training ground to teach budgeting,
time management, determination, and how to deal with and
overcome adversity, all skills that are invaluable in corporate America.
Harvard Business School dean Kim Clark served his mission
in Germany in the 1960s. "The mission is so intense," said Clark.
"You are on your own. And the stakes are high. You are dealing
with life and death. It's serious."
As a young missionary Clark was assigned to be the mission financial
secretary. The Mormon Church has over 200 missions
around the world. Each of them has up to 200 missionaries. The
Church assigns a mission president to preside over those missionaries and run the mission's finances and properties. A mission president
and his wife are typically called out of retirement and serve
three-year terms.
Kim Clark's mission president was the CEO of a bank. "I got
to work with him closely," said Clark, who was assigned to work
in the mission president's office after he had been in Germany for
about a year. "He had a profound influence on me and my sense
of what was possible in positions of responsibility and leadership if
people learned to execute them very well."
At age nineteen, Clark was asked to be the financial secretary
to the mission president, who had oversight of all the Mormon
Church's assets and finances throughout southern Germany. At the
time, Clark had completed only one year of college at Harvard before
leaving school to serve his mission. He had no experience with
finances. Suddenly he found himself serving as a finance secretary
to a bank CEO. "By being his financial secretary, I learned a lot
having to do with organization, finance, budgeting, and accounting,"
said Clark.
The experience taught Clark about management. "I saw in my
mission what happens when a leader establishes a pattern of consistency
and coherence across all aspects of an organization's work,"
Clark said. "My mission president didn't just care about the quality
of the teaching by the missionaries. He cared about the way our
finances were handled. He cared about the way we were organized.
He cared about training clerks properly and about whether our
records-financial and otherwise-were in order, and whether we
had control over what was going on."
Clark applied these lessons in his management style at the
Harvard Business School. "I try to run HBS as a living model of
the very best ideas we have about how organizations should work,"
Clark said. "I've tried to instill in people this commitment to the
fundamental mission and help everybody understand that no matter
what their role (alumni relations, teaching executive education,
running the MBA program, or providing support or doing research),
everybody has an important contribution to make to the
mission of the school. If the school is to reach its potential, everybody
has to perform at a high level. There's nothing we do that's
not important, because we are educating people who are going to
be leaders in the world. My mission for the Mormon Church was
a very important influence in how I think about organizations."
PERSISTENCE PAYS
Above all, missions teach persistence. Dave Checketts, the former
CEO of Madison Square Garden Corporation, had a persistent nature
before he served his mission. When he was sixteen, Checketts
went with his family on a vacation. It began in Seattle and was supposed
to end at Disneyland in Anaheim. But while driving
through Oregon en route to southern California, the family car
broke down on a remote stretch of highway. Passengers in another
car stopped and helped push the Checketts' car down an exit ramp
to a gas station. There a mechanic determined that the Checketts
needed a new fuel pump. At this point it was nearly 6:00 P.M. on
a Friday leading into the Fourth of July weekend. The local auto
parts store had closed, along with most other businesses.
Dave's father had to return to work the following Wednesday.
If forced to wait until Monday to have the car repaired, the Checketts
would not have sufficient time to complete the trip to
Disneyland.
"I'm not going to let this happen," Dave told his father.
His father insisted that they appeared to be out of options.
Dave disagreed. He asked permission to go to the next town in
search of a fuel pump.
The nearest town was twenty miles away. Mr. Checketts asked
Dave how he planned to get there.
Hitchhike, Dave told him.
Mr. Checketts did not like the idea of Dave hitchhiking alone
on a highway.
Dave persisted.
Finally, Mr. Checketts consented but insisted Dave bring his
twelve-year-old brother with him.
Dave had never hitchhiked in his life. The first vehicle that
approached-a pickup truck-stopped and the driver asked
where the boys were headed. Dave explained and the driver told
the boys to hop in the back.
Less than a half hour later the driver dropped Dave and his
brother off in Medford, Oregon. On foot, the boys walked to four
gas stations seeking a fuel pump for a Buick LeSabre. They had no
luck. Finally, at the fifth gas station, Dave encountered a mechanic
who said he just happened to have one.
Giddy, Checketts bought it. Then he and his brother sprinted
back to the freeway to hitchhike back.
Suddenly, a policeman from the other side of the freeway
began yelling at them through a bullhorn. He ordered the boys off
the freeway, saying it was illegal to hitchhike. Dave told his little
brother to stay put and then ran across the freeway to the officer.
Checketts explained his predicament to the officer and pleaded for
permission to hitchhike back to his parents with the newly acquired
fuel pump.
"Hop in," the officer said. He then drove to the other side of
the highway, retrieved Dave's younger brother, flipped on his
lights, and sped down the highway. As the police car approached
the exit where the Checketts' car had broken down, Dave spotted
his father.
He pointed his father out to the officer. The officer had already
figured it out by the look of worry on Mr. Checketts' face.
The officer turned on his siren and drove toward Mr. Checketts.
He rolled down his window. "Do you know these guys?" the
officer joked. "I caught them shoplifting."
The following morning the new fuel pump was installed and
the Checketts made it to Disneyland.
EXPECT A MIRACLE
Checketts' two-year stint as a Mormon missionary only strengthened
his natural tendencies toward not taking no for an answer
and for finding a way to overcome adversity. Checketts was sent to
East Los Angeles in 1975, where he spent two full years teaching
residents of Watts and Compton about the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints. The neighborhoods he worked in were so
tough that the missionaries were required to be in their apartment
by 6:00 P.M. As a young white male wearing a white shirt and tie
and pedaling a ten-speed bicycle up and down urban streets, he
stood out and encountered steep opposition. He was ridiculed and
sometimes even endured personal persecution.
Then one day Checketts' mission president handed him and
all the other missionaries business cards bearing the name of the
Church. The reverse side of the card said: EXPECT A MIRACLE, emblazoned
in gold. The missionaries were instructed to carry these
cards at all times.
Checketts had put off his college education and marriage to his
high school girlfriend to go on a mission. But under these conditions,
frustration and a sense of failure set in. Expectedly, his success
rate was terrible.
"I got this card at one of the lowest points of my mission,"
Checketts said. "The notion of expecting a miracle is pretty powerful.
It developed in me this sense of going in undaunted because
somehow the Lord will open a door."
From that day forward, Checketts' approach changed. He got
up every day and hit the streets of East Los Angeles expecting to
succeed. "The sense of being a minority or a persecuted minority
ties into this sense of going in undaunted," said Checketts.
Soon the results changed. The last year of his mission was a
tremendous success. By the time he returned to Utah at age
twenty-one and returned to studying business at Brigham Young
University, his competitive nature was well beyond a normal range.
These traits that Checketts developed in childhood and
strengthened as a Mormon missionary fit perfectly into his business
career. In the summer of 1994, Viacom sold Madison Square
Garden to ITT and Cablevision for $1.075 billion. At that time,
Checketts was president of the New York Knicks, which was
owned by the Garden. The Garden's new ownership promptly elevated
Checketts to president and CEO of MSG Corp., effectively
putting him in charge of the Knicks, the Rangers, the MSG network,
and the myriad of live entertainment and events offered at
the Garden each year. In 1994 alone, the Garden and its theater
and Expo Center hosted 350 events.
MSG Corp.'s revenue in 1994 was roughly $400 million, coming
from ticket sales and radio and television sponsorships. The
Garden's primary competitor for concerts and live shows was
Radio City Music Hall, which routinely outbid the Garden for top
shows. Checketts hated losing to Radio City. The only way to beat
Radio City, he concluded, was to buy it.
That was no small hurdle. At the time, Radio City Music Hall
and the land it rested on was owned by Rockefeller Center, which
was under the management of Tishman-Speyer, one of the country's
largest real estate firms. However, Radio City Productions,
which controlled the rights to the Radio City Christmas Spectacular
and to the Rockettes, was owned by a Japanese company
called Mitsubishi Estates. The Christmas Spectacular was Radio
City's primary revenue source, grossing $70 million each Christmas
season.
Checketts wanted control of both the building and the production
company. But he wasn't the only one with his eye on
them. Both Disney and Universal Studios were interested in acquiring
them, too. And both of those companies had far more financial
clout than Checketts and MSG Corp. The presence of
Disney and Universal prompted MSG Corp.'s parent company,
ITT, to tell Checketts to back off from trying to acquire Radio
City.
Despite both external and internal opposition, Checketts
pushed ahead. After all, gaining control of Radio City Music Hall
couldn't be as difficult as trying to teach Mormonism from a bicycle
in Watts during the 1970s. He remembered the card that said
EXPECT A MIRACLE and then formulated a plan.
In Checketts' mind, it made no sense for one company to control
Radio City Music Hall and for another company to control
Radio City Productions, which determines the shows that are performed
in the hall. To acquire control of the building, Checketts
knew he had to convince those controlling Rockefeller Center to
enter into a long-term lease with Madison Square Garden for
Radio City Music Hall. That ultimately would mean negotiating
with Jerry Speyer, one of the founding partners at Tishman-Speyer.
Checketts didn't know Speyer. He set out to change that by scheduling
a series of dinner and lunch meetings with him.
Over a two-year period, he cultivated a relationship with
Speyer, whose firm was attempting to negotiate a new lease for
Radio City Music Hall. The problem was that MSG Corp. did not
own Radio City Productions, leaving Checketts in no position to
negotiate for a lease. While building a relationship with Speyer,
Checketts began negotiating with Mitsubishi Estates to purchase
Radio City Productions. At the time, Mitsubishi Estates was in
bankruptcy. But Radio City Productions was a profitable business.
Checketts offered to buy 50 percent of the company for $70 million.
Mitsubishi accepted-a move that gave Checketts a leg up
on Disney and Universal and put Checketts in a position to negotiate
on behalf of Mitsubishi Estates for a new lease from Rockefeller
Center. By this time, Checketts' relationship with Speyer had
solidified.
Now a 50 percent stakeholder in Radio City Productions,
Checketts woke up one Monday morning and said to his wife:
"Deb, I'm going to make a deal to get Radio City this week. This
is the week I'm making a deal."
"C'mon," she said.
"No. I'm serious. I may not see you this week. But I'm going
to make a deal."
On each of the next four consecutive days, Checketts held a
four-hour meeting with Speyer. At the conclusion of the fourth
day, the two men agreed to have dinner that evening. When
Checketts arrived at the Manhattan restaurant where they had previously agreed to dine, he told Speyer: "I am not leaving you
tonight until we make a deal."
Speyer told Checketts he would have to come up to his price.
"If I come up to your price, are we going to make a deal?"
Speyer said he was willing to deal.
By 1:00 A.M. the restaurant was closed and no deal had been
reached. Speyer said he was going home.
"I'm coming with you," Checketts told him. He followed
Speyer down Park Avenue to his apartment. Inside, Speyer, who
also serves as a chairman of the Museum of Modern Art, showed
Checketts an impressive array of art. Then the two men sat down
and continued negotiating. Ultimately, Checketts agreed to enter
a thirty-five-year lease with Rockefeller Center for the use of Radio
City Music Hall.
At 4:00 A.M., the two men shook hands. On behalf of MSG
Corp., Checketts now had a firm grip on the property for thirtyfive
years and controlled half the ownership in the production
company. At 6:00 A.M. Checketts made it home and went to bed.
But he wasn't done dealing. When he reported his deal to Mitsubishi
Estates, its representatives felt he had paid too much for the
lease. Since Checketts and MSG Corp. now had all the leverage as
the leaseholders and Mitsubishi didn't like the lease arrangement,
Checketts offered to buy out Mitsubishi's remaining 50 percent
ownership stake in the production company for another $70 million.
Eager for cash, Mitsubishi agreed.
Now Checketts and MSG Corp. were into Radio City Production
for $140 million. But on the day the sale closed between
MSG Corp. and Mitsubishi Estates, the production company had
$70 million in cash that had just been collected from the Radio
City Christmas Spectacular ticket receipts. Checketts was already
halfway out of the deal on the day he closed. The next year the
Christmas Spectacular brought in another $70 million.
Meanwhile, Checketts and MSG Corp. invested an additional
$70 million into restoring Radio City Music Hall back to its original
condition in 1932. By the time Checketts left MSG Corp. in
2001, it was the sole owner of Radio City Productions and controlled
the lease on Radio City Music Hall until 2036. And annual
revenues at Radio City Music Hall had quadrupled.
"A big part of my drive is this sense of needing to prove myself
a little bit more," said Checketts. "My mission gave me the confidence
that I could do anything I set out to . . . if I had enough
faith."
THE HARDEST SALES JOB KNOWN TO MANKIND
"Missions cause you to be a better leader," said Harvard Business
School Professor Clayton Christensen, who had to learn to speak
Korean in order to serve his mission in Korea. "You go out there
with a deep devotion and you are just convinced that your product
is the best product in the world. You try to sell it and try to sell
it and you get knocked down and rejected. You have to figure out
how to keep your self-esteem and your motivation up in the face
of all this rejection. It's the hardest sales job known to mankind."
Christensen teaches management and the development of organizational
capabilities to business students at Harvard. Before arriving
at HBS, Christensen was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford
University, a White House fellow, and an assistant to two U.S.
transportation secretaries. Today he is a consultant to companies
such as Intel, Eli Lilly, Dell, Kodak, and others. But his missionary
services for the Mormon Church preceded all these professional and academic achievements. His mission also helped prepare
him. As a young missionary, Christensen served as what's
known as a "zone leader," meaning he had oversight and responsibility
to motivate his fellow missionaries. This leadership assignment
can be an even harder task than taking religion to the doors
of strangers. "It's an even harder sales management job," said
Christensen, who saw the experience as great preparation for the
world of big business. "If you are a zone leader, how do you keep
these guys motivated when rejection is what their life is all about?
Then you come into the business world and it's duck soup compared
to that."
American Express' chief financial officer, Gary Crittenden,
served his Mormon mission in Germany. "The thing a mission
does is teach you persistency," said Crittenden. "Every day you
have to get up and say 'I'm going to spend this whole day out walking
the streets,' in some cases going door-to-door, and in some
cases just stopping people on the street or on busses, even in the
coldest weather.'"
The coupling of this persistence with other management skills
can produce a powerful, unstoppable force in business. "As a
nineteen-year-old missionary for the Church, you learn to advance
your views in the face of significant opposition," said Dave Checketts.
"If you don't, you never succeed as a missionary. That's what
makes the training so valuable and so unique."
And when these men emerge from their mission experience,
they have intensity and a sharp focus that cannot be taught in any
business school. "We get married younger," said David Neeleman.
"We have kids younger. We don't go through that phase of adolescence
where men hang out with guys in bars. We come home from
our missions, get married, start raising children, and get to work.
I was married seven weeks after my mission and we had a child ten
months later. I didn't have time to play around. I just had to get to
work. So there is seriousness and focus."
The missionary training quickly surfaces in their approach to
business. "In business situations we get well prepared and we go in
undaunted," said Checketts. "I don't know if this is unique to the
Mormon culture. But we are individuals who have a mission and
are absolutely undaunted by it."
Copyright © 2007 by Jeff Benedict
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