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IHRSA interview – Adam Bryant

The award-winning author and New York Times columnist will discuss the qualities of strong leaders during IHRSA 2015. Jon Feld reports

By Jon Feld | Published in Health Club Management 2015 issue 2


You’re best known for putting CEOs on the spot in your Corner Office column in The New York Times, but in March you’ll be in the spotlight at IHRSA 2015. Can you give a preview of your keynote?
I’ll be sharing highlights from my most recent book, Quick and Nimble, about leadership and the most important drivers of culture in all sorts of organisations. If these factors are managed well, they can have an outsized positive impact, but conversely, if overlooked or handled badly, they can have an outsized negative impact.

When you conduct your interviews for Corner Office, do your subjects find the process prompts them to contemplate themselves and their roles more deeply?
Yes. In fact, I’ve had a lot of CEOs tell me that, during the interview, they found themselves connecting the dots in their own lives. I ask them questions about such things as when they were younger, their parents, first management positions and so on, and sometimes the light bulb goes on, mid-interview, about the impact those early experiences and influences have had.

Might it be useful for clubs to employ a Corner Office-type process to make managers more aware of their strengths and weaknesses?
You know, it might. Over the years, I’ve received a lot of feedback from executives who’ve used my interviews to encourage forthright discussion in companies. The themes I touch on are universal, so they’re applicable to all sizes of firm, and to non-profit as well as for-profit organisations.

One of the interesting insights uncovered by your column is that, in quantifying performance, successful leaders focus on just three or even fewer metrics. Can you offer an example of a CEO who does that?
When Shivan Subramaniam was the CEO of FM Global – a global insurance firm based in Johnston, Rhode Island, US – he created a simple scoreboard for everyone in the company. The following is how he described the approach in his own words:
“We call them key result areas or KRAs. We’re multinational – we’ve got 5,100 people, 1,800 of whom are engineers. We’re very analytical, yet we have three KRAs – nothing fancy – and everybody focuses on them: profitability, retention of existing clients, and attracting new clients.

“You can talk to (our) people in San Francisco, Sydney or Singapore, and they’ll know what the three KRAs are. All of our incentive plans are designed around our KRAs, and every one of those KRAs is very transparent. Our employees know how we’re doing. And, most importantly, they understand them, whether they’re a senior manager or a file clerk. They know that, ‘If I do this, it helps this KRA in this manner’.”

You stress the importance of ‘adult conversations’ – but speaking openly can be difficult, especially if someone’s performance or job seems to be in question. Why are candid conversations so important?
A lot of people go out of their way to avoid difficult conversations at work. I’ve avoided my share of them myself. After all, they’re stressful. You don’t know how people are going to react. And we’d all rather have pleasant conversations than tough ones.
But sweeping issues under the rug doesn’t make them go away, and unaddressed they can fester and lead to even poorer performance. Often, some sort of misunderstanding lies at the heart of the problem, and once you’ve identified and worked through it, people feel energised. The key is just initiating the conversation.

In Quick and Nimble, you also stress the importance of a simple mindset. What exactly does that mean, and how is it helpful to a CEO?
The phrase describes the ability to take a lot of information or complicated ideas and boil them down to their essence – transforming complexity into simplicity.

Anyone can develop a list of 12 priorities for the year, but if you have that many, they’re not really priorities. A simple mindset makes it possible for you to say: “Here’s what matters. Here’s what we’re going to focus on.” And it shouldn’t be more than three things, because as research shows, most people can’t remember more than three things day-to-day.

Simplicity also fosters innovation, because it motivates people to tackle problems and challenges collaboratively. Without priorities, people tend to labour in their own sandboxes.

In your book, you describe two of the other drivers as ‘passionate curiosity’ and ‘team smarts’. What are these?
Curiosity is important because, with the business landscape changing so quickly – and with so many industries grappling with disruptive innovation – no CEO can have all the answers, even if that’s the impression they have to convey to customers and investors. Inside the company, their role is to ask smart questions, so they have to have a relentlessly questioning mind. That’s a characteristic of a lot of the CEOs I interview.

Team smarts involves recognising that the real hierarchy and power structure within an organisation often has little do with official organisational charts. You have to understand who has influence, how to get things done, and be able to read a room – like people’s body language in meetings.

Failure is a common theme in your columns. What role does it play in a CEO’s, or company’s, success?
You have to have a healthy relationship with failure if you’re going to succeed.

The ability to deal with failure is critical to innovation, for instance. You have to create an environment in which people are willing to try new things, and if they don’t work out, to wring insights and lessons from the experience and then move on quickly. People shouldn’t be penalised for their failures.

Your book tells the whole story, but in a nutshell, if you were to offer the CEO of a health club company your advice on how to be an effective manager and create a healthy, productive culture, what would you tell them?
I put trust and respect at the top of my list of key qualities for effective leaders. You have to be trustworthy in all senses of the word. Meanwhile, the best way to show respect on a consistent basis is to really listen to people. That doesn’t mean you always have to agree with your employees, but they have to feel their input matters. If the CEO practises that behaviour, others will follow.

Next, I think developing a clear and simple scoreboard – similar to Subramaniam’s three KRAs – is important, because it creates a sense of shared mission and fosters teamwork. Without such a simple plan, people find themselves working in silos, and that’s deadly for an organisation.

Third, codifying your company’s values is important too, but the list of values has to be short: three is best, and no more than four. They have to be specific and capture the DNA of the organisation. You have to live by these values every day, and make them part of your hiring – and firing – process. If your club doesn’t live by its stated values, people become cynical.

Does anyone you’ve interviewed in the hospitality or health club industries particularly personify the qualities and skills you feel are conducive to business success?
The person who comes to mind is J W ‘Bill’ Marriott Jr, the executive chair and chair of the board of Marriott International. He shared a particularly memorable insight with me. “The four most important words in the English language are: ‘What do you think?’” he said. “Listen to your people and learn.”


Introducing Adam Bryant
Adam Bryant, 52, has held a number of positions at The New York Times in a wide range of capacities – among them business reporter, deputy business editor, deputy national editor, and senior editor for features. However, he’s best known as the creator of the Corner Office, a widely read weekly column about leadership and management issues, which appears in the print and digital editions of The Times.

Since the column first appeared in 2009, Bryant has mined insights from more than 350 CEOs, which, in turn, has led to two books: The New York Times bestseller The Corner Office: Indispensable and unexpected lessons from CEOs on how to lead and succeed; and Quick and Nimble: Lessons from leading CEOs on how to create a culture of innovation.

In addition to writing The Corner Office, Bryant is a deputy science editor at The Times, overseeing its coverage of the environment and climate change.


Hear more from Adam
Bryant will discuss ‘Quick and Nimble: Lessons from leading CEOs on how to create a culture of innovation’ during IHRSA’s 34th Annual International Convention & Trade Show, which takes place on March 11–14 in Los Angeles, US. His keynote address will take place on Friday 13 March, 9.00–10.30am.

For more information or to register, log on to www.ihrsa.org/convention



This feature first appeared in the January 2015 issue of Club Business International, IHRSA’s magazine for the health and fitness industry.
 



Club Business International
To quantify performance, you can focus on just three key areas: profitability, retention of existing clients, and attracting new clients Credit: PHOTO: WWW.SHUTTERSTOCK.COM/MAKSYM PORIECHKIN
All staff need to know how their own performance can impact the club’s KRAs Credit: PHOTO: WWW.SHUTTERSTOCK.COM/WAVEBREAKMEDIA
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Places Leisure is a leading leisure centre operator with a mission to create active places and healthy people for communities to thrive. [more...]
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30-30 May 2024

Forum HOTel&SPA

Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris, France
30 May - 02 Jun 2024

Rimini Wellness

Rimini Exhibition Center, Rimini, Italy
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Jobs    News   Products   Magazine

IHRSA interview – Adam Bryant

The award-winning author and New York Times columnist will discuss the qualities of strong leaders during IHRSA 2015. Jon Feld reports

By Jon Feld | Published in Health Club Management 2015 issue 2


You’re best known for putting CEOs on the spot in your Corner Office column in The New York Times, but in March you’ll be in the spotlight at IHRSA 2015. Can you give a preview of your keynote?
I’ll be sharing highlights from my most recent book, Quick and Nimble, about leadership and the most important drivers of culture in all sorts of organisations. If these factors are managed well, they can have an outsized positive impact, but conversely, if overlooked or handled badly, they can have an outsized negative impact.

When you conduct your interviews for Corner Office, do your subjects find the process prompts them to contemplate themselves and their roles more deeply?
Yes. In fact, I’ve had a lot of CEOs tell me that, during the interview, they found themselves connecting the dots in their own lives. I ask them questions about such things as when they were younger, their parents, first management positions and so on, and sometimes the light bulb goes on, mid-interview, about the impact those early experiences and influences have had.

Might it be useful for clubs to employ a Corner Office-type process to make managers more aware of their strengths and weaknesses?
You know, it might. Over the years, I’ve received a lot of feedback from executives who’ve used my interviews to encourage forthright discussion in companies. The themes I touch on are universal, so they’re applicable to all sizes of firm, and to non-profit as well as for-profit organisations.

One of the interesting insights uncovered by your column is that, in quantifying performance, successful leaders focus on just three or even fewer metrics. Can you offer an example of a CEO who does that?
When Shivan Subramaniam was the CEO of FM Global – a global insurance firm based in Johnston, Rhode Island, US – he created a simple scoreboard for everyone in the company. The following is how he described the approach in his own words:
“We call them key result areas or KRAs. We’re multinational – we’ve got 5,100 people, 1,800 of whom are engineers. We’re very analytical, yet we have three KRAs – nothing fancy – and everybody focuses on them: profitability, retention of existing clients, and attracting new clients.

“You can talk to (our) people in San Francisco, Sydney or Singapore, and they’ll know what the three KRAs are. All of our incentive plans are designed around our KRAs, and every one of those KRAs is very transparent. Our employees know how we’re doing. And, most importantly, they understand them, whether they’re a senior manager or a file clerk. They know that, ‘If I do this, it helps this KRA in this manner’.”

You stress the importance of ‘adult conversations’ – but speaking openly can be difficult, especially if someone’s performance or job seems to be in question. Why are candid conversations so important?
A lot of people go out of their way to avoid difficult conversations at work. I’ve avoided my share of them myself. After all, they’re stressful. You don’t know how people are going to react. And we’d all rather have pleasant conversations than tough ones.
But sweeping issues under the rug doesn’t make them go away, and unaddressed they can fester and lead to even poorer performance. Often, some sort of misunderstanding lies at the heart of the problem, and once you’ve identified and worked through it, people feel energised. The key is just initiating the conversation.

In Quick and Nimble, you also stress the importance of a simple mindset. What exactly does that mean, and how is it helpful to a CEO?
The phrase describes the ability to take a lot of information or complicated ideas and boil them down to their essence – transforming complexity into simplicity.

Anyone can develop a list of 12 priorities for the year, but if you have that many, they’re not really priorities. A simple mindset makes it possible for you to say: “Here’s what matters. Here’s what we’re going to focus on.” And it shouldn’t be more than three things, because as research shows, most people can’t remember more than three things day-to-day.

Simplicity also fosters innovation, because it motivates people to tackle problems and challenges collaboratively. Without priorities, people tend to labour in their own sandboxes.

In your book, you describe two of the other drivers as ‘passionate curiosity’ and ‘team smarts’. What are these?
Curiosity is important because, with the business landscape changing so quickly – and with so many industries grappling with disruptive innovation – no CEO can have all the answers, even if that’s the impression they have to convey to customers and investors. Inside the company, their role is to ask smart questions, so they have to have a relentlessly questioning mind. That’s a characteristic of a lot of the CEOs I interview.

Team smarts involves recognising that the real hierarchy and power structure within an organisation often has little do with official organisational charts. You have to understand who has influence, how to get things done, and be able to read a room – like people’s body language in meetings.

Failure is a common theme in your columns. What role does it play in a CEO’s, or company’s, success?
You have to have a healthy relationship with failure if you’re going to succeed.

The ability to deal with failure is critical to innovation, for instance. You have to create an environment in which people are willing to try new things, and if they don’t work out, to wring insights and lessons from the experience and then move on quickly. People shouldn’t be penalised for their failures.

Your book tells the whole story, but in a nutshell, if you were to offer the CEO of a health club company your advice on how to be an effective manager and create a healthy, productive culture, what would you tell them?
I put trust and respect at the top of my list of key qualities for effective leaders. You have to be trustworthy in all senses of the word. Meanwhile, the best way to show respect on a consistent basis is to really listen to people. That doesn’t mean you always have to agree with your employees, but they have to feel their input matters. If the CEO practises that behaviour, others will follow.

Next, I think developing a clear and simple scoreboard – similar to Subramaniam’s three KRAs – is important, because it creates a sense of shared mission and fosters teamwork. Without such a simple plan, people find themselves working in silos, and that’s deadly for an organisation.

Third, codifying your company’s values is important too, but the list of values has to be short: three is best, and no more than four. They have to be specific and capture the DNA of the organisation. You have to live by these values every day, and make them part of your hiring – and firing – process. If your club doesn’t live by its stated values, people become cynical.

Does anyone you’ve interviewed in the hospitality or health club industries particularly personify the qualities and skills you feel are conducive to business success?
The person who comes to mind is J W ‘Bill’ Marriott Jr, the executive chair and chair of the board of Marriott International. He shared a particularly memorable insight with me. “The four most important words in the English language are: ‘What do you think?’” he said. “Listen to your people and learn.”


Introducing Adam Bryant
Adam Bryant, 52, has held a number of positions at The New York Times in a wide range of capacities – among them business reporter, deputy business editor, deputy national editor, and senior editor for features. However, he’s best known as the creator of the Corner Office, a widely read weekly column about leadership and management issues, which appears in the print and digital editions of The Times.

Since the column first appeared in 2009, Bryant has mined insights from more than 350 CEOs, which, in turn, has led to two books: The New York Times bestseller The Corner Office: Indispensable and unexpected lessons from CEOs on how to lead and succeed; and Quick and Nimble: Lessons from leading CEOs on how to create a culture of innovation.

In addition to writing The Corner Office, Bryant is a deputy science editor at The Times, overseeing its coverage of the environment and climate change.


Hear more from Adam
Bryant will discuss ‘Quick and Nimble: Lessons from leading CEOs on how to create a culture of innovation’ during IHRSA’s 34th Annual International Convention & Trade Show, which takes place on March 11–14 in Los Angeles, US. His keynote address will take place on Friday 13 March, 9.00–10.30am.

For more information or to register, log on to www.ihrsa.org/convention



This feature first appeared in the January 2015 issue of Club Business International, IHRSA’s magazine for the health and fitness industry.
 



Club Business International
To quantify performance, you can focus on just three key areas: profitability, retention of existing clients, and attracting new clients Credit: PHOTO: WWW.SHUTTERSTOCK.COM/MAKSYM PORIECHKIN
All staff need to know how their own performance can impact the club’s KRAs Credit: PHOTO: WWW.SHUTTERSTOCK.COM/WAVEBREAKMEDIA
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Forum HOTel&SPA

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+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

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Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2024

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