"You were chosen, not elected. You don't need to please everybody."
That's just one piece of advice Anheuser-Busch CEO Carlos Brito shared
in his speech to a crowd of business leaders at the World Business Forum
in New York on Tuesday.
Brito, who oversaw the 2008 mega merger of Brazilian brewing company
InBev and American beer giant Anheuser-Busch, knows a thing or two about
being a leader, especially during times of change.
Here are his ten ways to build a high-performance ownership culture:
1. Dream big but stay humble.
You should benchmark your business against companies that are doing
better than you. “Look up and get inspired and challenged; look down and
you’ll get comfortable and lazy.” Brito said. If you look down at the
companies that are trailing you, you won't move forward.
2. Good company culture is universal.
Don't dilute your culture if it's working. Brito says that as you expand
your business, you are bound to meet “that’s not how things are done
here”–type resistance. He says not to listen to it. If you have created a
company culture that works in one place, it will work everywhere.
Performance is important to culture and culture is important to
performance.
3. Don't be selfish.
You need to think of your company as something bigger than yourself.
“It's not about me and my ego – it's about the company building
something that’s bigger than us, that is going to be here for hundreds
of years.” It’s not a matter of being detail-oriented versus strategic,
but rather a balance of both. “A leader should know enough about the
details to ask good questions,” he says.
4. It's all about people.
People are the only sustainable competitive advantage that any business
has. Brito says you should hire people that have the potential to become
better than you.
5. Face the brutal facts.
Too many companies only focus on the good news, but you can never grow
unless you face up to the negative truth as well. "I like people that
can tell me the good and the bad with the same urgency and clarity," he
says.
6. Reward results not efforts.
Brito says that while you should acknowledge and appreciate effort,
customers don’t buy effort --they buy results. “There is a big
difference between means and ends,” he says.
7. Keep the right amount of pressure on employees.
People perform best under the right amount of pressure. When your
employees are in their comfort zone they are coasting, he says. If you
take people out of their comfort zone, they learn to work harder and
produce more.
8. Welcome healthy conflict.
“Consensus is an impossible science,” Brito says. What's more important
is that you create an environment where people are encouraged to
disagree if it means coming to the best answer.
9. The consumer is the ultimate acid test.
You should make decisions with consumers in mind, always trying to imagine how would they react, Brito says.
10. Turn your employees into "owners."
It's great to have smart and accomplished employees, but if they're only
there to build their own careers, that could work against you. You want
people to take ownership in your company, not just rent it, says Brito.
An engaged group of owners as employees is the key to success rather
than a selfish group of professionals. Foster an environment of
owners—owners make better decisions.
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