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Tech Book of the Month
  • Tech Book of the Month
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December 2021 - Trillion Dollar Coach: The Leadership Playbook of Silicon Valley's Bill Campbell by Eric Schmidt, Jonathan Rosenberg, and Alan Eagle

This month we read a book about famous CEO and executive coach, Bill Campbell. Bill had an unusual background for a silicon valley legend: he was a losing college football coach at Columbia. Despite a late start to his technology career, Bill’s timeless leadership principles and focus on people are helpful for any leader at any size company.

Tech Themes

  1. Product First. After a short time at Kodak, Bill realized the criticality of supporting product and engineering. As a football coach, he was not intimately familiar with the intricacies of photographic film. Still, Campbell understood that the engineers ultimately determined the company's fate. After a few months at Kodak, Bill did something that no one else ever thought of - he went into the engineering lab and started talking to the engineers. He told them that Fuji was hot on Kodak's heels and that the company should try to make a new type of film that might thwart some competitive pressure. The engineers were excited to hear feedback on their products and learn more about other aspects of the business. After a few months of gestation, the engineering team produced a new type of film: "This was not how things worked at Kodak. Marketing guys didn't go talk to engineers, especially the engineers in the research lab. But Bill didn't know that, or if he did, he didn't particularly care. So he went over to the building that housed the labs, introduced himself around, and challenged them to come up with something better than Fuji's latest. That challenge helped start the ball rolling on the film that eventually launched as Kodacolor 200, a major product for Kodak and a film that was empirically better than Fuji's. Score one for the marketing guy and his team!" Campbell understood that product was the heart of any technology company, and he sought to empower product leaders whenever he had a chance.

  2. Silicon Valley Moments. Sometimes you look back at a person's career and wonder how they managed to be at the center of several critical points in tech history. Bill was a magnet to big moments. After six unsuccessful years as coach of Columbia's football team, Bill joined an ad agency and eventually made his way to the marketing department at Kodak. At the time, Kodak was a blockbuster success and lauded as one of the top companies in the world. However, the writing was on the wall, film was getting cheaper and cheaper, and digital was on the rise. After a few years, Bill was recruited to Apple by John Sculley. Bill joined in 1983 as VP of Marketing, just two years before Steve Jobs would famously leave the company. Bill was incessant that management try to keep Jobs. Steve would not forget his loyalty, and upon his return, Jobs named Campbell a director of Apple in 1997. Bill became CEO of Claris, an Apple software division that functioned as a separate company. In 1990, when Apple signaled it would not spin Claris off into a separate company, Bill left with the rest of management. After a stint at Intuit, Bill became a CEO coach to several Silicon Valley luminaries, including Eric Schmidt, Steve Jobs, Shellye Archambeau, Brad Smith, John Donahoe, Sheryl Sandberg, Jeff Bezos, and more. Bill helped recruit Sandberg and current CFO Ruth Porat to Google. Bill was a serial networker who stood at the center of silicon valley.

  3. Failure and Success. Following his departure from Claris/Apple, Bill founded Go Corporation, one of the first mobile computers. The company raised a ton of venture capital for the time ($75m) before an eventual fire-sale to AT&T. The idea of a mobile computer was compelling, but the company faced stiff competition from Microsoft and Apple's Newton. Beyond competition, the original handheld devices lacked very basic features (easy internet, storage, network and email capabilities) that would be eventually be included in Apple's iPhone. Sales across the industry were a disappointment, and AT&T eventually shut down the acquired Go Corp. After the failure of Go. Corporation, Bill was unsure what to do. John Doerr, the famous leader of Kleiner Perkins, introduced Bill to Intuit founder Scott Cook. Cook was considering retirement and looking for a replacement. Bill met with Cook, but Cook remained unimpressed. It was only after a second meeting where Bill shared his philosophy on management and his focus on people that Cook considered Campbell for the job. Bill joined Intuit as CEO and went on to lead the company until 1998, after which he became Chairman of the board, a position he held until 2016. Within a year of Campbell joining, Microsoft agreed to purchase the company for $1.5b. However, the Justice Department raised flags about the acquisition, and Microsoft called off the deal in 1995. Campbell continued to lead the company to almost $600M of revenue. When he retired from the board in 2016, the company was worth $30B.

Business Themes

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  1. Your People Make You a Leader. Campbell believed that people were the most crucial ingredient in any successful business. Leadership, therefore, was of utmost importance to Bill. Campbell lived by a maxim passed by former colleague Donna Dubinsky: "If you're a great manager, your people will make you a leader. They acclaim that, not you." In an exchange with a struggling leader, Bill added to this wisdom: "You have demanded respect, rather than having it accrue to you. You need to project humility, a selflessness, that projects that you care about the company and about people." The humility Campbell speaks about is what John Collins called Level 5 leadership (covered in our April 2020 book, Good to Great). Research has shown that humble leaders can lead to higher performing teams, better flexibility, and better collaboration.

  2. Teams Need Coaches. Campbell loved to build community. Every year he would plan a trip to the super bowl, where he would find a bar and set down roots. He'd get to know the employees, and after a few days, he was a regular at the bar. He understood how important it was to build teams and establish a community that engendered trust and psychological safety. Every team needs a good coach, and Campbell understood how to motivate individuals, give authentic feedback, and handle interpersonal conflicts. "Bill Campbell was a coach of teams. He built them, shaped them, put the right players in the right positions (and removed the wrong players from the wrong positions), cheered them on, and kicked them in their collective butt when they were underperforming. He knew, as he often said, that 'you can't get anything done without a team.'" After a former colleague left to set up a new private equity firm, Bill checked out the website and called him up to tell him it sucked. As part of this feedback style, Bill always prioritized feedback in the moment: "An important component of providing candid feedback is not to wait. 'A coach coaches in the moment,' Scott Cook says. 'It's more real and more authentic, but so many leaders shy away from that.' Many managers wait until performance reviews to provide feedback, which is often too little, too late."

  3. Get the Little Things Right. Campbell understood that every interaction was a chance to connect, help, and coach. As a result, he thought deeply about maximizing the value out of every meeting: "Bill took great care in preparing for one-on-one meetings. Remember, he believed the most important thing a manager does is to help people be more effective and to grow and develop, and the 1:1 is the best opportunity to accomplish that." Meetings with Campbell frequently started with family and life discussions and would move back and forth between business and the meaning of life - deep sessions that made people think, reconsider what they were doing and come back energized for more. He also was not shy about addressing issues and problems: "There was one situation we had a few years ago where two different product leaders were arguing about which team should manage a particular group of products. For a while, this was treated as a technical discussion, where data and logic would eventually determine which way to go. But that didn't happen, the problem festered, and tensions rose. Who was in control? This is when Bill got involved. There had to be a difficult meeting where one exec would win and the other would lose. Bill made the meeting happen; he spotted a fundamental tension that was not getting resolved and forced the issue. He didn't have a clear opinion on how to resolve the matter, on which team the product belonged, he simply knew we had to decide one way or another, now. It was one of the most heated meetings we've had, but it had to happen." Bill extended this practice to email where he perfected concise and effective team communication. On top of 1:1's, meetings, and emails, Campbell stayed on top of messages: ""Later, when he was coach to people all over the valley, he spent evenings returning the calls of people who had left messages throughout the day. When you left Bill a voice mail, you always got a call back." Bill was a master of communication and a coach to everyone he met.

Dig Deeper

  • Intuit founder Scott Cook on Bill Campbell

  • A Conversation between Brad Smith (Intuit CEO) and Bill Campbell

  • A Bill Campbell Reading List

  • Silicon Valley mourns its ‘coach,’ former Intuit CEO Bill Campbell

  • CHM Live | Trillion Dollar Coach: The Leadership Playbook of Silicon Valley’s Bill Campbell

tags: Intuit, Google, ServiceNow, Eric Schmidt, Jonathan Rosenberg, Alan Eagle, Columbia, Bill Campbell, Shellye Archambeau, John Donahoe, Jeff Bezos, Steve Jobs, Go Corporation, Football, Kodak, Fuji, Apple, Claris, Sheryl Sandberg, Brad Smith, Ruth Porat, AT&T, John Doerr, Microsoft, Donna Dubinsky, John Collins, Leadership
categories: Non-Fiction
 

August 2019 - How Google Works by Eric Schmidt and Jonathan Rosenberg

While at times it reads as a piece of Google propaganda, this book offers insight into the management techniques that Larry, Sergey and Eric employed to grow the Company to massive scale. Its hard to read this book and expect that all of these practices were actually implemented – it reads like a “How to build a utopia work culture” - but some of the principles are interesting, and more importantly it gives us insight into what Google values in their products and operations.

Tech Themes

  1. Smart Creatives. Perhaps the most important emphasis in the book is placed on the recruiting and hiring of what Eric Schmidt and Jonathan Rosenberg have termed: Smart Creatives – “people who combine technical & business knowledge, creativity and always-learning attitude.” While these seem like the desired platitudes of every silicon valley employee, it gives a window into what Google finds important in its employees. For example, unlike Amazon, which has both business product managers and technical product managers, Google prefers its PMs to be both business focused and highly technical. Smart Creatives are mentioned hundreds of times in the book and continually underpin the success of new product launches. The book almost harps on it too much, to the point where it feels like Eric Schmidt was trying to convince all Googlers that they were truly unique.

  2. Meetings, Q&A, Data and Information Management. Google is one of the many Silicon Valley companies that hosts company wide all-hands Q&A sessions on Friday where anyone can ask a question of Google’s leadership. Information transparency is critically important to Google, and they try to allow data to be accessible throughout the organization at all times. This trickles into other aspects of Google’s management philosophy including meetings and information management. At Google, meetings have a single owner, and while laptops largely remain closed, it’s the owner’s job to present the relevant data and derive the correct insights for the team. To that end, Google makes its information transparently available for all to access – this process is designed to avoid information asymmetry at management levels. One key issue faced by poor management teams is only receiving the best information at the top – this is countered by Amazon through incredibly blunt and aggressive communication; Google, on the other hand, maintains its intense focus on data and results to direct product strategy, so much so that it even studies its own teams productivity using internal data. Google’s laser focus on data makes sense given its main advertising products harvest the world’s internet user data for their benefit, so understanding how to leverage data is always a priority at Google.

  3. 80/20 Time. As part of Google’s product innovation strategy, employees can spend 20% of their work time on creative projects separate from their current role. While the idea sounds like an awesome to keep employees interested and motivated, in practice, its much more structured. Ideas have to be approved by managers and they are only allowed if they can directly impact Google’s business. Some great innovations were spawned out of this policy including Gmail and Google Maps but Google employees have joked that it should be called “120%” time rather than 80%.

Business Themes

  1. Google’s Cloud Strategy. “You should spend 80% of your time on 80% of your revenue.” This quote speaks volumes when it comes to Google’s business strategy. Google clearly is the leader in Search and search advertising. Not only is it the default search engine preferred by most users, it also owns the browser market that directs searches to Google, and the most used operating system. It has certainly created a dominant position in the market and even done illegal things to maintain that advantage. Google also maintains and mines your data, and as Stratechery has pointed out, they are not hiding it anywhere. But what happens when the next wave of computing comes, and you are so focused on your core business that you end up light years behind competition from Amazon (Web Services) and Microsoft (Azure)? That’s where Google finds itself today, and recent outages and issues haven’t helped. So what is Google’s “Cloud Strategy?” The answer is lower priced, open source alternatives. Google famously developed and open sourced, Kubernetes, the container orchestration platform, which has become an increasingly important technology as developers opt for light weight alternatives to traditional virtual machines. They have followed this open sourcing with a, “We are going to open source everything” mentality that is also being employed, a bit more defensively at Microsoft. Google seeks to be an open source layer, either through Kubernetes (which runs in Azure and AWS) or through other open source platforms (Anthos) and just touch some of your company’s low churn cloud spend. Their issue is scale and support. With their knowledge of data centers and parallel computing, cloud capabilities seemed like an obvious place where Google could win, but they fumbled on building a great product because they were so focused on protecting their core business. They are in a catch up position and new CEO of Google Cloud, Thomas Kurian (formerly at Oracle), isn’t afraid to make acquisitions to build out missing product capabilities, which is why it bought Looker earlier this year. It makes sense why a company as focused as Google is on data, would want a cloud focused data analysis tool. Now they are betting on M&A and a highly open-sourced multi-public cloud future as the only way they can win.

  2. “Objective” Key Results. As mentioned previously, the way Google combats potential information asymmetries by empowering individuals throughout the organization with data. This extends to famous venture capitalist (who invested in both Google and Amazon) John Doerr’s favorite data to examine – OKRs – Objective key results. Each Googler has a specific set of OKRs that they are responsible for maintaining on a quarterly basis. Every person’s OKRs are readily available for anyone to see throughout the Company i.e. full transparency. OKRs are public, measurable, and ambitious. This keeps engineers focused and accountable, as long as the OKRs are set correctly and actually measure outcomes. These fit so perfectly with Google’s focus on mining and monitoring data at all times: their products and their employees need to be data driven at all times.

Dig Deeper

  • Recent reports highlight numerous cultural issues at Google, that are not addressed in the book

  • Google Cloud was plagued by internal clashes and missed acquisitions

  • PayPal mafia veteran, Keith Rabois, won’t fund Google PM’s as founders

  • List of Google’s biggest product failures over time

  • Stadia: Google’s game streaming service

tags: Google, Cloud Computing, Scaling, Management, Internet, China, John Doerr, OKRs, Oracle, GCP, Google Cloud, Android, Amazon
categories: Non-Fiction
 

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