TIP111: GOOD TO GREAT

A REVIEW OF JIM COLLINS’ BOOK

5 November 2016

For years, Preston and Stig had an interest in reading this book, but they always seemed distracted by other things.  Although it took awhile to get around to reviewing the book, it didn’t disappoint.  The author, Jim Collins, used a team of researchers who studied more than 6,000 articles and 2,000 pages of interview transcripts to develop this outstanding book.  The entire effort took more than five year to produce, but it’s outcome tackled the idea of what it takes to move good companies to becoming great companies.

The book is broken down into a few key concepts.  First, Collins talks about what a great leader is and how level five leaders can send a company into a different trajectory.  Next, the book discusses the importance of finding the right people for the job.  His finding suggest that simply filling the ranks of the company an often lead to dangers results.  The book covers numerous other topics like the Stockdale paradox, the hedgehog concept, creating a culture of discipline, the impact of technology accelerators, and how to create a perpetual flywheel of growth.  If you would like to read our 5 page executive summary of Good to Great, click here.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Why the best company leaders consider themselves lucky rather than skilled, and why you should do the same.
  • How to find the right people for your organization by asking “why” multiple times.
  • Why and when it pays to be a pessimist in life and in business.
  • Why the great companies would rather use technology as an accelerator, but never as a creator for their concepts.
  • Why success always looks to be happening overnight, but in reality is always a question of consistency.

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Preston Pysh  0:30  

Hey, how’s everybody doing out there? This is Preston Pysh, and I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast. And as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host Stig Brodersen out in Seoul, South Korea. Today, we have a book for you, and this book is a book that I probably should have read a very long time ago. I’m embarrassed to say that I have not. Stig, I’m curious, have you read this before or did you just read it recently with me?

Stig Brodersen  0:56  

Yeah, I just read it recently, and I think it was Tony Hsieh, the author of Delivering Happiness, and I brought that into the mix. It seems like it’s a book everyone knows, but no, I haven’t read it before.

Preston Pysh  1:08  

Yeah, there’s so many people that have recommended this book. It’s Good to Great by Jim Collins. This book was fantastic. I went into reading this book thinking I wasn’t going to like it, and I kind of came out with a very different opinion, which I like, when I’m surprised like that. The reason I was really hesitant to read this book was simply because I had read reviews, and I had heard from people [that] some of the different companies that were used to demonstrate some of the ideas in the book. 

For example, one of the companies was Circuit City. I had this bias that I didn’t want to read the book. I thought, “How can the book be talking about good to great companies in Circuit City and a couple others that had gone bankrupt? Why are they the ones that were being used as the case study?” That didn’t make any sense to me, so I just immediately wrote the book off as something that wasn’t worth my time to read. But here we are, we read this book. I can tell you this is a fantastic book. This is a really, really thought-out and well-researched book. 

Just a little bit of background here. Jim Collins wrote this back in 2001. It came out, and he had 20 people on his team working on this. Here’s the stat that I’m seeing, saying that there were 6000 articles generated and more than 2000 pages of interviews and transcripts that were conducted by this team in order to conduct all the research that was done and went into this book, which in itself is pretty darn impressive. It’s to let you know how thorough they were in the research that they did. How they kind of went about this methodology is they found comparable companies in an industry. 

And now, these two companies aren’t being used, but I think that they’re a really good example for what I’m trying to talk about. Let’s say you have Coke and Pepsi. Very, very similar companies, okay? Now, they weren’t used in the book, but they’re very similar companies to give you this idea. 

What Jim and his team did is they went back, and they looked at these companies that had from a stock price standpoint very similar results. Maybe they were climbing at 2% annually, or whatever the numbers were. Then, one of them just kind of skyrocketed and just took off. They focused on that disparity. They said, “Why did that happen? What did that company do right there at that particular point in time that allowed them to take off, when all their competition just remained flat?” 

He did this comparison with all these different companies in the book, and they dissected the key elements that caused this to occur. That’s what Stig and I are really going to go through. They are those key elements and what they were that helped cause that to all happen, so I’m going to throw it over to Stig to see if he has any opening comments on the book and anything like that.

Stig Brodersen  3:59  

Like Preston, I really liked the book. I think that the book was very insightful. Preston mentioned before that some of the case studies that they have been using, which are companies that might have not been doing so well since the book was written. I think he talks about that in a really nice way and explains that in terms of the principles that the book outlines, they’re timeless. It’s just like engineering. Engineering will change, but the laws of physics are the same. Also, I think that’s the way of looking at it. 

I think that if you look at the companies, and we’ll go more in depth with 11 companies later, you can probably also see how some of these companies have recently deviated from the core principles outlined for really great companies. That’s the reason why because it’s very courageous to select so and so many companies, because some of the companies will clearly always do that [at] some point in time in the future. I think it’s really courageous that he’s actually talking about real companies, and when reading this, you need to think about the principles all the time and not the specific companies.

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