message dated 9/26/2011  [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])    writes:

 
Sustainable Capitalism 2.0 is on the march... 
CEOs Need a New Set of Beliefs - Raymond V. Gilmartin - HBS Faculty -  
Harvard Business Review
_http://blogs.hbr.org/hbsfaculty/2011/09/ceos-need-a-new-set-of-beliefs.html
_ 
(http://blogs.hbr.org/hbsfaculty/2011/09/ceos-need-a-new-set-of-beliefs.html)   
____________________________________
  
 
In the past 25 years, CEOs of many major corporations have relied on a  
flawed set of beliefs to lead their organizations. This set has influenced  
them to place way too much emphasis on maximizing shareholder value and not  
enough on generating value for society. Today we are mired in the Great  
Recession, which was brought about by the near collapse of the financial  
system. 
This environment and the behavior produced by the prevailing set of  
beliefs to which CEOs subscribe have deepened a widespread public distrust of  
corporations and capitalism. 
In this blog post, I will offer a new set of beliefs, which can renew and  
restore faith in corporations and capitalism. 
The Conventional Wisdom 
Most CEOs and corporate board members would agree that the theories and  
beliefs listed below drive their decision-making on how best to meet the  
challenges they face: 
    *   The focus of the CEO and the board should be on maximizing 
shareholder  value.  
    *   The stock market is short-term-oriented.  
    *   Stock-based incentive compensation aligns the self-interest of  
management with shareholders, and a performance-based pay system increases  
employee motivation.  
    *   Societal concerns should be addressed through corporate social  
responsibility programs.  
    *   The “best athlete” from inside or outside the company should be 
chosen  as the successor to the CEO. 
In my experience, these beliefs have led managers and boards to take  
actions that have had unintended, destructive consequences. When observing the  
behavior of management and corporate boards, when reading the management  
literature and the business press, and when assessing the outcomes of  
management behavior, it seems as though CEOs are recognized and rewarded  
handsomely 
for downsizing and outsourcing, acquiring or merging, and making  the 
quarter — all justified by the responsibility to maximize shareholder  value. 
Any of these actions can be necessary in certain circumstances; most of us  
have taken one or another. My concern is that these actions have become the 
 standard by which CEOs are expected to manage. Furthermore, these actions 
are  taken seemingly without regard to the consequences for the community, 
the  employees, the survival of the company as an institution, or the 
creation of  long-term firm value. 
New Guiding Beliefs 
Listed below are an alternative set of beliefs that guided me when I was  
the CEO of Merck and Becton Dickinson. I strongly feel that they have greater 
 validity, are more effective in meeting today’s management challenges, 
will  lead to superior outcomes, and will help restore public faith in business 
and  its leaders. Importantly, leading academics and thoughtful 
practitioners  provide supporting evidence for my beliefs.They include the 
Harvard 
Business  School’s _Joseph  Bower_ 
(http://drfd.hbs.edu/fit/public/facultyInfo.do?facInfo=ovr&facId=6426) , _Boris 
 Groysberg_ 
(http://drfd.hbs.edu/fit/public/facultyInfo.do?facInfo=ovr&facId=10650) , 
_Rakesh  Khurana_ 
(http://drfd.hbs.edu/fit/public/facultyInfo.do?facInfo=ovr&facId=6921) , and 
_V.  Kasturi 
Rangan_ 
(http://drfd.hbs.edu/fit/public/facultyInfo.do?facInfo=ovr&facId=6535) ; 
_Michael Mauboussin_ (http://www.michaelmauboussin.com/)  of Legg  
Masson; _Jeffrey Pfeffer_ (http://faculty-gsb.stanford.edu/pfeffer/)  of  
Stanford; and _Michael  Raynor_ 
(http://www.deloitte.com/view/en_US/us/Insights/Browse-by-Content-Type/people_profiles/sorter/michael-raynor/index.htm)
  of 
Deloitte Consulting. 
Shareholders benefit most when CEOs and boards maximize value for  society 
and act as _agents  of society_ 
(http://hbr.org/2008/10/its-time-to-make-management-a-true-profession/ar/1)  
rather than shareholders. Some CEOs are 
rediscovering  _“stakeholder  capitalism.”_ 
(http://hbr.org/2009/07/shareholders-first-not-so-fast/ar/1)  Merck never 
forgot it. The decisions of its 
leaders have been  and still are guided by founder George W. Merck’s well-known 
quote, “We try  never to forget that medicine is for the people. It is not 
for the profits.  The profits follow…” (By the way, under Delaware Law 
boards are responsible  not just to shareholders _but  also to the 
institution._ 
(http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?articleid=1762135)  
The market favorably receives projects with long-term payoffs,  
particularly those in research and development. _Research  by Michael 
Mauboussin_ 
(http://leggmason.de/de/pdf/mauboussin_articles/ShareholderValue.pdf) , the 
chief 
investment strategist at Legg Mason,  supports this view. And I witnessed 
its truth firsthand as the CEO of Merck in  2004, when our earnings were 
going to fall short of analysts’ expectations.  The conventional course of 
action would have been to cut investments in  research and restructure. Yes, 
those actions would have boosted short-term  earnings. But they would have also 
undermined our efforts to create new drugs,  which typically take 10 to 15 
years to develop, hurting the company and the  people who depend on us to 
find new therapies over the long term. To my  surprise, investors understood 
and approved of our decision: Merck’s stock  went up 2.9% the day we made the 
announcement and continued to rise in the  following days. 
Some people may contend that given the high risks and many years it takes  
to develop a new drug, pharmaceutical companies are different animals from  
other firms. I disagree. The fundamental challenges that CEOs of drug  
companies face are similar to those of any CEO: innovate, manage risk and  
uncertainty, and create long-term firm value. 
Purpose, meaning, and recognition are more powerful motivators than  
economic self-interest, and large external rewards can reduce intrinsic  
motivation. People do work for money but they work even more for _meaning in  
their 
lives_ (http://hbr.org/1998/05/six-dangerous-myths-about-pay/ar/1) . It was 
clear to me that working on the leading-edge of  science with other talented 
scientists to develop breakthrough drugs for  untreated diseases — not money 
— was what motivated Merck scientists. 
Actions to address societal issues should be an _integral  part_ 
(http://hbr.org/2011/06/the-globe-segmenting-the-base-of-the-pyramid/ar/1)  of 
strategy, and operations and should not be isolated as a separate  activity 
under 
the heading of corporate social responsibility.  Instead of structuring a 
partnership of Merck, the Gates Foundation, and the  government of Botswana to 
expand access to HIV/AIDS drugs as a  corporate-social-responsibility 
initiative, we integrated it into our business  and made it the responsibility 
of 
Merck’s head of Europe, the Middle East, and  Africa. If we had structured 
it as a CSR initiative, I don’t think it would  have been as successful as it 
was because the business would not have been as  fully engaged. And it was 
beneficial to the business because it helped our  managers learn how to 
bring drugs to developing countries at a lower cost. 
The most successful CEOs, on balance, are those who are developed  _inside  
the company_ 
(http://hbr.org/2007/11/solve-the-succession-crisis-by-growing-inside-outside-leaders/ar/1)
  but manage to retain an outside perspective. 
_Are leaders  portable?_ (http://hbr.org/2006/05/are-leaders-portable/ar/1)  
I didn’t think so when I was at Merck and Becton Dickinson,  where my 
successors came from the inside. My view was their institutional  knowledge, 
the 
values they shared with the rest of the organization, and their  emotional 
commitment to the respective companies made them much more likely to  be 
highly effective leaders than outsiders. 
I think there are CEOs who subscribe to these beliefs but do not believe  
they can act on them because of their experiences with Wall Street or because 
 they are counter to the beliefs of their boards. But these beliefs are not 
 just ideals; they are implementable. In additional blogs, I and others 
will  offer specific recommendations for how to do so.
 
____________________________________
(via _Instapaper_ (http://www.instapaper.com/) )



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