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31

My name is Evan Carmichael and I believe that the fastest and most effective way to build a business is to model the strategies of people who have already done what you’re trying to do. I call it Modeling the Masters. My last post with over 25 was 3 Success Tips from Anita Roddick (The Body Shop).

 

Today we're going to look at how a young lawyer who seemingly had it all bravely left his job to start his own business. He had to fight over 30 lawsuits and nearly went out of business but he stuck with it and created one of the most respected companies in America. This is the story of Southwest Airlines co-founder Herb Kelleher and the top 3 lessons that you can learn from his success.

 

Must Watch Video

 

 

"Your people come first, and if you treat them right, they'll treat the customers right." - Herb Kelleher

 

Herb Kelleher (born March 12, 1931) is the co-founder and former CEO of Southwest Airlines. After graduating from law school he did what every new lawyer dreamed of. He clerked for the Supreme Court Justice, joined a law firm, and became partner at a firm in his wife's home state of Texas. He should have been on top of the world but he was instead itching for a new career as an entrepreneur. One evening Kelleher was having drinks with a client, Rollin King, and that night the two used a cocktail napkin to hatch a new business, Southwest Airlines.

 

Using Kelleher's legal experience and King's business background, Southwest Airlines was set up to run only in Texas to avoid having to follow federal price regulations. Kelleher had found a legal loophole and his competition didn't appreciate it. Kelleher had to fight off over 30 lawsuits before Southwest Airlines was even able to get a plane in the air. But they prevailed and bootstrapped their way from a company with only 4 planes to being one of the most admired companies in America.

 

Southwest is consistently named one of the top five Most Admired Corporations in America by Fortune magazine, which also called Kelleher perhaps the best CEO in America. It has never experienced an in-flight fatality and continues to enjoy growing success. Southwest is also the only airline to have over 30 consecutive years of profit, despite the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, which threatened the rest of the industry. In 2001, Kelleher resigned as CEO and president of Southwest due to a personal battle with prostate cancer.

 

Action Item #1: Put Your People First

 

Any successful entrepreneur will tell you how important it is to have a good team running your business. Employees who are skilled at what they do and love their work will take you places you might only dream about right now. Treat them as people, give them opportunities, show them how they are adding value, and give them something to believe in and your business growth will explode.

 

Kelleher believed in the power of having employees who loved working for his company. He paid attention to their needs and made them feel important. He also made everyone have a share in the business' success. Southwest implemented the first profit-sharing plan in the airline industry in 1974. Employees owned 13 percent of the company’s common stock. All of Southwest’s employees, from the janitors to the pilots, receive stock options.

 

According to Kelleher: “I always felt that our people came first. Some of the business schools regarded that as a conundrum. They would say: Which comes first, your people, your customers, or your shareholders? And I would say, it's not a conundrum. Your people come first, and if you treat them right, they'll treat the customers right, and the customers will come back, and that'll make the shareholders happy... We’ve always tried to be sensitive to the needs of our people and recognize the things that are important to them in their personal lives... At Southwest Airlines, you can’t have a baby without being recognized – getting communication from the general office. You can't have a death in your family without hearing from us. If you're out with a serious illness, we're in touch with you once every two weeks to see how you're doing. We have people who have been retired for 10 years, and we keep in touch with them. We want them to know that we value them as individuals, not just as workers. So that's part of the esprit de corps... If you come here, you'll be happy.”

 

Action Item #2: Focus Everyone on Customer Service

 

Customer service is increasingly becoming one of the most important differentiating factors for companies. For a lot of businesses there really isn't all that much that is different in the products or services that they are offering compared to their competition. How do you stand out? Wow your customers with service. Make them love doing business with you so they come back and tell their friends. Have everyone on your team be as supportive as they can towards your customers and your marketing strategy will take care of itself.

 

At Southwest, people are encouraged to go the extra mile, and then some, to help their customers. There is the man who had a heart attack at the airport, who was then accompanied by a Southwest employee to the hospital. The employee stayed with the man all night and called his wife to update her on his status. Then, there is the passenger who left the airport only to find a flat tire on his car. Moments later, a Southwest employee was changing it for him, despite the fact that the man informed him he had never flown with Southwest.

 

According to Kelleher: "We have the best customer satisfaction record, based on Transportation Dept. statistics, of any airline in America, the fewest complaints filed per 100,000 passengers carried. So you’re not just getting low fares, you’re also getting wonderful customer service... We have a People Dept. That’s what it deals with, so don’t call it Human Resources – that sounds like something from a Stalin five-year plan. You know, how much coal you can mine. We say everybody is a leader, no matter what your job is. We want you to focus on customer service - and not just to the outside world - customer service to the inside world. If [employees] pollute our other people internally and they in turn savage the people who are doing the work outside, the whole company has just rotted."

 

Action Item #3: Hire the Right People

 

If you're going to have a company that puts its people first and grows through repeat customers and referrals you're going to have to do a fantastic job in hiring the right people. Know what type of personality you need in new hires and don't settle until you've found the best person for the job. Once you say you're going to settle for less than the best, that's what happens to your entire business.

 

In the hiring process at Southwest, many applicants are made to take personality tests. In one example, the vice president of Southwest’s People Department was having difficulty finding a new ramp agent. Frustrated, she went to Kelleher to ask for advice. She said she was embarrassed that she had already interviewed 34 candidates for the position. Kelleher told her to interview 134 people if that was what it would take to find the person with the right attitude for the job.

 

According to Kelleher: "We have a good many MBAs, but we look at them for attitude as well. We will hire someone with less experience, less education, and less expertise, than someone who has more of those things and has a rotten attitude because we can train people. We can teach people how to lead. We can teach people how to provide customer service. But we can’t change their DNA." One day, Kelleher received a letter from one of Southwest’s ramp agents in Oklahoma. It read, “Herb, I’m on to what you’re doing…You’re making work fun – and home work.”

 

True Story

 

In the beginning, Southwest had just four planes and 70 employees. All of the legal battles had left the company on the verge of closing down. It forced Kelleher to make a difficult decision: he had to either sell one of the planes or lay off some of his employees. He chose to sell the plane. In return, Kelleher asked his employees to cut gate turnaround times from 55 to just 15 minutes. They pulled it off and Kelleher had clearly set the culture for his business.

 

More Quotes

 

"I learned it by doing it, and I was scared to death."

 

"Sometimes you need a little courage too just to buck popular opinion."

 

"The important thing is to take the bricklayer and make him understand that he’s building a home, not just laying bricks."

 

What Do You Think?

 

What have you done to put your people first? How have you gone out of your way to help your customers? What part of Herb Kelleher's message impacted you the most? As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts if you leave a comment below!

 

Evan Carmichael


To learn more check out my list of Herb Kelleher articles or my website, EvanCarmichael.com.

3,716 Views 31 Comments Permalink Tags: strategy, 10-99, 100+, 1-9, business, tips, leadership, evan_carmichael, entrepreneur, small_business, southwest_airlines, herb_kelleher
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My name is Evan Carmichael and I believe that the fastest and most effective way to build a business is to model the strategies of people who have already done what you’re trying to do. I call it Modeling the Masters. My last post was: Top 3 Lessons from King Gillette (From 13 years of failure to multi-millionaire success)

 

Today we're going to look at how a farm boy whose father told him that he would never make anything of himself used money his parents gave him for doing well at school to create his own little business. He named the company IKEA. This is the story of Ingvar Kamprad, one of the richest people in the world, and the top 3 lessons that you can learn from his success.

 

Must Watch Video


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"What is good for our customers is also, in the long run, good for us." - Ingvar Kamprad


 

Ingvar Kamprad (born 30 March 1926) was born in a small farming village in Sweden where his grandfather had killed himself with a gun when he realized that he couldn't pay the mortgage on their family farm. Kamprad's grandmother then father kept the business going and his father frequently told him that he would never make anything of himself.

 

Determined to prove his father wrong, Kamprad woke up every morning at 5:50am by removing the 'off' button on his alarm clock. He then focused his efforts on his school work and was going to achieve until he made his father proud. After a particularly stellar year, his father gave him a cash reward as recognition for a job well done.

 

Kamprad used the money to start his own little business, a company he named IKEA. The name was a combination of Kamprad’s initials (I.K.) and the first letters of the farm and the village where he had grown up, Elmtaryd and Agunnaryd. He started off bidding for contracts to supply pencils and slowly expanded his business.

 

Today, IKEA has over 125,000 employees and Kamprad is the eleventh wealthiest person in the world, according to Forbes magazine, with an estimated net worth of US$23 billion.

 

Action Item #1: Build Around Your Customers

 

Too many entrepreneurs think they have a "great" idea and spend all their money and time developing it only to find out that customers don't want it. One of the best ways to ensure your success is to talk with potential customers, build your products and services around their problems, and give them practical solutions that they will pay for.

 

From the day he founded IKEA, Kamprad has been dedicated to providing good quality and well functioning products at low prices. This has been one of the key driving forces behind IKEA’s international success and the company hires its own designers, many of whom have gone on to win design awards over the years.

 

According to Kamprad: “To design a desk which may cost $1,000 is easy for a furniture designer, but to design a functional and good desk which shall cost $50 can only be done by the very best... We have decided once and for all to side with the many... What is good for our customers is also, in the long run, good for us.”

 

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Action Item #2: Lead by Example

 

If you're building your business beyond yourself then you'll have to think about your leadership style and how you are going to inspire those working for you to give their best every day.

 

Kamprad believed that the best way to encourage hard work and a strong character in others was to exemplify that in his own life. Even though he's worth billions of dollars he still drives a 13 year old Volvo, often takes public transportation in Sweden, doesn't have his own private office, and regularly flies economy class when traveling out of town.

 

According to Kamprad: “I’m a bit tight with money, but so what? I look at the money I’m about to spend on myself and ask myself if IKEA’s customers can afford it... I could regularly travel first class, but having money in abundance doesn’t seem like a good reason to waste it.. If there is such a thing as good leadership, it is to give a good example. I have to do so for all the IKEA employees.”

 

Action Item #3: Never Waste Your Time


 

You only have so many hours in a day to get work done and to accomplish your goals. Don't waste them! Every little step that you take to build your business will add up to big movements forward but you have to put the time in to turn your vision into reality.

 

Kamprad’s frugality is matched only by his desire to never waste his time. To that end he has built the IKEA corporate philosophy around efficiency and hard work. IKEA has always kept few layers of management, practically eliminated titles and privileges, and has almost no suits and ties in the office.

 

According to Kamprad: “Time is your most important resource. You can do so much in ten minutes. Ten minutes, once gone, are gone for good. Ten minutes are not just one-sixth of your hourly pay. Ten minutes are a piece of yourself. Divide your life into ten-minute units and sacrifice as few of them as possible in meaningless activity."

 

True Story

 

Kamprad has always been a fan of turning mistakes into opportunities. In 1956 a new IKEA employee had been standing with a colleague, trying to figure out how to get a bulky wooden table into the back of his car. Finally, against company policy, he said, “Oh God, then, let’s pull off the legs and put them underneath.” It was with that simple idea that IKEA would reorient itself towards the flat design production for which it has become famous today.

 

Quotes

 

"Waste of resources is a mortal sin at IKEA."

 

"Only those who are asleep make no mistakes."

 

"IKEA is not completely perfect. It irritates me to death to hear it said that IKEA is the best company in the world. We are going the right way to becoming it, for sure, but we are not there yet."

 

Contest

 

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Congratulations to Lia Glykis for winning the Terry Matthews card from my Entrepreneur Heroes series by writing a this comment on my last post. Lia, please contact me so I can get the card sent to you.

 

For this week's contest I'm going to give away a Herb Kelleher card, founder of Southwest Airlines. Southwest Airlines was created when Herb Kelleher and one of his law clients, Texas businessman Rollin King, created the concept for a new way of running an airline on a cocktail napkin in a San Antonio, Texas restaurant.

 

To win the card all you have to do is leave a comment below. One winner will be selected at random from the comments.

 

Have you built your business around your customers? Do you have any time management tips that have worked for you? What part of Ingvar Kamprad's message impacted you the most? As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts if you leave a comment below!

 

Evan Carmichael


To learn more check out my list of Ingvar Kamprad articles or my website, EvanCarmichael.com.

7,174 Views 20 Comments Permalink Tags: strategy, 10-99, 100+, 1-9, business, tips, customers, leadership, evan_carmichael, entrepreneur, small_business, terry_matthews, southwest_airlines, rollin_king, ingvar_kamprad, herb_kelleher, ikea


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