"Everything looks like a failure in the
middle." Rosabeth Moss Kanter, former editor of
Harvard
Business Review
"Transform your experiences into lessons and you'll
never feel world-weary or disadvantaged by your
past." Dan Sullivan, author of The Laws of
Lifetime
Growth
"If I were to wish for anything I should not wish for
wealth and power, but for the passionate sense of
what can be, for the eye, which, ever young and
ardent, sees the possible. Pleasure disappoints,
possibility never." Soren Kierkegaard, writer and
philosopher
Malcolm Forbes, Sr, was asked "How can
you
truly
know whether a company is going to be successful?"
Forbes answered, "You bet on the jockey, not
the
horse."
We would suggest that the word "jockey" be made
plural, because the whole team, not merely the CEO,
wins the race. Products don't sustain themselves. It
is the leadership in place that creates and sustains
successful companies.
One of literally millions of examples of companies
overcoming the odds is Steinway & Sons. The
company has a well-known brand, but a little known
history. It survived the Civil War, two World
Wars, the Great Depression, materials scarcity, and a
labor market lacking in the necessary technical skills.
Yet almost since its inception in 1853, Steinway
continues to set standards in the piano industry,
earning phenomenal acclaim from both musicians and
audiences.
The Steinway story offers five important lessons in
leadership, most important among them being a
commitment to possibilities.
To your continued success!
Susan and Lisa
A Leadership of Possibilities
Three wars, near bankruptcy, attempts to
burn down their factories, and aerial bombings aren't
usually the T on the SWOT list of most companies.
(Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats)
Steinway & Sons survived these and many other
challenges.
Leaders rarely have ideal conditions to grow their
organizations. Instead, they succeed by seeing
rich opportunities and staying persistently committed
to a future bigger than their past. Some, like
Steinway, definitely had more obstacles to overcome
than others. Steinway provides five hard-earned
lessons that apply to leaders everywhere. Here is a
little history from a 153 year old company that can
inform our present and future decisions.
1. A Commitment to Improve: Great
leaders, at all
levels, have a willingness to constantly improve,
consistently getting new ideas and fresh input. For
decades, the Steinway factory in New York has
invited musicians to come in to work with their
technicians on improvements to the instrument. It
was one of the first companies to actively solicit
customer feedback.
Steinway found that adequate products create
satisfied customers, while innovative, best-
in-class products create loyal customers.
2. A Commitment to Fighting the Unscrupulous:
Every industry has its share of thieves, con artists,
and liars. By 1892 Steinway had established its
reputation as a premier manufacturer of pianos.
During that time, unscrupulous competitors and
dealers placed an intentionally badly tuned,
purposely distorted Steinway in the showroom for the
purposes of unfairly contrasting it with their well
tuned, but inferior piano. In response as the
industry leader, Steinway initiated the unique "Group
of Six Agreements" which was the first code of
ethics among piano manufacturers.
3. A Commitment to Innovate: Matching
the
competition doesn't create any advantage. Bringing
synergy, freshness, and something that no one else
is doing is what elevates and differentiates.
Steinway created "Steinway artists" in the 1880's.
Great pianists like Anton Rubinstein, Agnace
Paderewski, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Artur Rubinstein,
and Vladimir Horowitz played Steinways in music halls
all over the world.
Composers like Wagner, Saint-Saens, and Liszt wrote
letters of endorsement promoting Steinway pianos,
which Steinway then published in its advertising.
Steinway was one of the first companies to market
superb "athletes." The inspirational, personality
based advertising promoted their pianos as "The
Instrument of the Immortals."
4. A Commitment to Quality: In every
industry, there are standards that all companies
meet. Leaders consistently look to exceed and
outperform whatever standards are in place. The
Steinway factory takes a full year to build one piano
and over 200 technicians and craftsmen work on
each piano.
Even Thomas Edison was impressed.
From the Laboratory of Thomas E. Edison, To
Steinway & Sons, Gents, I have decided to keep your grand piano.
For
some reason unknown to me it gives better results
than any so far tried. Please send bill with lowest
price.
Yours, Thomas A. Edison
5. A Commitment to Possibilities: The
two wars between America and Germany separated
the Steinway factories located in New York and
Hamburg. Both governments demanded that these
two factories produce not pianos, but war
articles. "Our hearts bled when we had to use our
valuable supply of seasoned Red Beechwood to build
stocks for rifles," lamented Gretel Bruhn,
director of the German factory during WW II.
The best leaders can transform even the most
debilitating events into breakthroughs in thinking and
action. Full commitment to possibilities mean facing
the truth and asking, "now what?" Like
many
companies today, Steinway assessed the situation,
did what they could, and looked to the possibilities
after the war. Through its commitment to
possibilities, Steinway remains the industry leader,
and today is stronger than ever.
Benjamin Zander, the conductor of the Boston
Philharmonic, tells the story of his father in 1945. He
arrived in England from Germany after the war and
was put in an internment camp. With little food, and
terrible living conditions, he looked around at the
depressed, but well educated group of refugees and
said "now what?" With no paper, desks,
computers,
or books, he started a university at the camp and
eventually offered a total of 40 classes.
Ben Zander and his wife Rosamund wrote an inspiring
book called "The Art of Possibility." Their premise is
that many of the circumstances that seem to block
leaders may only appear to do so based on the
framework of assumptions they carry. Draw a
different frame around the same set of
circumstances and new pathways come into view,
as illustrated by the following
example.
A shoe factory sends two marketing scouts to a
region of Africa to study the prospects for expanding
business. One sends back a telegram saying,
SITUATION HOPELESS. NO ONE WEARS
SHOES.
The other writes back triumphantly,
GLORIOUS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. THEY HAVE NO
SHOES.
The
Professional Image, Inc. provides leadership consulting from
mid to senior levels in executive coaching, team building, and image
development. Founded in 1980, The Professional Image, Inc. works nationally
with over 1,500 corporations and business.