see attached for assignment
After you have read about Unilever Brazil in Chapter 12 of the Bluen book, please respond according to the following:
Create a visual that shows five of the most important HRM-related globalization challenges specific to Unilever and rank them in importance to their business success. Your visual can be a chart, flyer, or drawing, as long as it is in a format that is accepted in TLC. The use of color is encouraged for this assignment.
Then discuss in detail the top (#1) and bottom (#5) HRM globalization challenges and explain why you ranked them as you did.
Finally, look up the company/industry in each of the following:
· IBISWorld (under library search box on TLC page, click “Additional Library Resources,” then click IBISWorld and search by company or industry).
· Company’s website
· Locate two high-quality articles related to HRM-related globalization challenges at Unilever (peer-reviewed high-quality references are found in the online library).
Review what you have learned from your research above, especially as it updates the case information in Bluen’s book. Also bring in the other Bluen module readings as needed.
Provide an introduction and a conclusion, cite sources, and include a cover and References page.
Submit your visual to the assignment dropbox as part of your 3- to 4-page paper (not counting the cover and References section) on or before the module due date. When asking for 3-4 pages, we want 4 but are willing to accept at least 3 full pages.
273
UNILEVER BRAZIL: A STORY OF
ORGANISATIONAL AND
PERSONAL RENEWAL
Rob Mallick & Marcelo Williams
12
This is a case study of the renewal of Unilever’s business in Brazil. It is the story of a
leadership team’s journey when faced with the need to reignite the growth of a proud
company whose performance had disappointed in recent years while it focused on a
very complex reorganisation to merge five different divisions.
The issue from a talent management perspective was less one of enhancing or
importing best practices, because Unilever Brazil was already a mature business that
had benefited from being part of a prestigious fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG)
corporate. It was more about renewal, both personal and organisational. It was more
about igniting existing talent and using the brand and an exciting story of corporate
growth and renewal to attract high performers from outside the company. All of this, on
a battleground for the emerging middle-class consumers in a huge market for FMCGs.
This is a personal account of the journey from the Vice President (VP) of Human
Resources (HR) (Marcelo) and the Organisation Development (OD) Consultant
(Rob) who assisted Unilever Brazil. It includes the inspirations for their actions, the
interventions they undertook, as well as sharing the Voices of others who participated
in the journey.
Introduction
Unilever Brazil is the Brazilian operation of the Unilever Global FMCG business.
It is the second-largest company of Unilever worldwide and the number one in
developing and emerging countries. In 2007, it was a €2.9 billion operation, covering
Personal Care (eg deodorants and shampoo), Home Care (eg detergents), Ice Cream
and Foods (eg packet soups and fruit juices).
Between 2001 and 2007, Unilever’s businesses in Brazil underwent a series of
consolidations. Between 2001 and 2005, a Home and Personal Care business (HPC)
was created with the integration of the Home Care and Personal Care businesses
with the National Management function. At the same time, the Foods business
was busy integrating its recent acquisition of the Best Foods business, while the
Ice Cream business continued to run as a separate business, isolated from the rest
of the organisation. Throughout this period, growth rates continued to be strong,
particularly in the HPC business. The years 2005 to 2007 saw the next phase of the
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274
integration with the objective of creating a ONE Unilever Organisation, and this
period saw the integration of the three different businesses (HPC, Foods and Ice
Cream) into a single business.
From a talent management perspective, there was much to be proud of. For
example, Unilever’s companies had consistently been among the most admired
companies and desired places to work. In 2003, the Brazilian business magazine,
Exame, deemed Unilever Brazil “one of the three best companies in Brazil for a
graduating student to start their career”. According to Cia de Talentos and Lab SSJ
pesquisa 2002 to 2007, Unilever Brazil was described for five years in a row as one
of the top three companies where a student would want to work.
Furthermore, Unilever Brazil’s management trainee programme was attracting
an increasing number of applications from young talent. For example, between 2001
and 2007, applications doubled. And it was difficult to get in, with an acceptance
rate of only 0.1%! Unilever Brazil was also regarded within Unilever plc as a source
of talent for its global operations. In 2008, for example, 90 Brazilians held senior
positions outside of Brazil, 50% in the Americas, 40% in Europe and 10% in Asia.
And what of the macrotalent situation in Brazil? Over the last five years or so,
Brazil has become one of the most competitive markets for FMCGs in the world, if
not the most competitive. The market has been growing consistently and the dynamic
of the business world has accelerated, with new players coming to the market and
Brazilian companies becoming multinational or at least expanding horizons beyond
the Brazilian frontier.
Many multinational companies are coming to Brazil without deep knowledge
of the Brazilian market. Many Brazilian companies were beginning to do business
abroad without talented people with multicultural experiences.
In this competitive environment, competitors looking to attract executive talent
were targeting companies like Unilever Brazil that had a strong reputation for
developing talent. By 2009, Brazil was becoming a battleground for executive talent.
It was clear that, in this emerging reality, Unilever Brazil was both a strong player
and one that was also vulnerable.
This challenging situation confronting Unilever Brazil coincided with a difficult
time for the Unilever Brazil business. Notwithstanding the track record of growth
and demonstrated strengths in talent management, the period between 2005 and
2007 was difficult for the business. After many years of strong growth in most of its
categories, growth slowed and, in late 2007, a new Chairperson (Chief Executive
Officer [CEO]), Kees Kruythoff, was appointed.
Framing and Diagnosing the Talent Management Issue
Kees’s brief was simple – Reignite Growth! Kees immediately saw the need for a
strategic review to provide greater clarity of direction and a much-needed, long-term
perspective. But he sensed that this would not be sufficient. He felt intuitively that
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
energy levels were low and that the culture was not supportive of an effort to grow
the business.
The first step was to explore the leadership and cultural reality of Unilever Brazil.
Upon exploration, including the use of a values assessment tool that we describe
below, it became clear that Kees’s intuition was correct. Illustrated below (see
figure 1), and using a systems dynamics approach, it was clear that the exertion in
integrating the businesses had kicked off a train of events that had created significant
dysfunction in the organisation that would surely undermine efforts to grow the
company.
Business and Culture Dynamic
One Unilever
reorganisation
Poor results
Reduced
market share
Reduced
customer
service/poor
execution
Lower-quality
innovation
Need to protect
(defend, survival)
• Empire
building
• Internal
competition
• Image
Increased
complxity
Short-term
focus
Job losses
Stretched
leadership
Poor results
Loss of
confidence (self-
esteem) of a proud
company
• Bureaucracy
• Control
• Caution
Figure 1: Business and Culture Dynamic
Faced with this reality, the Unilever Brazil leadership team concluded that this was
not something that could be fixed in a technical manner. From a talent management
perspective, for example, as we saw above, there was a strong tradition in attracting
and developing talent, and Unilever Brazil already had good systems in place. For
instance, it already had in place Performance Assessments Systems, Competency
Models, Formal Succession Plan Discussions, Personal Development Plans and
strong Leadership Development Programmes. There were some improvements that
could, and would, be made, but it was clear that process enhancements would not
generate the magnitude of improvements sought. The issue was more fundamental
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276
than that. The real leverage was in the more subtle domains of the energy, culture,
confidence and spirit of the place.
What was required was a fundamental transformation that got to the heart of the
contraction in the business and helped unleash the talent that was going to waste in
the business. In thinking about talent in Unilever Brazil, we found inspiration in the
Prophet’s evocative account of parenting children (Gibran 1980:20-23):
Your children are not your children.
They are the sons and daughters of Life’s longing for itself.
They come through you but not from you,
And though they are with you yet they belong not to you.
You may give them your love, but not your thoughts,
For they have their own thoughts.
You may house their bodies, but not their souls,
For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow,
Which you cannot visit even in your dreams.
You may strive to be like them, but seek not to make them like you,
For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday.
You are the bows from which your children as living arrows are sent forth.
The archer sees the mark upon the path of the infinite,
And He bends you with his might that
His arrows may go swift and far.
Let your bending in the archer’s hand be for gladness;
For even as He loves the arrow that flies,
So He loves also the bow that is stable.
The challenge to reignite growth in Unilever Brazil was not so much about improved
talent management, but about unleashing the creative potential in talented people
who had somehow lost their way.
In 2012, our sense is that Unilever Brazil is not alone in this, certainly among
divisions of global companies operating in emerging markets. General Electric (GE) is
acknowledged globally as the frontrunner with regard to talent management. Susan
Peters (2012:1), GE’s VP of Executive Development and Chief Learning Officer,
reported recently on the outcomes of GE’s recent reflection on ways to attract,
develop and retain talent in the future. She says:
We named the effort ‘Global New Directions’ and we knew we’d picked the
right people (to lead the review) almost immediately when they told us that they
didn’t want to retain employees, they wanted to inspire them. The generation
entering the workforce today is uniquely connected digitally and socially
attuned to the forces of change and common purpose. But what is the best way
to unleash their potential?
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
What Has Been Achieved So Far?
So, in early 2008, Unilever Brazil launched what was called UB2012: Let’s Build a
Company That Is Greater Than Great. Led by Kees, his HR VP, Marcelo Williams,
and the Board of Vice Presidents, the programme was marked by investment and
unrelenting focus on both strategic clarity and a revitalisation of a culture that was
feeling tired and beaten after the massive integration efforts along with low rates of
growth.
What has been achieved? By the end of 2011, a very significant transformation
was evident, both in terms of business performance and the quality of the leadership
and culture. Growth, both revenue and margin, had returned to the business and
customer service had improved significantly. For instance, in the 2010 Advantage
study, Unilever Brazil went from sixth to second, with customer development
number one in all measures except one.
Quantitative evidence also pointed to the emergence of a genuine performance
culture. For example, from the survey tool discussed below, the levels of dysfunction
in the organisation had fallen by over 35% and the alignment between the current
and desired culture had improved significantly Also, in late 2011, the respected
AON Top Companies for Leaders1 gave special recognition to Unilever Brazil for the
first time, ahead of its major competitors.
From a talent management perspective, Unilever Brazil had also regained much
of its strength and lustre.
• As never before, Unilever Brazil executives are taking over key positions around
the world. More than 70 Brazilian executives are working abroad, and many of
them in very senior positions having great strategic impact in the business.
• Unilever Brazil’s gender approach has started to show significant signs of
success. Around 50% of Unilever Brazil’s managers are women, and more than
40% are in Director and Vice President positions.
• In spite of the fierce war for talent in the Brazilian market, Unilever Brazil has
succeeded in keeping attrition rates below the average of the market.
• Unilever Brazil has introduced an Agile Working approach, and the Flexible
Work and Home Office policies are creating a better Employee Value Proposition
for Women and the ‘Y’ generation.
Just as important, the spirit has also returned to the business, with talented young
executives feeling energised, challenged and fulfilled – as their stories below
demonstrate:
1 Cited in 2011 Top Companies for Leaders: Winners and Special Recognition http://www.aon.com/
human-capital-consulting/thought-leadership/leadership/reports-pub-topcompanies-2011-winners.
jsp.
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Robert Hein Schermers, a Dutch national, is in his late 30s and is Director of the
Ice Cream Division:
I joined Unilever The Netherlands in 1995 as a trainee, and I have worked in
numerous roles in marketing, sales and category management. The last 8 years
I have been working in various director roles in The Netherlands, Germany,
South Africa and Brazil, in regional brand development and local management
roles in various categories.
What struck me in my early interactions with my colleagues was the
frightening silence I felt during the plenary sessions, when Kees asked for
feelings, thoughts, and ideas when we were all together. Nobody was responding
and people looked away, which led to eerie silences and an awkward feeling.
The team was far more hierarchical than I expected it to be and people were
apparently afraid to say something wrong in front of bosses and peers. This was
a reflection as well – I discovered later – of the way of working in the business
at the time: avoiding risks, not speaking up and, for sure, not saying something
which was not in line with the boss’s opinion.
This changed, fortunately. I feel that we have made a giant jump from a
top-down led organization, with little initiative from the teams below the board,
to an organization in which the board takes a facilitating role, responding to
the expressed needs to deliver the agreed plans by the teams below. We have,
for sure, made the step from individuals with totally socialized minds to more
independent minds, taking ownership and responsibility, driving our teams to
work in the same way.
I am convinced that we have learned to see the benefits of speaking up,
of expressing our confidence and/or doubts about the plans and challenges we
face. I am convinced that we have – as an extended leadership team – learned
from working closer, sharing experiences and best practices and that this has
made Unilever Brazil a far stronger organization, responding quicker to the
challenges we face, deciding with more courage and willing to take risk. And
I am convinced that within certain teams, the DNA of the team has changed
fundamentally and has evolved from socialized behavior to really acting on
what the business and team need, realizing that this demands real ownership
and courage.
Personally, the journey has given me the great luxury to step back, look
and learn on where I am at, with the help of great colleagues in fantastic settings
in this impressive country. Personally I have grown a lot!
Bruno Francisco, a Brazilian national, is in his mid-40s and is Director for
Deodorants:
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
I rejoined Unilever 3 years ago after a long period in other FMCG companies.
I am passionate about what I do and completely sure I made the right
decision to rejoin Unilever culture, which I found quite different from the
previous times: more results oriented without losing the passion for developing
people, always respecting their characteristics and opinions.
I rejoined the company at the beginning of the Journey and I felt people
were adapting to the new moment. There was a lot of excitement to get things
done but also a question like ‘Are they really true about the change?’ Coming
from other companies, which are very down to earth, I could not believe
the opportunity the company was giving us to be authentic and to make the
personal growth the true driver of professional growth. I was so passionate
about this moment that sometimes I even got feedback from people that I
believed too much.
I was experiencing some dynamics I never had the chance to experience
in other companies. The feeling was of participating in one process that other
companies would take years to have the same dynamic. It was also interesting
to see that when you just have one professional experience, you tend to get
very skeptical and critical about what you have in your hands. I felt at that time
there was a lot of understanding of the issues but we needed the energy to flow
to criticize and also solve the issue at the same time.
The journey we have been on has been based around very candid
discussions and also making the link between your personal characteristics and
the way you behave professionally. These conversations have been an immense
source of growth. People were open to discuss dreams, issues, opportunities,
building visions as a team and creating a passion to deliver results.
We have been able to drive this energy through the entire organization,
never linked to one person or leader but to yourself as a leader and how you
create the environment for people to behave as true leaders, authentic and
delivering results.
The growth comes from all interactions, from debates, difficulties, from
working in teams. The very positive side is that it gives you the opportunity to
get where you want and do not depend on somebody else. I believe the biggest
risk in a company is when you only get highly dependent on one charismatic
leader.
I can feel the value of the cultural change every week. We had a change
of president in the company, with lots of changes happening but we have the
same energy to accept questions and also make sure that we keep doing the
right stuff that we developed in the last few years.
This is coming from all levels of the organization, stepping up as a team to
accept the constant need to evolve as an organization, avoiding defensive and
denial style. I feel we are ready to really get the positive moment and accelerate
growth.
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Every week I try to work with my team and also with functional areas to
develop new ideas, talents and face the facts with a solving issue mindset, with
ability to accept others opinion but also with a results and drive orientation to
get things done.
From my side, I am also getting a much higher understanding of the
constant need I have to develop myself, creating instant links to situations and
my behavior related to that, and how do I learn and change to a personal
growth. I am doing that mainly for me, as a person and delivering results are
just the consequence. Important to say that in doing that I am enjoying the
moment, different from older times when I tended to get highly self-critical.
Really a great moment.
Jessica Hollaender, an HR Director in her mid-30s:
I’m a Psychologist, with an MBA in Business Management. I have 11 years
working in Unilever. I joined as an intern and one year after my internship I was
hired as a Trainee. I experienced a variety of jobs within this period in Unilever
in the most diverse context: Regional scope, Local scope, an international
experience, Organization Development area, different projects, etc.
When we started the Journey, I felt we had a culture with some strength
but also with some qualities that were holding us back. Our strengths included
high ethical standards, informality and an openness to teach and to learn. On
the other hand, I felt we had a consensus culture, were overly concerned with
our internal image and how good our PowerPoint presentations were. We were
too disposed to intellectual argument and debate and too little to action and
taking intelligent risks.
One of the most important lessons for me has been about linking personal
and professional growth. I believe that we started our turnaround in the cultural
transformation when we embraced this statement. We were explicit in linking
leadership and culture with our business strategy. I have never seen, in these 11
years of Unilever, such a strong people agenda as part of the business agenda.
This has been a highlight.
I think we have taken great steps in a short period of time. One thing
I really learned was that ‘God doesn’t play dice’, so where we put our full
attention was where we had a significant change. And for me that was the
journey itself. Unilever is much better in some aspects; the ones we wanted
to eliminate because they were bad in our current culture (consensus, feuds,
image, etc.). And also we accelerate other values that really care and would
drive us for the success (openness, leadership, stand up to speak your truth,
etc.). Of course, there is room to improve some other aspects such as bias for
action, performance driven, external focus, etc. But we know that it is a long
journey, and it would be unrealistic to believe it would take less time than it
has taken.
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
From a personal perspective, I started this journey somewhat lost and
lacking energy I normally bring to my work. Today I feel enthused and excited
and bring these qualities to all that I do. I am grateful for what I have experienced
and how I have grown.
How was this journey of renewal and growth undertaken? Let us first introduce
ourselves and then share with you the interventions and lessons we have learnt along
the way.
Marcelo and Rob
Marcelo’s story: Marcelo is an Argentinian who joined Unilever 20 years ago from
another multinational company. He worked for seven years in HR at Unilever River
Plate (Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay). After that, he moved to London to be part
of the Latin American Business Group, as one of the HR Directors, having projects in
different countries in the region. In January 2001, he arrived in Brazil with the main
challenge to integrate three Unilever divisions into a single Home, Personal Care and
National Management responsibility in HR. He was there in 2005, ready to move to
a destination in Europe when Unilever requested him to stay in the country to merge
all the divisions in ONE Unilever Organisation. In early 2008, when our story began,
he could not imagine that he would be part of what, in his own words, would have
to be the most significant experience of cultural transformation that had starred in his
22-year career at that time. He is currently responsible for Unilever Latin America, in
addition to his responsibilities at Unilever Brazil. Having a college degree from the
Faculty of Economic Sciences at the University of Buenos Aires, Marcelo confesses
to being professionally fortunate in being able to devote his entire professional life
(more than 26 years) to what he loves most, that is, making a positive difference in
and through the lives of people.
Rob’s story: In mid-2007, Rob left a prestigious management consulting firm,
having chosen to set himself up as a sole practitioner focusing on organisation
development work. The last two years with the consulting firm had been spent
working in South America, where Rob lived with his young family in Rio de Janeiro.
It was not an auspicious time to be setting up a consulting practice. The world was
just entering what became known as the Global Financial Crisis, and organisation
development work was surely a nice-to-have as the corporate world imploded. In
a moment of stress and vulnerability, Rob found himself on the second floor of The
Coop book store in Harvard Square. Seeking inspiration of any sort, he glanced
through the recently released Deepak Chopra book, Buddha. There on the second
page of the author’s note was just what Rob needed to know: “Whoever sees me,
sees the teaching,” said the Buddha, “and whoever sees the teaching, sees me.”
It was a sharp but gentle reminder to stay true to do the work he loved to do, and
a promise that clients were out there. And, sure enough, through contacts with his
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former employer, Rob was introduced to Kees in early 2008 and spent the next three
years helping Kees, Marcelo and the Unilever Brazil team on their Journey. From a
practical perspective, the stakes for Rob were high. With his first major client, it had
to work!
The Monks
The Journey started with a short parable about a monastery, four monks and an abbot
(sourced from Zander & Zander 2002:52-53).
A monastery had fallen on hard times. It was once part of a great order which,
as a result of religious persecution in the 17th and 18th centuries, lost all its
branches. It was decimated to the extent that there were only five monks left in
the mother house: the abbot and four others, all of whom were over 70. Clearly,
it was a dying order.
Deep in the woods surrounding the monastery was a little hut that the rabbi
from a nearby town occasionally used for a hermitage. One day, it occurred to
the abbot to visit the hermitage to see if the rabbi could offer any advice that
might save the monastery. The rabbi welcomed the abbot and commiserated.
“I know how it is,” he said. “The spirit has gone out of people. Almost no-one
comes to the synagogue anymore.” So the old rabbi and the old abbot wept
together, and they read parts of the Torah and spoke quietly of deep things.
The time came when the abbot had to leave. They embraced. “It was
wonderful being with you,” said the Abbot, “but I have failed in my purpose for
coming. Have you no piece of advice that might save the monastery?”
“No, I’m sorry,” the rabbi responded, “I have no advice to give. The only
thing I can tell you is that the Messiah is one of you.”
When the other monks heard the rabbi’s words, they wondered what
possible significance they might have. “The Messiah is one of us? One of us
here, at the monastery? Do you suppose he meant the abbot? Of course – it
must be the abbot, who has been our leader for so long. On the other hand, he
might have meant Brother Thomas, who is certainly a holy man. Or could he
have meant Brother Elrod, who is so crotchety? But, then, Elrod is very wise.
Surely, he could not have meant Brother Phillip – he is too passive. But, then,
magically, he’s always there when you need him. Of course, he didn’t mean
me – yet supposing he did? Oh Lord, not me! I couldn’t mean so much to you,
could I?”
As they contemplated in this manner, the old monks began to treat each
other with extraordinary respect, on the off chance that one of them might
be the Messiah. And, on the off chance that each monk himself might be the
Messiah, they began to treat themselves with extraordinary respect.
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Because the forest in which it was situated was beautiful, people
occasionally came to visit the monastery, to picnic or to wander along the
old paths, most of which led to the dilapidated chapel. They sensed the aura
of extraordinary respect that surrounded the five old monks, permeating the
atmosphere. They began to come more frequently, bringing their friends, and
their friends brought friends. Some of the younger men who came to visit began
to engage in conversation with the monks. Then another, and another. After
a while, one asked if he might join. Then another, and another. Within a few
years, the monastery became once again a thriving order, and – thanks to the
rabbi’s gift – a vibrant, authentic community of light and love for the whole
realm.
Unilever Brazil was not in decline, but something of the spirit had left the place.
There was a sense of ‘stuckness’ and not much hope. When we shared the story of
the monks with senior leaders in early 2008, they immediately saw the relevance to
their own situation.
Deeper down, the story of the monks was the initial source of inspiration to
commence the journey of renewal, because it offered people new language,
encouraged them to look with new eyes, and invited them to explore new places.
New language: The 19th-century philosopher, Wittgenstein2, said: “You cannot
enter a world for which you do not have the language.” Business today has a
language, and, if a business is to move and to renew, it needs new language. What is
the language of business today? It’s a language that emphasises the measurable, data,
process, replication, and scale.
What is needed is language for a new age, what Dan Pink (2005) calls the
Conceptual Age. In the Conceptual Age, new capacities will be needed to survive,
let alone prosper. These include what Pink calls Story, Symphony and Empathy.
Story includes, but goes beyond, providing skilful, fact-based argument. It evokes
persuasion, communication and self-understanding, and the ability to fashion a
compelling narrative. Symphony is the ability to go beyond analysis and see the
big picture, cross boundaries, and combine disparate pieces into an arresting new
whole. Empathy is the ability to understand what makes others tick, to forge deep
relationships, and to care for others.
We see a new language emerge among the monks. We see the language shift in
the internal dialogue each monk has with himself, and we see it shift in the language
and communication among the monks. It is a language marked by more respect,
more compassion, and more possibility than the defeatist language that had preceded
it. This is a language that could be deemed touchy-feely and airy-fairy. But it is not
this. In the case of Unilever Brazil, a new language was a prerequisite for renewal
and growth.
2 As cited in Kenny (1974).
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A little language goes a long way. What is important is that it does not take much
to stimulate renewal and growth. Dan Pink reminds us of EM Foster’s observation
that a fact is: “The queen died and the king died.” A story is: “The queen died and
the king died of a broken heart.” – same facts, and yet very different energies from
only a few different words.
New places: For the monks, as for many in Unilever Brazil, they initially looked
for the answers from outside when, in fact, so much of the leverage lay inside. As the
old indigenous saying puts it: “The faraway stick never killed the snake.”
New places go beyond looking closer to home. As Ralph Waldo Emerson3 said,
“What lies ahead of us and what lies behind us are tiny matters compared to what lies
within us.” The monks also inspired leaders in Unilever Brazil to explore domains
that they had not really grappled with before. This is the domain of the invisible
aspects of the organisation – the mind-sets, beliefs and assumptions. The culture of
Unilever Brazil is like an iceberg. The behaviours and results – the things we can
see, touch and measure – are at the top of the iceberg. But so much lies below that
is invisible. And the invisible matters. The Titanic, after all, did not have a problem
with the tip of the iceberg.
New eyes: The late psychiatrist, RD Lang, reminds us (as quoted in Zweig &
Abrams 1991:xix):
The range of what we think and do
is limited by what we fail to notice.
And because we fail to notice
that we fail to notice
there is little we can do
to change
until we notice
how failing to notice
Shapes our thoughts and deeds.
We see in the monks’ story how their awareness expanded – of themselves, of others
and of their surrounds. Huge amounts of energy and insight are aroused when one’s
attention and awareness are expanded. And, equivalently, energy is wasted when
attention is spent on churning through the same issue, over and over again. We can
see how new eyes – in the case of the monks, an appreciative and enquiring eye –
were crucial for the renewal of the monastery.
It is also important to have new eyes in order to reframe experiences. The foibles
of Brother Phillip can be reframed from being a character flaw to something enduring
that makes him whole. What was once seen as a problem might in fact be a source of
enlargement, of learning. This involves a vulnerability that many are not comfortable
3 Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1883) was a famous American poet, lecturer and essayist.
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
within business. It asks us to see as whole what was once separate. To the extent that
we do not open our eyes because we are scared of what we might find, it asks us to
be courageous.
So, the monks were the initial inspiration for the cultural and leadership renewal
of Unilever Brazil. What was done of a more practical nature, that is, what was the
perspiration to complement the inspiration?
What Was Done?
Over the course of the period 2008 to 2011, we undertook many interventions to
facilitate and prompt the cultural and leadership renewal of Unilever Brazil, and, in
doing so, attracted, developed and excited talented executives.
Let us first outline how we thought about sequencing the programme, and then
outline the framework that held our interventions together in a coherent way. We
conclude this section with a summary of a few of the most important interventions
we undertook.
Sequencing
We chose not to adopt a particular process map or prescribed sequential set of steps.
For those who find this approach helpful, we would recommend the steps outlined in
Richard Barrett’s (2006) Building a Values Driven Organization. Instead, an unlikely
source – Martin Luther King – inspired the way we sequenced and choreographed
the work.
In 1963, Martin Luther King was imprisoned for his early efforts at direct action
to ignite the civil rights movement. From prison, he wrote a note in defence of direct
action, as a rebuttal to those who said he should pursue civil rights in the courts.
He wrote in his Letter from Birmingham Jail4:
In any nonviolent campaign there are four basic steps: collection of the facts
to determine whether injustices exist; negotiation; self-purification; and direct
action.
As illustrated in the chart below (see figure 2), we found these steps to be helpful in
very practical ways.
4 Martin Luther King Jr. 1963. Letter from Birmingham Jail.
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Sequencing
• Cultural and
business
metrics
• Quantitative
and
qualitative
data
• “See, feel”
as well as
“Analyze,
think”
Collection of
facts Negotiation
Self
purification Direct action
• Dialogue
• Reflection
• Courageous
conversation
• Accountability
• Master, not
victim
• Where am I in
this?
• Fearless
vulnerability
• Technical and
adaptive
• Small enough
to matter, big
enough to win
• Symbolic
actions
Figure 2: Sequencing (Source: MOHAN VEENA Consulting)
It provided us with guidance as to the steps to take and as to what was needed at
each step. As in the more widely known Plan, Do, Check, Act, there is a circular
sequence to the steps, but, at any point, we found it was important to evoke each
step. At any particular point, one of the steps might be most relevant, but it is best
undertaken in partnership with all the steps. We found this, time and time again, to
be a very helpful discipline.
We also found that the process was not linear. In fact, it was more of a spiral. For
example, the period March to December 2008 saw us work through each of the steps
and we began to see improvement in the business. For example, growth returned
to many parts of the business that had been struggling, customer service began to
improve, and the spirit seemed to be returning to the business.
In the early part of 2009, we took the time to check in and hear from people –
Step 1. We were shocked to discover that all was not well. The Voices we heard are
summarised in the chart below (see figure 3).
Clearly something was amiss and there was a feeling of ‘stuckness’. This entailed
some tough conversations and soul-searching. As the senior leadership talked about
this (Step 2), we discovered the power of Step 3 – self-purification.
What we discovered was that, while good progress had been made, much of
the momentum was ‘out there’ and, to progress further, we had to go ‘in here’, and,
in particular, to another level of personal accountability. The antidote to a feeling
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
of ‘stuckness’ was to face into the sense of vulnerability and work through it. Up to
this point, the ‘easy things’ had been done. Now, tougher things needed to be done,
and personal risk-taking was required. This made people feel unsafe, and it required
people to reflect on their own very personal leadership challenges.
Voices in early 2009
“We are together
on the boat, but we
are becalmed” “There are some things I
don’t understand. How is
it that everything is still
urgent even though we re-
vised the MD task list”
“We are stuck in very
wet sand wanting to
move, but we cannot
get out”
“We are a family that
has built a house and
are in the middle of a
storm. We hope that
the storm will not
take our house away”
“We have made great
progress but there is
something holding us
back. Something I just
cannot put my finger on”
“People are
beginning to
fall off the
Carnival bus”
“We are driving
an engine at 120
that was built for
80”
“We are like a spaceship
that has just taken off…
Great ambitions, solid
foundations but in need
of energy at a critical
time. We all know what
happened to Challenger”
“We are at the door,
wanting to step through
but do not have the key”
“We want to move
more quickly but we
do not know how”
“We are about to
go into a paint ball
war. Some of us are
prepared to expose
ourselves, but others
will wait behind
the tree to see what
happens”
Figure 3: Voices in Early 2009 (Source: MOHAN VEENA Consulting)
One such example was a member of the leadership team reflecting positively on
how he felt he had been taking many more risks over the last year. When asked to
give an example, he said: “Just last week I shared a PowerPoint slide with the Board
that I had not seen before.” As soon as he said it, he and everyone else knew that we
had a lot of work to do regarding risk-taking! It became clear to many leaders that the
most important source of entropy was how they showed up each day. In the words of
the cartoon character, Pogo, “We have met the enemy…and he is us!”
From a talent management perspective, we do not think it is a coincidence that
it was soon after this period of intense reflection and ‘self-purification’ that we began
to attract a new range of talented executives, with some joining Unilever Brazil
for the first time, and others drawn back by what they sensed was happening to
the business. It was as if we were beginning to attract just the sort of talent that we
needed, and that talent was being attracted to us. Jung called this “participation
mystique” (Corlett & Pearson 2003:19).
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So, in a sense, we had come full circle. We were back where we started in early
2008, but we were different. It was the same ‘stuff’, but we could see it a bit more
clearly. This was an experience we would have many times over the next few years,
and we were constantly reminded about the critical role of the self-purification step.
And what of Step 4, direct action?
Framework for Our Interventions
Two models inspired our interventions, the first being a simple formula for change
from several early organisation development thinkers, and, the second, a framework
from the contemporary American philosopher, Ken Wilber.
The formula for change – originally proposed by David Gleicher, published by
Dick Beckhard and Reuben Harris, and simplified by Kathie Dannemiller – is simple
but quite profound and very helpful (Jacobs 1994:123).
Dissatisfaction (D) *Vision (V) *Interventions (I) > Resistance (R)
When trying to shift an organisation (or an individual for that matter), you need to
purposefully increase the sense of dissatisfaction with the current state of affairs.
This may be straightforward, but it might not be. How often are we in denial? What
about various forms of fatalism? How comfortable are we when people express
dissatisfaction?
In addition to generating dissatisfaction, one also needs to provide a picture of a
better future. This is not controversial today. And, then, one needs to offer practical
steps and interventions to help bridge the gap. Because each variable is multiplied,
you need to attend to all three variables. It is not enough to focus exclusively on one,
your ‘pet’ variable.
The sum of these aspects needs to exceed the resistance to change that is often
so significant in individual and organisational change efforts. How many of us know
that we are overweight? We don’t like it. We have a picture of what we want to look
like, and are inundated with help regarding diets and gym memberships. But why are
we unable to lose weight?
Sidney Howard5 once said: “One half of knowing what you want is knowing
what you must give up before you get it.” But what we fear most is loss, and this leads
to resistance. For, as JK Galbraith noted, “Faced with the choice between changing
one’s mind and proving that there is no need to do so, almost everybody gets busy
on the proof.”
Ken Wilber (2001), the philosopher at the centre of the Integral Movement, has
popularised the second model. In many of his publications, including A Theory of
Everything, Wilber works with what he calls the Four Quadrant Model. Illustrated
5 The American playwright and screenwriter, Sidney Coe Howard, received a posthumous Academy
Award in 1940 for the screenplay of Gone with the Wind.
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
below in figure 4, it proposes that, at any moment, the world (and, in our case, an
organisation) can be experienced in all of the four quadrants. The Upper Right (UR)
is the domain of individual behaviours (the ‘tip of the iceberg’ to use that metaphor
again). The Lower Right (LR) is the domain so familiar in business language today –
process, budgets, and strategies. The Upper Left (UL) refers to what lies below the
waterline in the individual icebergs of people in an organisation, while the Lower Left
(LL) refers to what Edgar Schein (2009) defines as culture – the underlying collective
mind-sets and assumptions made in the organisation.
Wilber’s point is that, to shift a system, you need to intervene in all four quadrants.
To focus on only your ‘pet’ domain will lead to imbalanced development and you
will end up being ‘stuck’ and disappointed with your change efforts. We suspect that
the fact that most (70%+) change efforts fail is down to this oversight.
Interior Exterior
Individual
Collective
Thoughts, feelings,
mind-sets
Measurable outputs,
behaviours, skills
Shared feelings
and beliefs
Processes, systems,
structures and resources
Figure 4: The Four Quadrants
In figure 5 below, we combine the two frameworks. The horizontal dimension is the
four quadrants applied to an organisation. The UL and UR are combined and relate
to leadership development, while ‘Infrastructure’ refers to the elements of the LR.
We find that teams exist at the centre of the four quadrants, as they combine all four
elements simultaneously, while culture sits squarely in the LL.
Our interventions were framed by the intersection of these two models.
Essentially, we sought at all times to work across all the domains, purposefully
looking to increase D, increase V, provide practical steps and reduce resistance.
Figure 5 summarises the ‘cookbook’. Now, we hasten to add that a cookbook is
not about cooking, and that there are lots of recipes that work for different occasions.
Practically, this means the transformation journey is not a road map, but a series of
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unfolding interventions. There is an art to knowing what intervention or combinations
of interventions are required at any particular time. There are times when the focus
of attention might be in a particular domain (eg building a high-performing team),
and, at others, in a different domain (eg a strategic review). Some interventions
are more focused on a particular variable (eg resistance), while others work on all
variables simultaneously. What is important is the discipline to cover all the bases
and integrate as much as possible.
Figure 5: The Cookbook (Source: MOHAN VEENA Consulting)
Sample interventions: Let us describe five of the most powerful interventions, and
how they worked to renew the effectiveness of talent and the culture of the Unilever
Cookbook
Levers
Domains
Leadership
development
Teams Culture Infrastructure
D
X
X
FS
v
R
• Personal insight e.g.
– 360 feedback tools
e.g. LVA, Disc,
MBTI
– Group feedback
e.g. Circle of fire
– Reflective
exercises e.g. FLE
• Ladders for growth
e.g.
– Voice dialogue
– Somatics
– Personal mastery
– Inner game
– Mindfulness
– Clinical approach
– Archetypes
– Shadow work
– Vision quests
– 4 Columns
– Meditation/
contemplative
practices
– Calling/True North
Corporate Athelete
• Support and
encourage
“deliberate practice”
e.g.
– Skill building
and training e.g.
Conversations
Wellness programs
– Holistic personal
plans
– 1:1 Coaching
– On-line reminders/
prompts
– 3+1… because
– Field work
• Foster desire e.g.
– Barrett
– Voices
– 4 ways or knowing
– mirror galleries
– U process
– Appreciative
Inquiry
– Visioning
– Fish bowls
– Peak experience
• Get unstuck e.g.
– Four player model
– Maister trust
equation
– 5 Powers of a team
– Collective 4
columns
• Embedding e.g.
– Team journeys
– Team coaching
– Meeting
observations
– Team charters
– Rituals
– Reflective
moments
• Surface data e.g.
– Schein’s three
levels analysis
– Barrett corporate
values assessment
– See, feel events
– Collective 4
columns
– Voices
• Social rituals e.g.
– Values jams
– Workout and CAP
– Whole system
summits
– Town halls
– Big Journeys
– Corporate
University
• Linguistic
interventions e.g.
– Metaphors
– Symbolic actions
– Reframing/story
telling
– Organizational
“mantras”
– Feed forward
– Vital/unacceptable
behaviors
• Viral interventions
e.g.
– Positive Deviants
Champions
– Social network
analysis
– “Give a Gorilla”
• Strategic and
operational
alignment e.g.
– Meaningful
strategy
– Restructuring
– Resourcing and
budgets
– Measurement of
culture
– 3, 3 and 3
• Formal business
processes and
systems e.g.
– RASCI
– Delegations
– Governance
– Planning/
budgeting
• Core HR systems e.g.
– Behaviors
embedded in
performance
management,
talent management
and recruiting
incentives and
recognition
– Attention to social
aspects
• Artefacts e.g.
– Office collateral
– Physical layouts
– Organization
structures
– Meeting agendas
V
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
Brazil organisation. There are both technical and adaptive interventions discussed
here.6 Heifitz et al. describes technical interventions as processes and systems
enhancements designed to address issues and encourage the desired behaviours.
Technical interventions are akin to a heart transplant to address heart disease. These
interventions exist ‘outside of the people’, and ‘the experts’ do the work. Adaptive
interventions, on the other hand, speak to the underlying behaviours, mind-sets and
values of the people in the organisation. Adaptive interventions for the heart patient
might include changes to diet and addressing sources of stress. It is the person who
does the work, not the experts.
Barrett Values Survey. There is a wide variety of survey tools to help interveners
in organisation development work. One of the best we have found is the Barrett
Values Survey. This is a tool inspired by the work of Abraham Maslow, and we used
this tool as part of the initial diagnostic and then annually to track progress. The tool
has a number of strengths.
First, with its focus on values, it addresses the invisible domain below the
surface of the iceberg, and so it helps make visible the invisible, and makes tangible
the intangible. It is therefore especially helpful in framing adaptive interventions.
Secondly, it is a simple online tool that takes only 15 to 20 minutes to complete.
Thirdly, it provides a quantitative measure of wasted energy and dysfunctional
behaviour in the organisation. Best practice is 5 to 10%, and, in early 2008, Unilever
Brazil’s entropy was 37%, confirming the need for fundamental transformation.
Fourthly, it distinguishes between personal values, values in the current culture
and values in the desired culture. Dissonance between prominent values in these
three domains brings home accountability to where it belongs. If much of what
people in the organisation value personally is not showing up in the current culture
and/or there are big discrepancies between the values in the current and the desired
culture, there is only one place to look and that is the leadership of the organisation.
This is because what is valued in an organisation is what is valued at the top. As
Robert Frost7 said: “Something we were withholding made us weak. Until we found
it was ourselves.”
As you can imagine, the process of reviewing, discussing and making meaning
of this sort of data with the leaders of Unilever Brazil was a powerful way to increase
dissatisfaction, and the data about the desired culture also stimulated energising
conversations about vision and what was possible in Unilever Brazil.
Surfacing and managing behaviours. One of the first and most important initial
steps we took in mid-2008 was to move from a focus on values to also attend to
behaviours. Behaviours, unlike values, can be observed and hence managed.
Using an Appreciative Inquiry (AI) process, we surfaced what came to be called
Unilever Brazil’s Vital Behaviours. These were the behaviours that people would
6 Heifitz, Grashow & Linsky (2009).
7 Robert Frost (1874-1963) was one of America’s most popular 20th-century poets.
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hold themselves accountable for and would be enablers of the new strategy that was
being shaped at the time. We also took the time to face the brutal facts and gave
language to what we called the Unacceptable Behaviours, or how it was that high
levels of entropy were being experienced in the business.
By mid-2010, we felt that it was time to review the Vital Behaviours. We were
seeing growth in the business and entropy levels were now well under 30%, and it felt
like the behaviours were vital then but less relevant now. So, we undertook another
high-engagement exercise involving some 1 000 senior leaders, and crafted what
we called the Winning Behaviours. These felt qualitatively different from the first
generation of behaviours – sharper, more externally focused, and more aspirational
in keeping with the fact that the darkest days were behind us.
A very important step was to incorporate the Winning Behaviours in Unilever
Brazil’s performance management process (a Lower Right [LR] intervention). In the
performance conversations that were being had, explicit recognition was given
to the extent to which each person was living the Winning Behaviours. We also
published print materials throughout premises and factories promoting Winning
Behaviours so that there was no doubt about which behaviours were expected.
Finally, in another link into the organisational infrastructure of Unilever Brazil, the
Winning Behaviours were formally integrated into the annual awards that recognised
outstanding achievement in the business.
Developing talent through personal growth. The Barrett survey highlighted the
importance of how leaders conducted themselves in creating the culture and the high
levels of entropy. The data suggested a big discrepancy between the values that they
espoused and those that they actually demonstrated that they cared about. Closing
this gap and having leaders live more often into their espoused values needed more
than a training intervention. It called for more profound personal growth.
We found the title and book cover of Marshall Goldsmith’s book, What Got You
Here Won’t Get You There (2007), captured this idea perfectly (see figure 6). It invites
leaders to reflect on who they have become, on their strengths and weaknesses, as
well as on their personal vision and aspirations. Most importantly, it draws attention
to the white space between the ladders. At the end of the day, the move to the next
ladder involves taking risk, a letting-go, a vulnerability. And this lies at the heart of
personal growth.
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
Figure 6: What Got You Here Won’t Get You There
One tool we found particularly useful in helping leaders attend to their personal
growth is the work of Bob Kegan and Lisa Lahey (2009). Their Four Columns process
is a simple, but profound, tool to help people uncover unconscious sources of
resistance and hence tackle head-on the Resistance variable in David Gleicher’s
equation (see Jacobs 1994).
The reason why there was a gap between Unilever’s actual and espoused values
was that, in addition to the espoused values on the Barrett Values Survey, people held
other values or competing commitments. These other values are held unconsciously
and typically relate to basic needs and self-preservation. They act as a foot on the
brake, no matter how determined one is to press the accelerator and live the higher-
order espoused values.
To help lock down the importance of personal growth, each leader took
time each year to shape what we called their ‘holistic personal plan’. This was a
chance for each person to reflect on the key roles they played in life, not just as a
businessperson, but also as a father, a mother, a friend, a soccer coach, et cetera, and
to define the goals for each role. The personal plans were a fixture in the discussion
in the regular journeys that we discuss below.
Journeys. Another very important intervention was what we called ‘Journeys’.
These were off-sites that were held regularly each year, and they formed the backbone
around which the cultural shifts were managed. Einstein once said, “God does not
play dice.” What he was referring to was the power of attention – in culture, you
get the culture that you pay attention to. These Journeys were a discipline to help us
maintain attention on the culture we wanted as an enabler of the growth ambitions
of the business. They also created safe spaces for courageous conversations and
for trust-based relationships to be established that were a precondition for reducing
entropy.
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As the work was getting under way in 2008, Kees and his top team would meet
every quarter, and this was followed immediately by a working session with the
top team and their direct reports. This pattern continued for the next three years,
although the frequency of the sessions was reduced as things became more settled.
In addition to these Journeys, we held what we called the Big Journey once a year
where we invited some 250 of the most senior people in the business. In addition to
these Journeys led by Kees and Marcelo, each VP would take time out to meet with
his or her team in regular ‘mini Journeys’ (see figure 7 below).
Domains
Journey Description Time/frequency Learning
Board journeys • 10 person board
• Offsite locations
• Aim for depth
• 2–3 days
• Quarterly initially
and now twice per
annum
• Don’t claim victory
• The right people
will come and go
ELT journeys • 45–50 directors
• Replicate the
experience of the
preceding board
journey
• 2 days
• Quarterly initially
and now 2–3 hours
after quarterly Town
Halls
• Heavy investment
initially and then
can taper off. Don’t
linger
Big journeys • – 160–180
Managers and key
interfaces
• Once per annum • High engagement
dynamics
• Barrett data for
THEIR direct reports
Mini journeys • Functional teams
down to front line
• 1–2 a year in
third year of
transformation
• VP and HR led
• Vital to widening
and deepening
agenda
Unilever Brazil Journey Design
Figure 7: Unilever Brazil Journey Design (Source: MOHAN VEENA Consulting)
A number of features distinguished the Journeys from more traditional corporate off-
sites:
• They were a formal item on the corporate calendar. We knew that the culture
shifts we were after needed more than a once-off off-site or team-building
intervention. What was needed was disciplined attention, as a senior leadership
team would attend to other things it valued. A senior leadership team would not
think twice about taking regular time out to review pressing business issues, so
why not culture and leadership?
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Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
• Attention to physical spaces. We took great care to ensure that the locations
were well chosen and, ideally, involved nature. We were constantly amazed
about the impact that the location and the physical spaces had on the quality
of conversation and insight. As Churchill8 once said, “We shape our buildings,
and, from that moment, our buildings shape us.”
• Semistructured but emergent agendas. In the weeks prior to each Journey, we
would take the time to discuss which issues needed to be discussed. At the same
time, in each and every Journey, we would always come back to conversations
under three headings: Where am I on my personal journey? Where are we as
a team on our journey? Where are we as a company on our journey to build a
company greater than great?
• Integration across the quadrants. The Journeys were not just about culture. In
fact, they were a great opportunity to ensure that we very consciously integrated
things across all four quadrants. For example, in addition to regular reviews of
personal plans (UL and UR), the Journeys were an opportunity to review major
strategic issues (LL).
3+1…because. Like many mature companies operating in emerging markets,
Unilever Brazil had the benefit of drawing on the best thinking around performance
and talent management processes. One feature of the process was that following the
annual planning cycle: all executives would clarify what was called their ‘3+1’. The
‘3’ refers to their three biggest objectives for the year, and the ‘1’ refers to their most
important developmental goal, typically something of a leadership nature.
What we realised was that, while this was very good and focused, it was missing
a very important aspect – the ‘Why bother?’ We believed that more explicitly
integrating personal meaning into the performance and talent management systems
would be a source of great energy. As Nietzsche9 said, “He who has a why to live for
can bear with almost any how.”
Many of us had seen an example of the performance impact of a strong ‘why’
in the recently released movie, Blindside, the story of Michael Oher. Adopted into
a well-off family from a very impoverished background, he is attending his first
American football training session. His imposing physique marks him out as a perfect
offensive lineman whose objective is to protect his quarterback from onrushing
defensive linemen seeking to sack the quarterback. Only one problem! The X and
O’s coaching style was not getting through to Michael, and he was floundering. Up
steps Michael’s adopted mother, played by Sandra Bullock. “Watch this,” she says to
the coach. She walks up to Michael and points at Michael’s quarterback. “Michael,
see him? He is a ‘goodie’. He is like your little brother, SJ. See these guys over there
8 As stated by Sir Winston Churchill in the House of Commons (during a meeting in the House of Lords),
28 October 1943.
9 Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900), German philosopher.
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[pointing to the defensive linemen]? They are the ‘baddies’ and they are trying to
hurt your brother. Your job is to protect SJ. Got it?” Michael nods and, from that
moment, Michael Oher performed exceptionally, and, as the story unfolds, signs as
a professional footballer for the NFL team, the Baltimore Ravens.
What Sandra Bullock has done was touch Michael’s ‘Why?’ She recognised what
gave him meaning. We wanted to capture the same idea in the way objectives were
set in Unilever Brazil.
We settled on a very simple innovation. Each conversation had the 3+1 and a
‘Why?’. Why is it that you want to achieve these objectives? What are you fighting for?
Where does your passion lie? If there was not a strong ‘why’, you could be sure that
it would be a struggle to achieve the 3+1. So, as a result, much richer conversations
occurred, and objectives were set that had much more meaning behind them.
The Next Phase of the Journey
“Historic continuity with the past is not a duty, it is only a necessity.” So said Oliver
Wendell Holmes Jr.10
As we write this chapter, Kees has moved on to a new Unilever business, and
a new CEO has been appointed to run Unilever Brazil. We see it as a moment of
transition and a never-ending process of inheritance and growth.
In 2007, Kees inherited a business with great strengths and great challenges. His
team of VPs and the leaders of Unilever Brazil have made significant improvements
and the business is now on a different trajectory. As Kees had received the gift of
a divisionalised organisation that had been converted into a fully integrated ONE
Unilever organisation, so the new CE inherits a business with great strengths and great
challenges. Brazil is one of the fiercest battlegrounds for FMCGs in dynamic, emerging
markets, and the business has to continue to renew in order to grow. Unilever Brazil
has invested heavily to build capabilities and processes to succeed in the marketplace.
Now is the time to put the whole organisation on the street, winning in the marketplace,
with all the assets we have accumulated in our handbags in the last few years.
When we reflect on the Journey to date, there is much we are proud of and there
are things we would do differently. We achieved many of the goals we set, and failed
to meet others. Just as the business enters a new phase, so we do too. And, like the
business, we feel enlarged. Not perfect, not the finished item, but more capable and
more resourceful having participated in this phase of the Journey.
We conclude with Marcelo’s own Voice in April 2012.
10 Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr (1841-1935) was the longest-serving member (30 years) of the
United States Supreme Court.
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297
Chapter 12: Unilever Brazil: a Story of Organisational and Personal Renewal
Marcelo Williams:
From the personal side, this was the deepest journey in which I have been
involved. I could say that what strikes me most is to see the legacy of a team
of leaders with the confidence to write this new chapter in the history of the
organization. In the Brazilian day to day, I can see our people delivering
extraordinary results and gaining market share and our major competitors are
suffering. And I know nothing of that would be possible without our journey. It
is like the transformation is inside the individuals and they are paying back all
the investment we have made in each other and ourselves.
Being completely honest and perhaps more selfish, I would say that this
journey transformed myself as a person and allowed me to find my calling. I
discovered the power to transform individuals in a leadership team, confirming
that my real calling is to impact positively the lives of people and through them
produce significant impact on organizations. The tremendous pleasure is to
make a difference through people.
References
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2011 Top Companies for Leaders: Winners and Special Recognition http://www.aon.com/human-capital-
consulting/thought-leadership/leadership/reports-pub-topcompanies-2011-winners.jsp.
Wilber, K. 2001. A Theory for Everything. USA: Shambhala.
Zander, R & Zander, B. 2002. The Art of Possibility. USA: Penguin Books.
Zweig, C & Abrams, J. 1991. Meeting the Shadow. USA: Jeremy P Tarcher/Penguin.
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EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) – printed on 3/1/2020 2:11 PM via TRIDENT UNIVERSITY
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STANDARD BANK – LEADING
THE WAY IN AFRICA
Jennifer Morris & Shirley Zinn
299
13
A Truly African Bank
Standard Bank started life 150 years ago in Port Elizabeth as the brainchild of John
Paterson. Funded and supported by a group of local businesspeople, The Standard
Bank of British South Africa was officially incorporated and registered in 1862, with
capital fixed at one million pounds and with 10 000 shares of £100 apiece.
The Group’s expansion into Africa began just 10 years later when a subsidiary was
formed to carry business into South Africa and South West Africa (now Namibia). By
1917, Standard Bank was operating in 12 African countries. Standard Bank’s Africa
focus was brought to an abrupt halt in 1987 when its parent company, Standard
Chartered, sold its controlling interest in Standard Bank and it once again became a
purely South African bank. Standard Bank had to start again.
In the late 1980s, a branch was opened in Swaziland. Standard Bank’s Africa
growth strategy was further enhanced in 1992 when it acquired ANZ Grindlays Bank,
a small bank which had operations in eight African countries: Botswana, Kenya,
Uganda, Zaire, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Ghana and Nigeria. By the 2000s, Standard Bank
had grown its African presence to 17 countries, as well as acquiring a foothold in
Russia, Argentina, Turkey and Brazil. In 2008, the world’s largest bank, the Industrial
and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), acquired a 20% shareholding in Standard
Bank for R36.7 billion, which was the biggest-ever Chinese foreign direct investment
at the time. Today, the company has total Group assets of more than R1.49 trillion,
and more than 50 000 employees across 30 countries. But, as Chairperson, Fred
Phaswana, recently stated: “We have chosen to focus on a strategy that recognises
and participates in the great opportunity that is unfolding on the African continent.
Africa remains at the heart of the Standard Bank Group’s strategy.”
Terry Moodley, Head of Personal and Business Banking in Africa, agrees:
“Because we have a long history on the continent, we enjoy the brand equity of trust.
Africa is our core business, which sets us apart from our international counterparts.”
This emphasis on long-term relationships and a focus on the continent has seen
Standard Bank named as the 2011 Bank of the Year in Africa and the Best Bank in
four African countries – Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi and Zimbabwe – by leading
industry journal, The Banker. In early 2012, Standard Bank Group was named as the
best investment bank in South Africa and Africa by Global Finance magazine. In a
recent Ask Afrika Trust Barometer Survey, Standard Bank was recognised as the most
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EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) – printed on 3/1/2020 2:11 PM via TRIDENT UNIVERSITY
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