128 Collins himself "Compared to rinsing my cottage cheese everyday, this just isn't that bad" I realize that it's a bizarre analogy. But in a sense, the good-to-great companies became like Dave Scott. Much of the answer to the question of "good to great" lies in the discipline to do whatever it takes to become the best within carefully selected arenas and then to seek continual improvement from there. It's really just that simple. And it's really just that difficult. Consider Wells in contrast to Bank of America. Carl Reichardt never doubted that Wells could emerge from bank deregulation as a stronger company, not a weaker one. He saw that the key to becoming a great company rested not with brilliant new strategies but-with the sheer determination to rip a hundred years of banker mentality out of the system. "There's too much waste in banking" said Reichardt. "Getting
rid of it takes tenacity, not brilliance"
Reichardt set a clear tone at the top We're not going to ask everyone else to suffer while we sit on high. We will start rinsing our own cottage cheese, right herein the executive suite. He froze executive salaries for two years despite the fact that Wells was enjoying some of the most profitable years in its He shut the executive dining room and replaced it with a college dorm food-service He closed the executive elevator, sold the corporate jets, and banned green plants from the executive suite as too expensive to He removed free coffee from the executive suite. He eliminated Christmas trees for He threw reports back at people who'd submitted them infancy binders, with the admonishment Would you spend your own money this way What does a binder add to
Reichardt would sit through meetings
with fellow executives, in a beat-up old chair with the stuffing hanging out. Sometimes he would just sit there and pick at the stuffing while listening to proposals to spend money, said one article, "and a lot of must-do projects just melted Across the street at Bank of America, executives also faced deregulation and recognized the need to eliminate waste. However, unlike Wells
Good to Great B of A executives didn't have the discipline to rinse their own cottage cheese. They preserved their posh executive kingdom in its imposing tower in downtown Francisco, the CEO's office described in the book Breaking the Bank as "a northeast corner suite with a
large attached conference room, oriental rugs, and floor-to-ceiling windows that offered a sweeping panorama of the San Francisco Bay from the Golden Gate to the Bay We found no evidence executive chairs with the stuffing hanging out) The elevator made its last stop at the executive floor and descended all the way to the ground in one quiet whoosh, unfettered by the intrusions of lesser beings. The vast open space in the executive suite made the windows look even taller than they actually were, creating a sense of floating above the fog in an elevated city of alien elites who ruled the world from Why rinse our cottage cheese when life is so good After losing
$1.8 billion across three years in the B of A eventually made the necessary changes in response to deregulation (largely by hiring ex-Wells But even in the darkest days, B could not bring itself to get rid of the perks that shielded its executives from the real world. Atone board meeting during Bank of America's
crisis period, one member made sensible suggestions like "Sell the corporate jet" Other directors listened to the recommendations, then passed them
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