I would be risking the whole company on this decision,ā Graham wrote in her memoir, Personal History. Yet to opt for assured survival at the cost of the companyās soul, she concluded, would be worse than not surviving. The Post published.
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Lots of companies try to win and still canāt do it. So imagine, then, the likelihood of winning without explicitly setting out to do so. When a company sets out to participate, rather than win, it will inevitably fail to make the tough choices and the significant investments that would make winning even a remote possibility. A too-modest aspiration is far more dangerous than a too-lofty one. Too many companies eventually die a death of modest aspirations.
I was also told that a brand-new CEO shouldnāt be trying to make huge acquisitions. I was ācrazy,ā as one of our investment bankers put it, because the numbers would never work out and this was an impossible āsaleā to the street.
The banker had a point. Itās true that on paper the deal didnāt make obvious sense. But I felt certain that this level of ingenuity was worth more than any of us understood or could calculate at the time. Itās perhaps not the most responsible advice in a book like this to say that leaders should just go out there and trust their gut, because it might be interpreted as endorsing impulsivity over thoughtfulness, gambling rather than careful study. As with everything, the key is awareness, taking it all in and weighing every factorāyour own motivations, what the people you trust are saying, what careful study and analysis tell you, and then what analysis canāt tell you. You carefully consider all of these factors, understanding that no two circumstances are alike, and then, if youāre in charge, it still ultimately comes down to instinct. Is this right or isnāt it? Nothing is a sure thing, but you need at the very least to be willing to take big risks. You canāt have big wins without them.
It was an easy decision, really. I never asked what the financial repercussions would be, and didnāt care. In moments like that, you have to look past whatever the commercial losses are and be guided, again, by the simple rule that thereās nothing more important than the quality and integrity of your people and your product. Everything depends on upholding that principle.
I think it would have been absolutely naĆÆveāas well as dangerousāif I had come into a company as complex as IBM with a plan to import a band of outsiders somehow magically to run the place better than the people who were there in the first place. Iāve entered other companies from the outside, and based on my experience, you might be able to pull that off at a small company in a relatively simple industry and under optimal conditions.
On June 15, 1971, The Washington Post Company went public at $6.50 per share (adjusted for a subsequent 4-for-1 split). When Kay stepped down as CEO on May 9, 1991, the price was $222, a gain of 3,315 percent. During the same period the Dow advanced from 907 to 2,971, an increase of 227 percent.ā Now that I have studied Grahamās life and leadership, my own assessment is that she stands as one of the absolute best examples of a leader who took a company from good to great, with some of the gutsiest business leadership decisions of all time.