6.3. Buying and Being Bought
âBut that culture is enabled and driven by the fact that Googleâs search and advertising business pretty much prints cash. Even Googlers call it the âMoney Tree.â Itâs turned Google into a place of wild abundance where anyone can more or less do anythingâor sometimes nothing at all. Theyâve been so profitable for so long and have had so few existential business threats that theyâve never had to cut back or slim down, never had to be scrappy. They havenât had to really fight for anything in decades. Lucky them!
But at Nest, we were fighters. Our culture was born from the Apple way, a culture that survived multiple near-death experiences over its forty-plus years of existence. We were ready to fight for our mission and our place at the table, fight to keep our culture and our way of doing things.
Related Quotes
5.6. Death of a Sales Culture
âThere is a different model that aligns short-term business goals without neglecting long-term
customer relationships. Itâs based on vested commissions.
Rather than focusing on rewarding salespeople immediately after a transaction, vest the commission over time so your sales team is incentivized to not only bring in new customers, but also work with existing customers to ensure theyâre happy and stay happy. Build a culture based on relationships rather than transactions.
Hereâs how to set it up at your company:
- If youâre starting a new sales organization, do not offer traditional monthly cash commissions. Itâs best to have everyone in your company compensated in the same wayâso offer salespeople a competitive salary and sales performance bonuses of additional stock options that vest over time. Stock provides a built-in incentive to stick around and invest in long-term customers who are good for the business.
- If youâre trying to transition to a relationship-driven culture, you may not be able to kill traditional commissions right away. In that case, any stock or cash (stock is still preferable) that you give as a commission should vest over time. Pay 10â15 percent of the commission at first, then another tranche in a few months, then another a few months after that, etc. If the customer leaves, the salesperson loses the remainder of their commission.
- Every sale should be a team sale. So if you have a customer success team (the team that
actually delivers, sets up, and maintains whatever is sold to the customer), then it should sign off on every deal. Sales and customer success should be under one leader, in the same silo, being compensated in the same way. In this setup, sales canât just throw a customer over the fence and never think about them again. If thereâs no customer success team, then sales should work very closely with customer support, operations, or manufacturingâcreate a board of people to approve each commitment.
The Google teams with whom weâd planned to integrate and codevelop technologies and products were reluctant to work with us. They kept asking their execs for more details to figure out if they really had to help us at the expense of their own projects. Why? Why? Why do we have to help a team that isnât Google? Over the subsequent months, every time we had to clarify yet again for customers that Nest was separate from Google, our internal reputation took another hit.
I should have remembered what it was like at Apple during the very first months when we started building the iPod. It just didnât occur to meâNest was so much bigger and more established than my tiny iPod team, I thought this was a completely different situation. But it was exactly the same. Back then Appleâs executive antibodies saw us coming to take their time and draw away their resources, so they tried to block our way and ignore our requests.
Thatâs when Steve Jobs gave us air cover, dropped bombs on the teams who were slowing us down, forced the issue, yelled sometimes to make sure we got what we needed. Steve Jobs fighting for us was ultimately what allowed us to succeed.
Google Ventures, now known as GV, was an investor. They knew our financials and had always been extremely supportive, so I wasnât worried about the number. I was worried about which teams weâd work with, what technology weâd share, what products weâd build. Nest wasnât joining Google for the moneyâwe were joining to accelerate our mission. So it was always mission first, money second.
Together with Google, we went through every single functionâmarketing, PR, HR, sales, every part of the company. We established where we could create synergies and where we couldnât, figured out which managers would be assigned to us, how we would do the hiring, which perks people would get, which salaries they could expect, which teams would be working together closely, and how those relationships would be established.
It took a lot of time. In fact I was starting to get a lot of eye rolls. âReally, Tony? You want to get into the details of this now?â Yes, yes, I do. Itâs important.
And it wasâcritically important and usually overlooked.
Most acquisitions are driven and overseen by bankers, and bankers only make the real money if the deal goes through, so theyâre motivated to move fast and get paid. They donât care about getting every detail of what happens to employees right. They donât really care about cultural fit. Not deeply.
When Google gave us new, gorgeous, high-end office space after the acquisition, I thanked Larry Page. I said it was very beautiful. And I told himâand our teamâthat we didnât deserve it.
It felt wrong. We hadnât earned it yet. That building was meant for a profitable company that had already proven itself. It was meant for people who could relax and spend their time arguing about who was going to get the window seat, whoâd get the best view. But thatâs not what Nest was about. We were focused on our mission, on staying late and solving problems and working hard and fighting through and over and around every obstacle in our path.
I came to see, in my time at IBM, that culture isnât just one aspect of the gameâit is the game. In the end, an organization is nothing more than the collective capacity of its people to create value. Vision, strategy, marketing, financial managementâany management system, in factâcan set you on the right path and can carry you for a while. But no enterpriseâwhether in business, government, education, health care, or any area of human endeavorâwill succeed over the long haul if those elements arenât part of its DNA.