Conversations With

Stephen Covey
Tom Peters
Peter Senge


About the conversations
This special "Conversations With " article appears courtesy of Lessons in Leadership/WYNCOM Inc. It was done to promote the "Worldwide Lessons in Leadership Series," a series of satellite broadcasts presented by FORTUNE magazine and 130 of America's leading colleges and universities. The four-part series was broadcast Sept. 12, Oct. 1, Oct. 23 and Nov. 15 to 180 locations in the United States and 150 locations in more than 40 countries around the world. For more information, call (800) 233-0937.

Stephen Covey

Stephen Covey is the author of several highly acclaimed books. His The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People is ranked as the No. 1 international best seller by the New York Times-having sold more than 9 million copies in 28 languages and 72 countries.

The Covey Leadership Center is Covey's organizational legacy to the world-a 700-member international firm whose mission is to empower people and organizations to significantly increase their performance in order to achieve worthwhile goals.

Covey has an MBA from Harvard University and a doctorate from Brigham Young University. For more than 25 years, he has taught millions of individuals the transforming power of principles rooted in unchanging natural laws that govern human and organizational effectiveness.

QD: The global marketplace and global competition have already become intellectual buzzwords. How can readers get real about how global competition will affect their business in the short term?


Covey: There are three constants, three realities that always exist. The first reality is change, and global competition is an embodiment of change. It's analogous to permanent white water, which is a turbulent, disheveling, noisy world that cannot be predicted in any way. And everyone is living in that kind of a world-in a level of change, and a rapidity of change, beyond any possible imagination. It is governed largely by technology and the impact that it has on economics, and then on political forces, and then on social and, ultimately, cultural forces.

The second reality is principles. It never changes, and the ability to deal with change is a function of having a changeless core inside our cultures, our organizations, our families, our personal lives. And that changeless core is natural law or principles. I use the compass a great deal to show that this technology has not changed for centuries-people use the compass to find magnetic direction, and that's exactly what principles are. They will never change, and they ultimately control and govern.

The third reality is choice. That is the internal power that we each have as individuals to choose how we will deal with these principles, these law-like controlling forces, and how we will adapt to the changing realities of the permanent white-water world. And this is the ultimate source of leadership: the internal capacity to change to applied principles in a changing environment.

QD: What do you believe is the most important issue facing businesses today?

Covey: The building of relationships. With all the problems associated with these profound changes, what happens is that it negatively begins to affect the trust in relationships. People become more formalistic, more legalistic and less synergistic. And I've often said, and believed deeply, that the major problem we face is not any particular problem. It's the process we use to solve these problems. We use basically an adversarial and, at best, a negotiation process, but what we need is a synergistic process.

QD: You've been in a number of different countries around the world recently speaking to business leaders and heads of state. What about your message seems to ring true with these audiences?

Covey: The thing that rings truest as I travel around the world is the universality of principles: that these principles transcend culture, religion, race, any local customs or cultures, that the principles are deep within the hearts and souls of all people. A local culture may develop value systems that are contrary to these principles, but when you get people in a reflective mind-set where they are interacting freely with each other, ultimately these deeper values that are principle-based and principle-centered seem to emerge.

I am amazed at how common these principles are and how self-evident and common-sensible they are everywhere. The priority put on these principles or on different value systems does vary, but inevitably, the principles deal with the four areas of life: our economic or our physical world; our well-being, which really revolves around the principle of fairness; our relationships with one another, which revolve around the principle of kindness and respect, along with the development and use of people's talents; and the spiritual principle of looking for meaning and of allowing integrity to form the basis of these other principles.

QD:
Asia is becoming a rapidly growing economic giant. What is your observation of what they are doing in Asia, and why should the rest of the world pay attention to it?

Covey: I was just in Asia, and I was absolutely amazed at what is happening there-particularly with the middle classes in India, as well as the burgeoning countries in Asia itself. I think what's happening is a growing awareness of this global economy and the efforts to upgrade organizations, their cultures, their capacities to produce and to sell goods and services to meet these world-class standards. This is driving a process of empowering people at lower and lower levels so that they have this commitment to this level of quality in service and speed and flexibility.

All of these forces are causing an upgrading of their cultures, their products, their services. They are becoming a formidable force in the global economy.

QD:
As this growth continues and these issues that you describe come to bear, how do we deal with the issues of diversity and cultural customs in these different areas?

Covey: Diversity is synergistic only if there is a common vision and a common set of values that are principle-centered. Otherwise, diversity will be counterproductive. And even though it will be a buzzword and people will give lip service to it, deep inside themselves, they will want to clone themselves and won't come to appreciate, value and celebrate differences. But if there is a common vision, a common purpose, a common set of principles that they can agree upon, then diversity becomes enormously unleashing of human talent, human potential, human creativity because how you get from here to there doesn't make any difference as long as you get there within the guidelines of a principle-centered value system.

QD: What would be the most important piece of career advice you could give to employees?

Covey: I would say get relevant and go back to school. Not necessarily in a formal school setting, but see life as an education, as literally a lifelong endeavor. Plan to invest hours every week, and perhaps a day or two every month, on nothing but intensive training and education. This training develops particularly the capacity to continue learning, the capacity to become more and more literate with today's technologies and the capacity of developing a culture that can also continually learn and grow to adapt to all of these new realities.

I believe that about one-fourth of the work force today is obsolete or almost obsolete, and that this is getting worse as the old paradigm persists that school is over when you finish school.

QD: What do you recommend to CEOs?

Covey: I recommend that CEOs get involved in a real commitment over time to the training and development of their people, to a major investment in people and in relationships, and to see people as an investment and not as a cost. Also to become deeply aware of the importance of supporting their communities and the education of the next generation-the families of their employees and the whole supportive network of all of their stakeholders. By these means, they begin to think in terms of a 360-degree trust toward everybody. The only way they can do this is to really have their leadership centered upon principles.

QD: Would you like to add anything?

Covey: Write your mother and clean your closets.

Tom Peters

Tom Peters describes himself as a gadfly, curmudgeon, champion of bold failures, prince of disorder, maestro of zest, professional loudmouth, corporate cheerleader, lover of markets and capitalist. His unconventional views led Business Week to describe him as business' "best friend and worst nightmare."

Peters followed up on the phenomenal success of In Search of Excellence with three more books-A Passion for Excellence, Thriving on Chaos, Liberation Management-which ranked at or near the top of the New York Times best-sellers list for years.

Peters is a graduate of Cornell (B.C.E., M.C.E.) and Stanford (M.B.A., Ph.D.), served on active duty in the U.S. Navy in Vietnam and Washington, was a senior White House drug abuse advisor in 1973­p;1974 and worked at McKinsey & Co. from 1974 to 1981.


QD:
The global marketplace and global competition have become buzzwords. How can readers get real about global competition and how it will affect business in the short term?

Peters: The real issue is how it will affect the individuals who are there in the audience because the biggest thing that's going on right now is that the whole notion of job security is changing radically, and changing for people who are vice presidents and managing directors, as well as people who are making automobiles and VCRs. We've seen it in the United States in this political season, and we're seeing it in Germany and Korea and Japan.

QD:
What would you say, then, is the most important issue that domestic and international businesses will face?

Peters:
The end of hierarchy, the end of careers as we knew them and perpetual job insecurity is the simple and terrifying answer. Literally, the information technology, the literal arrival, buzzphrase or not, of the global village, where no one is literally more than six-tenths of a second away from anybody else in communication terms, is changing the nature of what it means to do things together, do work together, do church together, do nonprofits together, do government together, in the most dramatic way. I'm inclined to say these changes are happening in the most profound way in several thousand years because the basic ideas of hierarchical organizations to get things done were really invented by the Chinese that many years ago.

QD:
When you speak in these other countries, what seems to ring most true for the audiences from your perspective?

Peters: It's a double-edged sword. I am a great respecter of cultural differences. I am a great believer in cultural differences, and so Koreans and Singaporeans take what I say with a grain of salt. I've lived in Silicon Valley for the last 25 years, and New Yorkers and Texans take what I say with a grain of salt, and they should. Individuals will have to take much more responsibility for their lives than they have in the past, whether they are Japanese, German or Korean.

That's a tough sell in a lot of countries. I mean, the United States was founded on the basis of individualism. People call our economy "cowboy capitalism." I don't think it is quite deserved, but certainly it's true relative to the highly controlled Korean economy or the relatively highly controlled French economy or what have you. Given the new technologies, a lot of issues are transcending national borders in a way that they haven't in the past.

QD: You said in The Pursuit of WOW! that the "It's not important unless it happens here" attitude from the United States is becoming a problem. What is Asia doing?

Peters: "It's not important unless it happens here" is an American problem, and it's also a German problem and a Japanese problem. The Japanese are just about as bad as we are in saying there is only one way to do things, and it's the Japanese way; and we say there is only one way to do things, and it's the American way. All of us have got to learn to open our eyes to a much more pure form of globalism.

But, back to the basic thrust of your question, I don't think many of us are taking Asia seriously enough. The world population as you and I speak is 5.8 billion people, and 3.6 billion of those people live in Asia. Asians are young: Something like 52 or 53 percent of the Asian population is under the age of 25, which is a dramatically different demographic statistic than that in western Europe or the United States. Literally 1.7 billion new Asian workers are coming on line in the next 20 years, and two-thirds of them are literate, and this will change everything.

QD: How are we going to deal with this diversity in cultural customs as we interact in these different environments?

Peters: Gingerly. A Dutch management consultant by the name of Fon Trompenaars wrote a fabulous book called Riding the Waves of Culture a couple of years ago. The book's first paragraph says, "For gosh sakes, don't ever listen to Peter Drucker or Tom Peters because they purely talk Americanism. Nothing that they're saying makes sense if you're outside of the United States." The Koreans are radically different from the Indonesians. The Japanese are radically different from the Chinese, and we're all different from the French, and we are all different from the Americans.

And so there is an absolute requirement that we not even take big-word attitudes, like issues of trust as saying that the American version of trust, is the same as the Japanese, or Korean or Chinese version of trust, because it isn't. Now, having said that, at the end of the day there's a lot to human beings that is relatively similar.

The first training program that I really ever put together after In Search of Excellence, something called Toward Excellence, went around the world, and people in India said it was the first program that was ever based on the principles of Hinduism. Some other group said it was the first one that's based on the principles of Islam. Somebody else said it was based on Catholicism, and here I am a lapsed Presbyterian.

The real point was that Bob Waterman and I, in In Search of Excellence, said respect for the fundamental dignity of the individual person, individual worker makes a heck a lot of sense. So there is a lot of commonality, and there are a lot of differences.

QD: That's encouraging. It actually sounds like we can interact constructively without getting lost in those issues that are overplayed in the media.

Peters:
Yes, you really do have to ride about 100 miles an hour down the track in opposite directions. That is being phenomenally sensitive to differences and at the same time-and I think Stephen is particularly good at this-being a little bit insistent about the fact that listening is listening, and, at some level, trust is trust, even though there are some ramifications that are very different from country to country.

Where you get into very thorny issues is, I remember reading in Trompenaars' book this fascinating thing, for example, that if you are riding with a friend, and the friend is speeding significantly and he or she is involved in a vehicle accident where somebody is hurt, do you tell the truth to the authorities about the fact that your friend was speeding when this person got hurt in the accident, or do you protect your friend?

In the United States, everybody said tell the "truth." That is the American version of truth about the speeding. And in several Asian countries in particular, only about 2 percent said tell that truth. The rest said protection of that friend, of the family, if you will, is No. 1. And so it does get very dicey, and to not acknowledge that is the height of head-in-the-sand-ism.

QD:
What career advice would you say is No. 1 given the conditions you've just described?

Peters: My career advice to employees is to assume you are going to be fired six months from now. The first thing the outplacement counselor will ask you to do is put together your résumé or curriculum vitae. How will it look? And are you working on something today that will be one of your "braggables" at the end of the year or at the end of 1997, or at the end of 1998?

Peter Senge

When Fortune magazine astutely predicted that "the most successful corporation of the 1990s will be something called a learning organization," it had the work of Peter Senge in mind. Senge is a worldwide authority on the emerging use of learning organization disciplines to create dramatic advances in the effectiveness of organizational structures and methods.
His best-selling book, The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization, touched a nerve in the international business community, reaching numerous best-seller lists. Senge has since co-authored The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook to meet the growing demand for practical, in-depth exercises.
Senge is director of the Center for Organizational Learning at MIT's Sloan School of Management.

QD: What is the most important issue facing domestic and international businesses today?

Senge:
I would say the system of management. That was the term that W. Edwards Deming used to like to use. A whole raft of assumptions, practices, norms: deeply embedded, highly tacit ways of operating in organizations-nonprofit or governmental organizations every bit as much as for-profit-that are fundamentally at odds with what will be necessary for the vitality, sustainability and health of those enterprises in the long term.

We still operate our businesses like 17th-century Newtonian mechanists in the sense that we tend to think and act in very particular ways. We have very particular images about control. For most people in most companies, what it means to be a manager is to be in control, and yet at another level, it's like saying, what it means to be an effective parent is I'm in control of my teenagers. Not many parents would say that. Why is it that some managers still think that way?

I believe that a deep set of changes is called for by organizations and those of us in organizations in terms of how we think and how we interact. We are not used to changes at that level. Most of the changes we try to engineer in our organizations come essentially from the outside in. Reorganizations, new strategies, reengineering, downsizing-these are all changes from the outside in. They are mandated usually from the top. They represent a set of forces intended to cause people to change as opposed to reversing it and thinking that the most profound changes really always come in a sense from the inside out through changes in people and particularly how people think and look at the world.

QD:
Are learning organizations able to transcend cultural boundaries-and, if so, how do they accomplish this?

Senge:
First off, learning organizations aren't things you can describe categorically and say they can do this or that, any more than you can say a good person can do this and a person who wasn't so good could do that. Those kinds of categorical statements miss the real point. If I could turn your question around, might the capabilities that people are seeking to develop in order for organizations to be more capable of learning make a real difference in how we work across cultural boundaries, or how might those capabilities need to be developed when we are dealing with multicultural settings?

One of the most important areas that will determine the success and failure of different businesses in the future will be their capacity to nurture deep understandings that transcend cultural boundaries. Americans are probably the least well-qualified of any advanced industrial society on the earth to undertake this because we arguably have the lowest level of cultural sensitivity of any major society on the earth. This really comes from a tremendous lack of experience in dealing with culture and multiple cultures. To really foster deep understanding across the diversity of cultures that are getting drawn into the global marketplace is an absolutely awesome undertaking, and we tend to think that it's going to be pretty easy.

We are going to need different language; we are going to need to have ways of talking that go way beyond what we can do today in English. We think English is a common language. It's only a common language in a sense that nickels and dimes might be recognized around the world. The quality of a conversation falls off dramatically if you force everybody to have it in English.

The superficiality, the discomfort that people have in expressing themselves in English, we've researched this for years in our work on systems thinking. If you could introduce people to a set of tools and methods that allow them to have penetrating conversations that don't require them to be highly fast on English, you'd suddenly find out big differences in views. These never come out. The non-English speakers will not feel comfortable expressing a reservation in English when they know they can't communicate their thoughts and feelings very well.

Dialogue is a core competence for learning to occur. What dialogue really represents is a sustained inquiry into our most unquestioned assumptions. Culture is a set of unquestioned assumptions, taken-for-granted views of how the world works. How can we expect to have cross-cultural conversations if we can't even inquire into our own cultural assumptions? Tools like dialogue and systems thinking lay a foundation for a cross-cultural learning capability.

QD: In The Fifth Discipline, you wrote about being part of a great team, a group of people who functioned together in an extraordinary way, who trusted one another, who complemented each other's strengths and compensated for each other's limitations, who had common goals that were larger than any of the individual goals and who produced extraordinary results. Why do people find such an experience so meaningful?

Senge:
There are several reasons why. When people reflect on their experience of being part of a profound team, it really has deep meaning to them. The first is kind of obvious, but it is worth noting, and that is that most of us have had such experiences. If we hadn't had such experiences, then believe me, it wouldn't have nearly as much meaning. It is a little bit like saying, "I want to tell you about a sunset. I know you have never seen a sunset, but let me describe it to you." You can't really reduce experience to concept.

In the West, in particular, and in industrial societies in general, a self is an isolated thing, separate in time and space from other selves. Experience as a profound team takes us outside of that definition of self. We actually experience the genuine degree of interdependence that exists in reality, but that we normally manage to hide from ourselves.

One of the funniest examples of this is the classic icon of the American individual: the automobile. People all around the world aspire to this standard: I'll have my own car and I will be able to do whatever I want; I'll be the master of my destiny from 7:30 to 8:30 every morning. The irony is that when we drive our symbol of individualism down the highway, our lives are in the hands of hundreds of strangers. If any of those strangers makes one crazy move, our life is over.

Earlier, you asked me what was the most fundamental issue facing businesses. I actually think the simplest way to respond to that is that we have business organizations, just as we have institutions of all sorts in our society, which have grown up based on deep assumptions of independence and are now trying to operate in a world that is profoundly interdependent. The changes that requires in us individually and collectively are beyond most of our imaginations.

It is like you grew up without a family, and now someone is going to introduce you to family life. "Oh, by the way, for the rest of your life, you now have a family." We are going to wake up and realize, as people knew very well 10,000 years ago, that to be alive is to be interdependent. We will discover that an awful lot of our practices, habits, structures, ways of doing things are profoundly dysfunctional and have been for a long, long time. We've all been telling ourselves the same lie: That a business is a business, and it's basically independent and as long as you please your investors, you are OK. Well, that is nonsense.

If you offend your customers, you are not OK, and if you don't build relationships with your suppliers, you are not OK, but it is much worse than that. If you don't start to think seriously about the community you operate in, you won't be OK in the long term. If you are not really concerned about the quality of education those kids are getting in that community, you won't have much of a future in that community because the community is not going to have much of a future. If you don't worry about what is happening with the families of those kids, the education system won't compensate for the fact that kids have nobody at home. And if you don't stop to think about the long-term effects of the things you are doing on the natural physical environment in which we operate, we won't be OK in the long term.