She also offers some excellent HR and organization learnings:
“Our talent academy was the envy of American industry. In fact, nine senior executives were recruited away between 2014 to 2020 to become CEOs of other companies. But thanks to our systematic talent development processes, we had a strong bench of executives ready to step in.”
“In hindsight, I think I kept some people in the jobs for too long, hoping they would improve or change. During a transformation, these people can be extremely problematic. I now realize that it’s better to move them out sooner rather than later.”
“Percy’s (ABB CEO when Indra was an employee, also named European CEO of the Year) leadership style was unique: he decentralized the company into entities and gave senior managers complete control. Then he’d come down like a ton of bricks if they didn’t deliver.”
When the promoter of Motorola, her past employer, asked her to stay back, she said, “I didn’t want to leave, but I didn’t feel like I was having an impact. All I wanted was to see the results of my work.” [She had made an excellent strategy presentation that everyone loved, but after 9 months there was hardly any action].
“I decided to write to the parents of my senior executives. Over the next ten years, I wrote hundreds of notes, thanking mothers and fathers for the gift of their child to Pepsico…and to the spouses for sharing their husband or wife with Pepsico… These letters unleashed a lot of emotion.”
Nooyi shares how “when I stepped up to champion diversity and inclusion, my own ethnicity and gender were front and center… If an Indian American was hired into a management job, … there were disparaging comments (“this must be Indra’s contact”). And if any contract went to an Indian company, complaints came on Speak Up line, “that the job went to my relatives”. “It was disheartening but amusing in its own disturbing way”
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