part of the event. Worse, the stunt didn't do anything to reinforce
some purpose, cause or belief that Pontiac represents. We had no
idea what Pontiac's WHY was before the stunt, so it’s hard for the
publicity stunt to do much more than, well, be a stunt to get some
publicity. With no sense of WHY, there is nothing else it's doing.
For a message to have real impact, to affect behavior and seed
loyalty, it needs more than publicity. It needs to publicize some
higher purpose, cause or belief to which those with similar values
and beliefs can relate. Only then can the message create any lasting
mass-market success. For a stunt to appeal to the left side of the
curve of the Law of Diffusion, WHY the stunt is being performed,
beyond the desire to generate press, must be clear. Though there
may be short-term benefits without clarity, loud is nothing more
than excessive volume. Or in business vernacular: clutter. And
companies wonder why differentiation is such a challenge these
days. Have you heard the volume coming from some of them?1
In contrast, what would have been the impact of Dr. King’s
speech had he not had a microphone and loudspeakers? His vision
would have been no less clear. His words would have been no less
inspiring. He knew what he believed and he spoke with passion and
charisma about that belief. But only the few people with front-row
seats would have been inspired by those words. A leader with a
cause, whether it be an individual or an organization, must have a
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megaphone through which to deliver his message. And it must be
clear and loud to work. Clarity of purpose, cause or belief is
important, but it is equally important that people hear you. For a
WHY to have the power to move people it must not only be clear, it
must be amplified to reach enough people to tip the scale.
It's no coincidence that the three-dimensional Golden Circle is a
cone. It is, in practice, a megaphone. An organization effectively
becomes the vessel through which a person with a clear purpose,
cause or belief can speak to the outside world. But for a megaphone
to work, clarity must come first. Without a clear message, what will
you amplify?
Say It Only If You Believe It
Dr. King used his megaphone to rally throngs of people to follow
him in pursuit of social justice. The Wright brothers used their
megaphone to rally their local community to help them build the
technology that could change the world. Thousands of people heard
John F. Kennedy's belief in service and rallied to put a man on the
moon in less than a decade. The ability to excite and inspire people
to go out of their way to contribute to something bigger than
themselves is not unique to social causes. Any organization is
capable of building a megaphone that can achieve a huge impact. In
fact, it is one of the defining factors that makes an organization
great. Great organizations don't just drive profits, they lead people,
and they change the course of industries and sometimes our lives in
the process.
A clear sense of WHY sets expectations. When we don't know an
organization's WHY, we don't know what to expect, so we expect
the minimum—price, quality, service, features—the commodity
stuff. But when we do have a sense for the WHY, we expect more.
For those not comfortable being held to a higher standard, I strongly
advise against trying to learn your WHY or keeping your Golden
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Circle in balance. Higher standards are hard to maintain. It requires
the discipline to constantly talk about and remind everyone WHY
the organization exists in the first place. It requires that everyone in
the organization be held accountable to HOW you do things—to
your values and guiding principles. And it takes time and effort to
ensure that everything you say and do is consistent with your
WHY. But for those willing to put in the effort, there are some great
advantages.
Richard Branson first built Virgin Records into a multibillion-
dollar retail music brand. Then he started a successful record label.
Later he started an airline that is today considered one of the pre-
mier airlines in the world. He then started a soda brand, wedding-
planning company, insurance company and mobile phone service.
And the list goes on. Likewise, Apple sells us computers, mobile
phones, DVRs and mp3 players, and has replicated their capacity
for innovation again and again. The ability of some companies not
to just succeed but to repeat their success is due to the loyal
followings they command, the throngs of people who root for their
success. In the business world, they say Apple is a lifestyle brand.
They underestimate Apple's power. Gucci is a lifestyle brand—
Apple changes the course of industries. By any definition these few
companies don't function like corporate entities. They exist as social
movements.
Repeating Greatness
Ron Bruder is not a household name, but he is a great leader. In
1985, he stood at a crosswalk with his two daughters waiting for the
light to change so they could cross the street. A perfect opportunity,
he thought, to teach the young girls a valuable life lesson. He
pointed across the street to the red glow of the "Do Not Walk" signal
and asked them what they thought that sign meant. "It means we
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164
have to stand here," they replied. "Are you sure?" he asked
rhetorically. "How do you know it's not telling us to run?"
Soft-spoken and almost always wearing a well-tailored three- piece
suit when he comes to work, Bruder looks like you would imagine a
conservative executive to look like. But don't assume you know how
things work simply based on what you see. Bruder is anything but a
stereotype. Though he has enjoyed the trappings of success, he is not
motivated by them. They have always been the unintended by-
product of his work. Bruder is driven by a clear sense of WHY. He
sees a world in which people accept the lives they live and do the
things they do not because they have to, but because no one ever
showed them an alternative. This is the lesson he was teaching his
daughters that day at the crosswalk—there is always another
perspective to be considered. That Bruder always starts with WHY
has enabled him to achieve great things for himself. But more
significantly, it is his ability to share his WHY through the things he
does that inspires those around him to do great things for
themselves.
Like most of us, the career path Bruder has followed is incidental.
But WHY he does things has never changed. Everything Bruder has
ever done starts with his WHY, his unyielding belief that if you can
simply show someone that an alternative route is possible, it can
open the possibility that such a route can be followed. Though the
work he is doing today is world-altering, Bruder hasn't always been
in the world peace business. Like many inspiring leaders, he has
changed the course of an industry. But Ron Bruder is no one-hit
wonder. He has been able to repeat his success and change the
course of multiple industries, multiple times.
A senior executive at a large food conglomerate that sold vege-
tables, canned goods and meats decided to buy a travel agency for
his nephew. He asked Bruder, as the chief financial officer of the
company at the time, to take a look at the financials of the agency
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165
before he went through with the purchase. Seeing an opportunity
others didn't, Bruder decided to join the small travel agency to help
lead it. Once there, he saw how all the other travel agencies worked
and took an alternative course. Greenwell became the first travel
agency on the eastern seaboard to take advantage of new technolo-
gies and fully computerize their operations. Not only did they be-
come one of the most successful companies in the region, but after
only a year, their business model became a standard for the whole
industry. Then Bruder did it again.
A former client of Bruder's, Sam Rosengarten, was in some dirty
businesses—coal, oil and gas; all industries that created brown-
fields, land that had been contaminated by their operations. Little
could be done with brownfields. They were too polluted to develop,
and the liability to clean them up was so high that the insurance
premiums alone made it too prohibitive to even try. But Bruder
doesn't see challenges the same way as everyone else. Most avoided
brownfields because they could only see the cost to clean them up.
Bruder focused instead on the actual cleaning. His alternative
perspective revealed the perfect solution.
Bruder had already formed his real estate development
company, Brookhill, and with eighteen employees, he was doing
quite well. Knowing what he needed to do to seize the opportunity,
he approached Dames & Moore, one of the largest environmental
engineering companies in the world, and shared his new
perspective with them. They loved his idea and formed a
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