In 2019, a three-year-old boy walked with his mother into a Florida Best Buy store, clutching a toy dinosaur that Santa had given him for Christmas. Only, the dinosaur’s head had broken, and now tears were streaming down the boy’s face as his mother explained to two sales associates that he was desperate to get the toy fixed.
“At any other store, they would have been directed to the toy aisle to buy a replacement,” says Hubert Joly, Best Buy’s former chairman and CEO, who is now a senior lecturer of business administration at Harvard Business School. “But that’s not what happened in that store.”
Instead, the sales associates—nicknamed “blue shirts” after Best Buy’s trademark royal-blue collared shirts—brought the injured T. rex to a service counter and performed “surgery” on the toy as they surreptitiously traded it out for a new one.
“You can imagine the joy the child felt?” Joly asks. “But, do you think that was standard operating procedure? No! What happened that day is that the two blue shirts found it in their hearts to do this, and felt they had the latitude to do it.”
Stopping Best Buy’s freefall
Creating such a human-centered connection among employees and customers is at the core of the near-miraculous turnaround Joly spearheaded at the company during the 2010s. Joly stepped in as CEO of Best Buy in 2012, just after its quarterly profits plummeted by 91 percent and its stock price hit a nine-year low. With Joly’s focus on customer service, aggressive price-matching, and new offerings like the Geek Squad, the company’s stock tripled in 2013.
The same human connection Joly cultivated at Best Buy can be found in the pages of his new book, The Heart of Business: Leadership Principles for the Next Era of Capitalism, co-written with Caroline Lambert. The book, which published May 4, aims to reverse some of the damage done by other cutthroat leaders who have taken a slash-and-burn approach to business.
“So much of what I learned when I was at business school, or in my early years as an executive, is either wrong or dated or, at best, incomplete,” Joly says. At the top of his list of leaders who imparted the wrong lessons are Milton Friedman, who believed companies should prioritize their stock prices, and Bob McNamara, the inventor of top-down management, who measured his way to success with ruthless efficiency.
“They figured a company is owned by shareholders and is a money-making machine,” he says. “But no, a company is a human organization made up of individuals working together in pursuit of a goal.”
Leading with purpose and humanity
Based on his own track record in transforming Best Buy, Joly wrote this book to help leaders who value the role that employees play in delighting customers and growing their businesses.
“The book is really constructed as a guide for leaders who are eager to abandon the old ways and are ready to embrace leading from a place of purpose and humanity,” Joly says. “I really wanted to share a thoughtful and practical architecture of what, in my view, we need to move the world forward.”
Of course, pulling off such an ambitious effort is easier said than done. At Best Buy, Joly didn’t start with the traditional turnaround playbook of laying off employees and closing unprofitable stores. Rather, he took measures to boost revenues: matching prices at Amazon, and speeding deliveries by shipping directly from stores. He also cut costs by reducing waste and streamlining processes.
“We were breaking $200 million-worth of TVs every year,” he says. “By improving packaging, we reduced that [number] by 50 percent.”
Fewer slides, more soul-searching
Perhaps what’s most important, he instituted a training program that cast aside PowerPoint presentations and videos and replaced them with soul-searching conversations between both executives and front-line employees about their purpose in life.
“We discovered that we were colleagues, yes, but we were also human beings, and most of us were aligned on this idea of doing something good in the world. So we said, ‘Let’s use Best Buy as a platform for that.’”
Instead of seeing the company as a consumer electronics retailer, Joly and his team refocused the company’s purpose as “enriching people’s lives through technology by addressing key human needs.” Best Buy’s competitive advantage had always been the unique customer service provided by its sales associates, but that only mattered if they truly wanted to help customers. So, in trainings, blue shirts were asked to think of an inspiring friend in their lives.
“For me, it’s my brother Philippe,” Joly says. “He is such a generous soul and a great life coach, always focused on finding the best in you and bringing joy to life.”
Sales associates were then asked to be that “inspiring friend” for their customers—helping them solve their problems and improving their lives through technology. “Then, when a customer walks into the store, they’re not a walking wallet. They are a human being, and you can help them,” says Joly.
Five steps to harnessing human connection
That mindset shift took hold across the company, giving employees a greater sense of joy and autonomy in their work, and attracting customers with a new service-oriented approach. Along the way, the company’s share price grew from a low of $11 in 2012 to $110 by 2020.
In his book, Joly says the guide is one any company can follow, and he distills the formula down to five key ingredients:
- Connecting employees with what drives them, and this is usually focused around finding ways to make the world a better place;
- Creating genuine human connection among employees and customers;
- Giving autonomy to team members, as much as possible, rather than scripting what to do;
- Instituting one-on-one coaching to give employees individual training and feedback; and
- Creating a growth mindset to continue to improve.
“That’s the recipe,” says Joly, who reinforces it throughout the book with exercises that readers can use to guide themselves through the process. “It’s all about humanity. Changing the world starts with changing ourselves.”
At HBS, Joly is now working with other faculty to create a new program for senior executives to help them unlearn some of the toxic profit-focused lessons of a traditional business education and replace them with new lessons centered on human connection.
“The mistake that many leaders, myself included, have made is that they lead with their brains,” he says. “But what’s at the heart of business? Well, it’s the heart. It’s people.”
About the Author
Michael Blanding is a writer based in the Boston area.
[Image: iStockphoto/Elijah-Lovkoff]
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