Contented Cows Still Give Better Milk
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Contented Cows Still Give Better Milk

The Plain Truth about Employee Engagement and Your Bottom Line

Bill Catlette, Richard Hadden

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eBook - ePub

Contented Cows Still Give Better Milk

The Plain Truth about Employee Engagement and Your Bottom Line

Bill Catlette, Richard Hadden

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About This Book

How to foster happier employees for a healthier bottom line

Managers could learn a lot from a message echoed by generations of dairy farmers: "Contented cows give better milk." This book is not, repeat, not a management tome. In this fully revised and expanded edition to a book which absolutely, positively makes the case that treating people right is one of the best things any business can do for its bottom line, Contented Cows Still Give Better Milk offers sound, practical advice for those who know that their reputation as an employer is as important as bandwidth.

  • Offers updated case studies and new examples from on-site research in a number of real organizations, as well as inspiring examples of companies that know how to do it right... and few that didn't
  • Fad-free prescriptive advice informed by the authors' combined four-plus decades of training and consulting with thousands of managers and employees, conducting employee engagement surveys, and translating the attendant learning to management audiences in a form they can appreciate and use
  • Coauthor Bill Catlette's Bottom Line Leadership Seminar has helped thousands of managers become more effective leaders

Direct from the horse's... actually cow's mouth, this fully revised and expanded second edition will teach readers that having a focused, engaged, and capably led workforce is one of the best things any organization can do for its bottom line.

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Information

Publisher
Wiley
Year
2012
ISBN
9781118331804
Edition
2
Subtopic
Gestión

PART I

The Premise

CHAPTER 1

Just the Facts

Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own set of facts.
—James Schlesinger
Every year, respected business publications like Fortune, INC, and Bloomberg BusinessWeek rank (in seemingly endless ways) those companies that are doing the best job in their chosen industry or niche. We read about the “Most Admired” and “Most Innovative,” the “Customer Service Champs,” the ones generating the “Highest Shareholder Return,” the “Fastest Growing,” the XYZ 500, and the list goes on.
We can’t help but notice that in this blizzard of rankings and ratings the same organizations seem to take home the trophies year after year—companies such as Coca-Cola, Disney, Google, Southwest Airlines, Intel, and Procter & Gamble. We certainly don’t think that the frequency of their presence has anything to do with shortcuts that writers or editors of these publications take. No, there’s something else at work.
Outside the corporate boardroom, but certainly no less engaged in the world of business, lies the arena of professional sports. Here, too, there is a fairly short list of perennial overachiever teams such as the Boston Celtics, New England Patriots, and Chicago Cubs.
You’re still thinking about that last name, aren’t you? We were just checking to see if you’re awake. We can still hope for the Cubbies, though, right?
What we find among persistent winners in just about any labor-intensive endeavor is that an extremely high ratio of them also happens to have adopted leadership habits that make the organization a great place to work—not an easy place to work, but a very good one. Our passion has been to study many of these firms over the past three decades, and it’s been our pleasure to work with a few of them up close and personal. It is truly impressive to encounter a workplace where people are hitting on all cylinders—whether your vantage point is that of an insider, a customer, or as we’re about to prove yet again, a shareholder.
Since 1982, Fortune magazine has published an annual listing of what it calls the “Most Admired Corporations,” a ranking—overall and by industry—of those organizations with the best business reputations. It is now produced in both domestic U.S. and global versions. Corporate executives, outside directors, and financial analysts judge companies according to the following criteria:
  • Product quality
  • Global competitiveness
  • Value as a long-term investment
  • Use of corporate assets
  • Financial soundness
  • Innovation
  • Social responsibility
  • People management
The top 15 companies on the 2012 “Global Most Admired” list are Apple, Google, Amazon.com, Coca-Cola, IBM, Federal Express, Berkshire Hathaway, Starbucks, Procter & Gamble, Southwest Airlines, McDonald’s, Johnson & Johnson, Disney, BMW, and General Electric.
A reasonably astute observer might suggest that this list consists of some of the best brands on earth, and it does.
Likewise, it would be fair to say that nearly all of the companies atop this list also happen to be regarded as truly exceptional places to work. In fact, 13 of them have also been formally recognized (most of them more than once) as one of the very best places to work by Fortune, Glassdoor, BusinessWeek, or comparable rating media. Similarly, none of the firms regarded as best places to work shows up in (or anywhere near) the bottom 50 on Fortune’s “Most Admired” list. Rather, some of the companies at the bottom of that list are also regarded as especially unattractive places to work.
As more than casual observers of these relationships for better than 15 years (indeed the first version of this book cited the comparison in 1998), we can affirm that this finding is anything but an aberration.
Yet, being selected onto lists of this sort involves a fair amount of subjective judgment, even when that judgment considers the opinions of large numbers of one’s peers. Hence, we’ve made it a point to analyze further by looking for consistency in an organization’s record. We also examine “harder” data, such as financial performance comparisons between those firms with great workplace reputations relative to benchmarked norms.
Here again, the conclusions are clear: those publicly held firms with good workplace reputations tend to outperform both their immediate peers and aggregate financial benchmarks on a long-term basis—something that’s proved true in both “down” and “up” economic cycles. As a case in point, during the period 1997–2010, which included two up and two down cycles, the publicly held “100 Best Companies to Work For” outperformed both the S&P 500 and the Russell 3000 benchmark indices by a 4:1 margin.
Take away my factories, and I will build a new and better factory; but take away my people, and grass will grow on the factory floor.
—Andrew Carnegie
In the first edition of this book in 1998, we identified six companies, (the Contented Cows), that enjoyed well-earned reputations as employers of choice. We paired them with six competitors that didn’t have quite the same workplace reputation (the Common Cows). We conducted a rigorous comparison of their sales growth, earnings, productivity, and return to shareholders over a 10-year period (1986–1995). The Contented Cows outgrew, outearned, and in general, outperformed the Common Cows by a substantial margin.
After the book was published, we extended the comparison period to test the results by including the impact of the 2000 recession and found that the advantages of the Contented Cows became even more compelling. Over the 15-year comparison period, the Contented Cows outgrew their counterparts by a 10:1 margin, outearned them by $111 billion, generated 16 times as much wealth for shareholders, and created tens of thousands more sustainable jobs.
To mollify those who might suggest that we had somehow managed to pick the right comparison companies and time period to advance our theory, we initiated an exercise whose outcome we couldn’t control. Specifically, we challenged the management of the Fidelity Investments Magellan Fund to a 12-month head-to-head contest. The challenge was that our little mythical Contented Cows Mutual Fund—which consisted of publicly held employers of choice and was comanaged by a friend who had just obtained his broker’s license—could go head to head with what was then the biggest mutual fund on the planet.
The odds of this being a fair fight were slim. Our offer was that Fidelity could make the rules and that the loser would donate $1,000 to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. After being ignored by Magellan fund manager Bob Stansky, we implemented the challenge unilaterally (after all, mutual funds report their Net Asset Values on a daily basis) and dutifully reported the comparative results every quarter on our ContentedCows.com website.
Do you know how it turned out? Of course, you do. (We’re telling you about it, aren’t we? Do you really think we’d be bringing it up if we lost?) The Contented Cows fund beat Magellan by 8.8 percent over the period—and to be good sports, we made the donation anyway.
So there you have it. Contented Cows really do give better milk.
Since then, we have travelled the globe advising corporate leadership teams and association management audiences about the very real, tangible benefits of treating people right. We’ve defined for them in vivid detail just what “right” means and offered straightforward, executable prescriptions for attaining those same results.
People have asked periodically if we thought it might be time to update the story. In general, we have resisted (okay, Bill has resisted), largely on the grounds that once you know that 2 + 2 = 4, there is no need to continually reprove it. Moreover, the basic tenets of leadership are virtually timeless.
Yet we have realized after a decade of hearing this question—with the help of our editor, Lauren Murphy—that readers aren’t so much interested in a rejustification of the Contented Cows axiom; instead, they are asking for some fresh examples and fresh stories, with maybe a little reaffirmation of the original premise. There is only so much you can hear about the Southwests and FedExes before you ask, “Is that all there is? Doesn’t anybody else get these things right?”
Therein lies the challenge. Although each of us is an optimist, we are also realists. Practicality reminds us that for every company like Southwest Airlines that has proved in spades that a fired-up workforce is indeed a potent competitive weapon—and that paying customers shouldn’t be locked in cramped spaces with grumpy employees—there are a thousand others who either fail to grasp the concept or lack the discipline to faithfully execute it. So although it’s not exactly a search for a needle in a haystack, it can be difficult finding real, bona fide exemplars.
It wouldn’t be as hard if you could just go to the lists of the annually announced best places to work and accept them at face value, but you can’t. Rather, we won’t, because there are more than a few organizations that have managed either to game the system in order to achieve recognition or have had the good fortune of a strong, short-lived tailwind. We’re more interested in those that have demonstrated over a long period, through good times and bad, that credible leadership practices are deeply embedded in their business strategy. That is precisely why we’ve only now opted to include Google, a relative newcomer, on our list of Contented Cows.
Admittedly, there is a good deal of subjectivity involved in first defining what an employer of choice actually is. Serious consternation comes into play when determining which organizations legitimately qualify. We rely on essentially three sources to separate the Contented Cows from the rest of the herd:
1. Credible “best places to work” types of lists, such as Glassdoor’s “Best Places to Work—Employees’ Choice Awards,” Bloomberg BusinessWeek’s “Best Places to Launch a Career,” and Fortune magazine’s annual ranking of the “100 Best Companies to Work For,” compiled by The Great Place to Work Institute.
2. Our colleagues in the Society for Human Resource Management, with whom we’ve consulted extensively on the subject.
3. Our own judgment based on 50-plus years of combined business experience. In the final analysis, we asked ourselves: “Is this a company that we would recommend to a good friend or family member who was looking for a job?”
One message we’ve gotten loud and clear from readers and others who have been kind enough to offer suggestions is that although you want to hear about more of the positive exemplars, you don’t have a need to hear as much about comparison companies whose workplace reputations don’t quite measure up. So we’ve taken a slightly different approach with this edition.
Specifically, we have doubled the complement of Contented Cows and in general benchmarked their performance against respected broader indices rather than individual industry peers.
As you can see from the list that follows, we have again incorporated organizations representing the broad spectrum of commerce, to include the manufacturing, service, and distribution sectors. There are two each from health care, technology, energy, and hospitality; three from the food world; and one from entertainment/media. Some are old, some new; some quite large, others smallish in size. Most operate internationally, and two of the firms are headquartered outside the United States. With the exception of employee-owned Publix, all are publicly held. In short, they are quite representative of the commercial landsc...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Contents
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. Introduction
  8. Part I: The Premise
  9. Part II: Contented Cows Are Committed
  10. Part III: Contented Cows Are Cared About
  11. Part IV: Contented Cows Are Enabled
  12. Index
Citation styles for Contented Cows Still Give Better Milk

APA 6 Citation

Catlette, B., & Hadden, R. (2012). Contented Cows Still Give Better Milk, Revised and Expanded (2nd ed.). Wiley. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/1002286/contented-cows-still-give-better-milk-revised-and-expanded-the-plain-truth-about-employee-engagement-and-your-bottom-line-pdf (Original work published 2012)

Chicago Citation

Catlette, Bill, and Richard Hadden. (2012) 2012. Contented Cows Still Give Better Milk, Revised and Expanded. 2nd ed. Wiley. https://www.perlego.com/book/1002286/contented-cows-still-give-better-milk-revised-and-expanded-the-plain-truth-about-employee-engagement-and-your-bottom-line-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Catlette, B. and Hadden, R. (2012) Contented Cows Still Give Better Milk, Revised and Expanded. 2nd edn. Wiley. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/1002286/contented-cows-still-give-better-milk-revised-and-expanded-the-plain-truth-about-employee-engagement-and-your-bottom-line-pdf (Accessed: 14 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Catlette, Bill, and Richard Hadden. Contented Cows Still Give Better Milk, Revised and Expanded. 2nd ed. Wiley, 2012. Web. 14 Oct. 2022.