
412: Kevin Sharer (Former CEO of Amgen) - What Operational Excellence Looks Like
from The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk
by Ryan Hawk
Published: Sun Mar 28 2021
Show Notes
Text LEARNERS to 44222...
Full show notes at www.LearningLeader.com
Twitter/IG: @RyanHawk12 https://twitter.com/RyanHawk12
Kevin Sharer has a distinguished career as a successful CEO and Board Member. He is currently a senior lecturer at Harvard University Business School and continues to mentor a select number of senior executives. Either as a Chairman, independent director, or mentor, Sharer has been a part of more than 20 successful CEO-successor transitions. Kevin led Amgen for 20 years, first as President and then as CEO for 12 years. Under Sharer's leadership, the company achieved annual revenue of $16 billion with operations in 55 countries.
Notes:
- "What Operational Excellence Looks Like" 
- Must know the details
 - Must have a listening system to know where problems brew
 - The leaders have a clear agreement with the team on what success is
 - A cadence of clear communication
 - The leader must embody the behavior... They are the model
 - Must have real empathy for people and care about them
 
 - The leader needs to assess when things go wrong so that they don't make the same mistake twice...
 - Kevin spent 110 days underwater in a submarine...
 - When he left the Navy, he knew he wanted to be a manager. He joined a program at AT&T to become one... 
- He had an ambition to rise high in an organization
 
 - Kevin's dad - A military aviator. His hero and role model. his dad cared a lot about leadership...
 - How did Kevin earn the CEO role at Amgen? 
- Spent 8 years as the President of the company. And "made it pretty obvious" to hire him for the CEO role
 - He consistently delivered results and formed a strong partnership with the CEO
 
 - How to sustain what's special about a company as it grows? 
- The book Built to Last by Jim Collins was very helpful....
 
 - How to create and live your values? 
- They are not defined by what's written down, it's the behavior of the people. And that starts at the top...
 - Understand what your real values are. If you don't believe in the values, you shouldn't work there...
 - You "have to have social data to know that the values are real." Ask others in the organization: "Are the values you experience consistent with the values stated by the company?"
 
 - How he got hired as the President at Amgen? 
- "I first decided that I wanted to be a General Manager and not a functional specialists." Kevin pursued that through General Electric and got great experience...They hired him in part because of his broad range of experience.
 - It was a multi-step interview process. Kevin interviewed with 20 people at the company before getting the offer...
 
 - Listening ability: Kevin went from bad to great... "On the way up in my career, I had the view that I was so fast, so smart... It was working. I thought I was being helpful by telling others what I thought, but I was cutting off the full picture."
 - Kevin had an eye opening moment when he asked the CEO of IBM to talk about leadership with his team... 
- "I learned to listen for comprehension. Listen to understand first."
 - "You need to listen to the entire eco-system."
 
 - Big idea: Pick 10 CEOs who didn't make it: "Seven of them weren't situationally aware."
 - What are some "must-have" hiring qualities? 
- A record of good knowledge
 - Great communication skill
 - Comfort in their own skin
 - Curious - they must ask questions
 - Answer the question, "what are your goals?"
 - Answer the question, "what have you learned from failure?"
 - "If five people were asked about you, what would they say?"
 - Their accomplishments speak for themselves. They don't have to overly sell themselves
 - They need to "clearly want the job."
 - A good sense of humor
 
 - Hiring trap: "There is a bias for us to hire people like us. It's overwhelming. We're wired to think, "other is dangerous." We must be aware of that."