Franchise Update Magazine Issue IV, 2012 | Page 9

lieve leadership starts with your brain and mindset. I try to lead by example with the energy, work ethic, service, and hard work I bring each day and to truly try and help paint a picture for others of where we are headed. I’m not sure there is a classical term for this. I have a degree in operations, but I believe I learned how to lead from working on my visionary master’s, I guess. Part of leadership is having an understanding that you are never “there”—you never arrive as a leader—you must commit to working at it daily. What has inspired your leadership style? I have had a lot of positive influ- ences in my life, starting with the work ethic instilled by my parents from a very young age. I have also had great mentors from the family of Two Men and a Truck as I started here as an intern at MSU. They were instrumental in developing me as both a business person and family man. What is your biggest leadership challenge? My biggest challenge is to help grow our brand while still maintaining the agility and flexibility to adapt to our ever-changing world. We must all work toward becoming comfortable being uncomfortable with the world we live in today. My challenge is to maintain our vision and course in uncharted waters ahead—an exciting challenge for sure! How do you transmit your culture from your office to front-line employees? It starts with our core purpose, mission statement, and core values. Clarity, communication, and consistency in actions help synthesize our culture organizationwide. Since day one we have focused on customer service; this is the foundation for all our decisions relative to how it affects the customer. We are also very transparent and share many key metrics across the franchise system. This transparency from day one has helped instill a culture of openness, as well. Where is the best place to prepare for leadership: an MBA school or OTJ? I do not have an MBA so I can’t speak directly to that experience. I started as an intern and grew with the organization, so I definitely see where on-thejob experience is key—particularly in operations. I am always learning and reading, so I think you need a good balance of academia and experience to prepare you to lead. In my opinion, leadership is a mindset that starts with the individual making the choice first then selecting the avenues to get there. Are tough decisions best taken by one person? I believe there should be an owner for every decision made. That is leadership, but we have a saying around here that our founder Mary Ellen Sheets coined: “All of us are smarter than one of us.” I firmly believe in obtaining input from key subject matter experts before making a tough call. How do you make tough decisions? Being an engineer by education, I always try to review each decision objectively. For tough decisions, I seek to involve key people from the organization for their input and expertise, look at factual information surrounding the system, and at the end of the day I look at the pros and cons and consider the worst-case outcome as the result of this decision. Beginning with the end in mind sometimes makes it easier to figure out how to respond in a tough situation. Do you want to be liked or respected? I think human nature tends to drive people toward wanting to be liked, but I believe that, from a business perspective, Bill Cosby is right on with the quote, “I don’ B