Business Stripped Bare (3 page)

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Authors: Richard Branson

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Good people have always been at the heart of the Virgin business, and that's largely because we have tried to keep our businesses small, and our management teams tight-knit. I feel that small, compact companies are, generally, better run. This is partly because people feel more connected in smaller companies.
In an ideal business environment, everybody should have a rough idea of what everyone else is going through. People should be free to talk. Banter is essential. Anonymous, over-formal, regimented surroundings produce mediocre results. Niggling problems either fester, or they end up on your desk. No one runs that extra mile for you.
And there's another thing you should take into consideration: if your people aren't talking to each other, how are they ever going to get ideas? It was the physicist Albert Einstein who said: 'What a person does on his own, without being stimulated by the thoughts and experiences of others, is even in the best cases rather paltry and monotonous.'
There are few places more depressing than a room full of people who have nothing to say to each other.
So put people together in a way that will have them bouncing ideas off each other, befriending each other, and taking care of each other, and suddenly they are coming to you, not with gripes and problems, but with solutions and great ideas
.
Of course, there'll be friction. People working in small teams, in close proximity with each other, will rub each other up the wrong way from time to time. But nothing festers. Nothing stalls. People get over their problems. They come into work curious about what the day will bring. They're not having to contend with that dreadful, low-level headache that comes from not quite connecting with the people with whom they're spending most of their day.
As a manager, you're going to need a modest amount of psychological insight to build great management teams. But practice pays off, and you don't have to agonise over finding exceptional 'characters'. Given the right conditions, exceptional people will reveal themselves. The buzz of Virgin's early years was generated by a diverse mixture of incredible characters. I remember the brilliant Simon Draper, a student from South Africa who became the music buyer for our fledgling business. At Virgin Records, he was our musical sounding board. He was hip, cool, loved music and therefore had an unerring ability for finding fantastic music. He signed some of our best bands, and the music he fostered was the bedrock of our success.
There's another thing about teams: they don't last for ever. Think of a team as being like the cast in a theatrical play. Actors who work too long together on the same show for too long grow stale. When the business lets you, shake things up a little.
In the early days, when one of our Virgin companies ended up employing more than a hundred staff, I would ask to see the deputy managing director, the deputy sales manager and the deputy marketing director. I would say to them: 'You are now the managing director, the sales manager and the marketing director of a new company.' Then we would split the company in two. And when either of those companies got to a hundred people, I would once again ask to see the deputies and split the company again.
Virgin Records birthed nearly twenty different companies in the Notting Hill area of London. Each one would be independent and competing in the marketplace, but they would share the same accounts and invoicing department. Being the managing director of something small – rather than the assistant to the assistant MD of something big – gave people more clout. They were able to take pride in their successes, and they had to learn quickly and well from their failures. They were offered incentives according to how well they did. Although each company was relatively small, collectively the group turned into the largest independent record company in the world, and the most successful. If we'd kept everyone in the same building, I don't think we would have generated the ideas that led to our success.
Even today, each Virgin company is relatively small, although our airlines and train businesses, by their very nature, have grown significantly. I can't say that I know everyone's name now – indeed, it's been a while since that was the case, but we have tried to retain a culture of intimacy. If we set up a new airline we create a completely separate, stand-alone entity. Virgin Blue in Australia, Virgin Atlantic and Virgin America are independent companies. Our new airline in Russia will be independent, as is Virgin Nigeria, although we have pulled in technical people from Virgin Atlantic to help establish it. We pass and exchange expertise at arm's length. This makes the Virgin Group a fascinating environment for people who work in the airline businesses. One year Virgin people might be working in Britain or South Africa, the next spending time down under in Australia. This is a wonderful way of keeping hold of good people for longer. At Virgin, secondment is a way of life. There has to be a bit of give and take because some of our companies have different ownership structures. But our managing directors usually realise their people can benefit from a cross-fertilisation of ideas and culture.
There is nothing more demoralising than to work your pants off, only for strangers to be promoted to the senior positions you aspire to. At Virgin, we keep business in the family wherever we can, and we promote from within. The woman who was the managing director of Virgin's recording division started work for Virgin at the Manor Recording Studios; she was the cleaning lady. The manager of the Kasbah, our hotel in Asni, Morocco, first demonstrated her winning ways with people as a masseuse on Virgin Atlantic.
By 1995, I estimated some thirty people had become millionaires or multimillionaires as a result of starting Virgin businesses – and this didn't include the hundred or so musicians who became millionaires through record sales. Since then we can probably say that another eighty Virgin people have become millionaires in our businesses. This reward is just a by-product of success in business.
It's a fact of business life that people come and go. The offer of better prospects or career advancement elsewhere will naturally draw good people away from time to time. But what about the others – the ones who leave in order to do much the same thing, for much the same money, elsewhere? What went wrong?
Managers often assume it's a question of pay. This is lazy of them. Yes, money is important. It's essential to pay people fairly for the job they do, and to share out the profits of a company's success. But throwing money at people isn't the point. When people leave a good company, it's often because they don't feel good themselves. They feel marginalised. They feel ignored. They feel underused. Few people spend every spare hour scouring the jobs pages hunting for a higher salary. Most are driven back into the jobs market by frustration. Their bosses don't listen to them.
If you have a strong business idea and it falls on stony ground, there is only one possible response: 'Sod it, I'm fed up with this lot. I'm getting out of here.'
So – managers should listen more?
It wouldn't do any harm. At Virgin Blue, our Australian domestic air carrier, founder Brett Godfrey's management method dictates that all of the management team have to get out once every three months and 'chuck bags'. This means that they turn out at 4 a.m. and do a full shift with the baggage people. That way they get to understand the problems and the hassles of the job. And because turnaround time is so vital, he also wants to involve and reward the baggage handlers too. Brett has given them bigger incentives to help with getting the planes back on the runway again. He calls them the 'Pit Crew' and has decked them all out in Ferrari red. In some airports baggage handlers have been viewed as the lowest of the low. Not at Virgin Blue.
For my own part, I always make it a rule, when I'm in a city, to stay, if possible, where the cabin crews hang out. I'm a regular at the Holiday Inn at Potts Point, Sydney, which has certainly enjoyed better days, but its location is superb. I'll stay there with 200 of our cabin crew, so I can spend time with them and hear how they're doing, and if there's anything we should be looking into.
But we're still missing the point. Maybe your manager
is
a good listener. Maybe your manager is listening too much, to too many people at once, in too much detail. The thing is, if you have a good business idea, why should you have to ask permission every time? Why can't you just carry it out? Why can't you show it off to your manager in action? Why won't people give you the freedom to try, to succeed, even (horrors) to make mistakes?
At Virgin, we try as far as we can to make people feel as if they are working for their own company. Our more senior people have share stakes or options in the companies they run and, as a result, we've created a lot of very successful people over the years. But however our staff are employed, every one of them should feel that, in some respect or other, they own their own work.
Within reason, this is more important to people than their salary. I'll give you an example: Qantas's cabin crew earn $66,400 a year on average based on 'seniority'! Virgin Blue's much younger crews get $40,000. Our crews clock in for over 700 hours a year. Qantas's work for just 660 hours. This difference is likely to be eroded over time as the business matures, but in the meantime Virgin Blue's customers are reaping the advantage in lower fares.
How is this possible? Are Virgin Blue's staff of poorer quality?
Not a bit of it. Some people think airline hospitality is an easy job, and maybe it is – on paper. I've tried being an airline steward for a few days and I know just how hard it is. To get it right and have people come back again and again, the staff have to be absolute perfectionists in terms of their customer-service ability. So whereas at some airlines you could literally go into a pub on a Saturday night, hand out some business cards, train a few people up and that would be it, Virgin Blue puts its guest-facing crew through a rigorous five-stage recruitment process.
Why would they go through all that for a lower salary? Because Brett has introduced a reward system on Virgin Blue. Instead of creating a climate of fear, he has set things up so that the cabin attendants can take responsibility for their actions. He calls it 'First to Know, First to Fix', so that if cabin crew sort things out and it is recognised then they get a free flight ticket, which they can give out to anyone. This is typical of Brett's approach. Another point he insists on is that people with self-discipline don't need to be treated like naughty schoolchildren. It is important not to hammer people who make mistakes, provided they were made with honest intent.
After all, we only live once, and most of our time is spent at work, so
it's vital that we are allowed to feel good about what we do
. Throwing yourself into a job you enjoy is one of life's greatest pleasures – but it's one that some leaders of industry seem determined to stamp out at all costs.
Enjoyment at work begins where all other enjoyments begin: in good health. I write this with no small twinge of conscience, as I do get unfit from time to time. Week after week goes by and I hardly seem to leave the air or airports. I think of Nelson Mandela: during his years in captivity, he kept himself fit with press-ups and sit-ups. He kept his brain alive with a daily routine of exercises. Recently I spent about four months travelling back and forth to Australia, and I could have done with some of Mandela's spirit. I think I only managed an hour's surfing during a one-night stop-off in Bali; at least the buzz from that kept me going for days.
There is no denying, it's easier to stay fit in pleasant surroundings. Our Virgin health clubs make the experience as pleasant as possible, but it's a lot easier to spend an hour chasing rays in the shallows off Necker than it is to slog up and down in a swimming pool. Still, exercise is a bullet worth biting, whatever your surroundings and whatever the pressures of the day. The more energy we can bring to our working days, the better.
It's important, if you see someone overdoing it, to say, 'Go on a holiday.' If someone has lost a family member, let them take as much time off as they need.
There's no point in having people working under unmanageable stress. You've got to give people time to mend
. It's the decent thing to do, it makes practical sense and, when you're in the kind of business we're in, it may even, one day, save a life. Remember, we run airlines. We run train companies. We take people's money and in return we hurtle them about the globe at hundreds of miles an hour. Our chief engineers need to ensure that their engineers are contented, fulfilled and enjoying their work. This is the only surefire method we know of inculcating a culture of safety and routine excellence – and Virgin's safety record is, as a result, second to none.
While we're on the subject, I might as well mention another one of our safety measures. You've probably noticed that all our trains and planes have names. By giving these huge, powerful, potentially lethal machines names, we help our people remember where they were working yesterday, or last week, or last month. We help them recall specific problems and gripes with individual engines, coaches or aisles. We make communication easier. People don't have to reach for their diaries every time they're asked about some niggling detail. We never forget that our engineers and flight crew are people, and we'd much sooner personalise our machinery than mechanise our staff.
I find it extraordinary that so many managers pay no attention to the fabric of their workplaces. How are people supposed to believe in your company when all they see of it, day after day, is a couple of dying pot plants and a fire extinguisher? At Virgin, we give people the tools they need to do their job properly. How else are they ever going to feel pride in where they work? Virgin people have told me that at the end of a tiring day, when they are off duty, having a drink in the pub, or a meal, they're occasionally asked where they work. When they say, 'With Virgin,' the enquirer usually replies, 'Lucky you! That must be a great place to work.'

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