You are on page 1of 4

In 2019, 

I took a 9am flight from Atlanta to New York City. I was the first person to board that
day. So as I 1death-gripped my phone to step over that 2 little crack that leads to the runway, I
3 caught a glimpse of the flight attendant. 4 Head in her hand, like this, eyes closed. The
moment she heard me, she looked up, she 5 put a smile on her face and she said, "Good
morning."
00:24
"This is not your first flight of the day, is it?" I asked.
00:27
"No," she said, "it had been a really early one."
00:31
I made some silly sleep joke and she laughed, and I went to go sit in my seat. She couldn't
have been more than 25 years old.
00:39
During the flight, we 6 exchanged pleasantries, and at one point she came to offer me a
snack, and she asked me what I was going to New York to do. I said that I was going to 7
deliver a speech and that honestly, I was 8 cutting it kind of close.
00:52
"No time for lunch?" she asked.
00:54
“No time for lunch,” I said, and I took a bag of almonds and I 9 tucked it into the pocket of my
backpack.
01:00
After the flight landed, I was on my way out of the plane, and she stopped me for a
moment, and she handed me a plastic bag. It was about this big and it was 10 weirdly heavy.
01:09
She said, "I know you didn't have a lot of time today, so I packed you this. Good luck." That was
nice.
01:16
So as I'm walking through LaGuardia with my bag and my bag, I 11 peer inside and there are
about 30 packets of almonds inside that bag. It was a bag of bags. And when I was in the taxi
on the way to the speech, I found this little note tucked inside: “Ms. Grice, thank you for coming
on and putting a smile on our faces with your 12 sweet words. You have been so kind, and we
are very lucky to have you as a loyal Delta customer. Thank you. I know you are 13 gluten-
free so here are some almonds for the road! Thank you for your kindness!14 It goes a long
way! Sarah, Delta flight attendant."
01:58
Now reading this, my heart 15 gave a little jolt. My day job is to help companies 16 excavate
and 17 execute their purpose. And this little note on this little napkin was 18 purpose in
action, specifically that airline’s purpose. And I know because I had helped to 19articulate it
over 15 years before.
02:20
In 2003, purpose was just one element of a much 20 larger strategic transformation that Delta
Airlines undertook. It was a company still reeling from the aftereffects of 9/11 and one looking
for a North Star to guide them through would eventually become Chapter 11 21
bankruptcy. But in 2019, for a flight attendant who was maybe in elementary school at the time
that purpose was articulated, it was some almonds for a hungry customer.
02:48
It may be that Sarah never saw that purpose line we articulated, but no matter, she didn't need
to, because purpose was alive and well at Delta. It had become 22 muscle memory. It had
become 23 cultural norm.
03:02
Now let me be clear in what I'm talking about here, I'm talking about embedding purpose. I'm
not talking about your mission, which is what you do every day, or your vision, which is where
you are headed. Both mission and vision are important 24 corporate drivers, but they play a
different role in purpose. And mission and vision will change with changes in
leadership, corporate contacts, 25 competitive landscape, merger and acquisition. They are
important, but they are also temporal. In my experience, they often have a time horizon of, say,
three to five years.
03:33
But purpose is your "why." It is found 26 at the intersection of who you are at your very best and
the role in the world that you are meant to play. It comes from your ethos. 27 It is married to
your aspiration, and because it is ethotic, it is 28 also timeless.
03:50
Now, there are plenty of data out there to say that well-embedded purpose across organizations
brings 29 immense value. Studies that will link well-embedded purpose to elevated total
shareholder return over 10 years, increased employee 30 engagement, retention, even higher
levels of productivity. Because of all this data, it is rare in my work that a CEO will come to me
and say, "Ashley, what is purpose" or "Why do I need to do it?" Instead, what they will ask is
"When I have my purpose, how do I embed it across my organization so well that it brings the
most value, that it becomes muscle memory?"
04:28
As I've been doing this work for almost 20 years at this point, I have a ready answer. First, I tell
them it needs to be 31 authentic. Purpose that is 32 rooted in your ethos, 33 distinctive to your
brand, meaningful to all of your stakeholders and 34 consistent with your values is
authentic. Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, the CEO of Optus, a Sydney, 35 Australia-based
telecommunications company, can speak to her company’s purpose -- powering optimism with
options -- with conviction, because it is authentic. Optus is, by its very nature, a challenger
brand, and it is a brand synonymous with a brand platform of positivity since 36 options breed
action and optimism breeds hope. How they pull their 37 internal relations together with their 38
external reach-out to customers is very consistent and incredibly authentic.
05:20
Now 39 on the other end of the authenticity scale, I once worked with a CEO who really wanted
purpose to be about 40 environmental sustainability. "That is great," I said, "except for your
company struggles to even recycle in your offices. I know, I've been there." While they admire
the 41 aspiration, if we had come up with a purpose line that was solely about environmental
sustainability, it would have been 42 dead on arrival. Specifically with employees.
05:48
Secondly, I tell CEOs that they must be critical in excavating purpose from the inside
out. Purpose is uncomfortable. It should be, because you are introducing a tension between 43
idealism and realism: who you really want to be and who you are capable of being, today and in
the future, based on 44 competencies and ethos. And purpose can be particularly 45
discomforting because even once you have it, it takes a while to implement it. In fact, you may
set your purpose once and spend your entire career 46 living up to it.
06:22
Now, purpose is particularly uncomfortable for companies who are on a forced evolution of
change, companies in industries like oil and gas, for example, or for companies who maybe
have bad behaviors they need to leave behind. Finally, I tell CEOs that purpose must apply to
the whole of the organization. Purpose is not a CEO 47 vanity project. Sure, it may help cement
the legacy of the CEO who is in charge at the time it's articulated, but it's not about them, it’s not
about him or her. It’s about the value the company brings. It is about the role in the world that it’s
meant to play.
06:58
Now purpose at the C-suite level should be a 48 unifying construct that brings together mission
and vision and influences your 49 strategic agenda. It should help CEOs think about how they
50 redefine metrics for success, what types of topics they may want to speak with analysts
about, or maybe most importantly, how the board ought to hold them accountable as
managers.
07:18
Purpose at the 51 middle-management level is about much needed clarity and authority. The
middle-management layer of any organization is often the most difficult to motivate because
they have so many different stakeholders to please. But by bringing clarity with 52 purpose-
driven expectations and guardrails, it allows middle managers to understand which battles to
pick and that the 53 micro decisions they make on a daily basis affect the company [as] a
whole.
07:44
Finally, 54 front-line employee purpose helps employees at that level ensure that they are
seen. When purpose is excavated and 55 executed top floor to shop floor, those on the shop
floor understand that their work matters and how it adds up to the overall value for the company.
08:04
Well-embedded front-line purpose is the tenet behind that legendary story of John F. Kennedy
and the NASA janitor back in 1962. You know, the one where JFK supposedly asked the
janitor, "What do you do for NASA?" And the janitor said, "I'm putting a man on the moon." In
this story, the janitor understood that his role was to prepare the building for the engineers who
were going to come in and crank on the math. But he also understood the importance of that
role to the 56 overall vision and objectives of NASA. That janitor understood his role in the
universe, so to speak.
08:40
So many iconic business stories begin on the back of a cocktail napkin. But it wasn't just this
napkin or even the nuts that caused me pause that day. It was the 57 sentiment behind it. It
was the idea if you execute purpose across culture and strategy and brand consistently for
years, it does become muscle memory. It becomes a cultural norm. And it is that norm that
encourages an employee to make a gift, which becomes a story which then a very loyal
customer tells to the world.
09:17
So since I am here, Sarah, thank you for your kind words that day, and for the almonds. You
helped make it a great day because you were right, I was hungry.
09:30
Thank you.
09:32
https://www.ted.com/talks/ashley_m_grice_the_power_of_purpose_in_business/
transcript

You might also like