THE TALENT MYTH
Are smart people overrated?
by Malcolm Gladwell
Five years ago, several executives at McKinsey & Company, America’s
largest and most prestigious management-consulting firm, launched
what they called the War for Talent. Thousands of questionnaires were
sent to managers across the country. Eighteen companies were singled
out for special attention, and the consultants spent up to three days at
each firm, interviewing everyone from the C.E.O. down to the humanresources
staff.
McKinsey wanted to document how the top-performing companies in America differed from
other firms in the way they handle matters like hiring and promotion. But, as the consultants
sifted through the piles of reports and questionnaires and interview transcripts, they grew
convinced that the difference between winners and losers was more profound than they
had realized. "We looked at one another and suddenly the light bulb blinked on," the three
consultants who headed the project-Ed Michaels, Helen Handfield-Jones, and Beth Axelrod-
write in their new book, also called "The War for Talent."
The very best companies, they concluded, had leaders who were obsessed with the talent issue.
They recruited ceaselessly, finding and hiring as many top performers as possible. They
singled out and segregated their stars, rewarding them disproportionately, and pushing them
into ever more senior positions. "Bet on the natural athletes, the ones with the strongest
intrinsic skills," the authors approvingly quote one senior General Electric executive as
saying.
"Don't be afraid to promote stars without specifically relevant experience, seemingly over
their heads." Success in the modern economy, according to Michaels, Handfield-Jones, and
Axelrod, requires "the talent mind-set:" the "deep-seated belief that having better talent at
all levels is how you outperform your competitors."
"Don't be afraid to promote stars without specifically relevant experience, seemingly over
their heads." Success in the modern economy, according to Michaels, Handfield-Jones, and
Axelrod, requires "the talent mind-set:" the "deep-seated belief that having better talent at
all levels is how you outperform your competitors."
This "talent mind-set" is the new orthodoxy of American management. It is the intellectual
justification for why such a high premium is placed on degrees from first-tier business
schools, and why the compensation packages for top executives have become so lavish. In
the modern corporation, the system is considered only as strong as its stars, and, in the past
few years, this message has been preached by consultants and management gurus all over
the world. None, however, have spread the word quite so ardently as McKinsey, and, of all its
clients, one firm took the talent mind-set closest to heart. It was a company where McKinsey
conducted twenty separate projects, where McKinsey's billings topped ten million dollars a
year, where a McKinsey director regularly attended board meetings, and where the C.E.O.
himself was a former McKinsey partner. The company, of course, was Enron.
[The] "talent mind-set" is the new
orthodoxy of American management.
The Enron scandal is now almost a year old. The reputations of Jeffrey Skilling and Kenneth
Lay, the company's two top executives, have been destroyed. Arthur Andersen, Enron's
auditor, has been driven out of business, and now investigators have turned their attention
to Enron's investment bankers. The one Enron partner that has escaped largely unscathed is
McKinsey, which is odd, given that it essentially created the blueprint for the Enron culture.
Enron was the ultimate "talent" company. When Skilling started the corporate division known
as Enron Capital and Trade, in 1990, he "decided to bring in a steady stream of the very
best college and M.B.A. graduates he could find to stock the company with talent," Michaels,
Handfield-Jones, and Axelrod tell us. During the nineties, Enron was bringing in two hundred
and fifty newly minted M.B.A.s a year. "We had these things called Super Saturdays,"
one former Enron manager recalls. "I'd interview some of these guys who were fresh out of
Harvard, and these kids could blow me out of the water. They knew things I'd never heard of."
Once at Enron, the top performers were rewarded inordinately, and promoted without regard
for seniority or experience. Enron was a star system. "The only thing that differentiates Enron
from our competitors is our people, our talent," Lay, Enron's former chairman and C.E.O., told
the McKinsey consultants when they came to the company's headquarters, in Houston. Or, as
another senior Enron executive put it to Richard Foster, a McKinsey partner who celebrated
Enron in his 2001 book, "Creative Destruction," "We hire very smart people and we pay them
more than they think they are worth."
Once at Enron, the top performers were rewarded
inordinately, and promoted without regard
for seniority or experience. Enron was a star system.
The management of Enron, in other words, did exactly what the consultants at McKinsey said
that companies ought to do in order to succeed in the modern economy. It hired and rewarded
the very best and the very brightest-and it is now in bankruptcy. The reasons for its
collapse are complex, needless to say. But what if Enron failed not in spite of its talent
mindset
but because of it? What if smart people are overrated?
At the heart of the McKinsey vision is a process that the War for Talent advocates refer to as
"differentiation and affirmation." Employers, they argue, need to sit down once or twice a year
and hold a "candid, probing, no-holds-barred debate about each individual," sorting employees
into A, B, and C groups. The A's must be challenged and disproportionately rewarded.
The B's need to be encouraged and affirmed. The C's need to shape up or be shipped out.
Enron followed this advice almost to the letter, setting up internal Performance Review
Committees. The members got together twice a year, and graded each person in their section
on ten separate criteria, using a scale of one to five. The process was called "rank and yank."
Those graded at the top of their unit received bonuses two-thirds higher than those in the
next thirty per cent; those who ranked at the bottom received no bonuses and no extra stock
options-and in some cases were pushed out.
The management of Enron...did exactly what the
consultants at McKinsey said that companies
ought to do in order to succeed in the modern economy.
How should that ranking be done? Unfortunately, the McKinsey consultants spend very little
time discussing the matter. One possibility is simply to hire and reward the smartest people.
But the link between, say, I.Q. and job performance is distinctly underwhelming. On a scale
where 0.1 or below means virtually no correlation and 0.7 or above implies a strong correlation
(your height, for example, has a 0.7 correlation with your parents' height), the correlation
between I.Q. and occupational success is between 0.2 and 0.3. "What I.Q. doesn't pick up
is effectiveness at common-sense sorts of things, especially working with people," Richard
Wagner, a psychologist at Florida State University, says. "In terms of how we evaluate
schooling,everything is about working by yourself. If you work with someone else, it's called cheating.
Once you get out in the real world, everything you do involves working with other people."
Wagner and Robert Sternberg, a psychologist at Yale University, have developed tests of this
practical component, which they call "tacit knowledge." Tacit knowledge involves things like
knowing how to manage yourself and others, and how to navigate complicated social situations.
Here is a question from one of their tests:
You have just been promoted to head of an important department in your
organization. The previous head has been transferred to an equivalent position
in a less important department. Your understanding of the reason for the move
is that the performance of the department as a whole has been mediocre.
There have not been any glaring deficiencies, just a perception of the department
as so-so rather than very good. Your charge is to shape up the department.
Results are expected quickly. Rate the quality of the following strategies
for succeeding at your new position.
- Always delegate to the most junior person who can be trusted with the task.
- Give your superiors frequent progress reports.
- Announce a major reorganization of the department that includes getting rid of
whomever you believe to be "dead wood."
- Concentrate more on your people than on the tasks to be done.
- Make people feel completely responsible for their work.
Wagner finds that how well people do on a test like this predicts how well they will do in the
workplace: good managers pick (B) and (E); bad managers tend to pick (C). Yet there's no
clear connection between such tacit knowledge and other forms of knowledge and experience.
The process of assessing ability in the workplace is a lot messier than it appears.
How do you evaluate someone’s performance
in a system where no one is in a job
long enough to allow such evaluation?
An employer really wants to assess not potential but performance. Yet that's just as tricky.
In "The War for Talent," the authors talk about how the Royal Air Force used the A, B, and
C ranking system for its pilots during the Battle of Britain. But ranking fighter pilots-for
whom there are a limited and relatively objective set of performance criteria (enemy kills, for
example, and the ability to get their formations safely home)-is a lot easier than assessing
how the manager of a new unit is doing at, say, marketing or business development.
And whom do you ask to rate the manager's performance? Studies show that there is very
little correlation between how someone's peers rate him and how his boss rates him. The
only rigorous way to assess performance, according to human-resources specialists, is to use
criteria that are as specific as possible. Managers are supposed to take detailed notes on their
employees throughout the year, in order to remove subjective personal reactions from the
process of assessment. You can grade someone's performance only if you know their performance.
And, in the freewheeling culture of Enron, this was all but impossible.
People deemed "talented" were constantly being pushed into new jobs and given new challenges.
Annual turnover from promotions was close to twenty per cent. Lynda Clemmons, the
so-called "weather babe" who started Enron's weather derivatives business, jumped, in seven
quick years, from trader to associate to manager to director and, finally, to head of her own
business unit. How do you evaluate someone's performance in a system where no one is in a
job long enough to allow such evaluation?
"What I.Q. doesn’t pick up is effectiveness
at common-sense sorts of things,
especially working with people."
The answer is that you end up doing performance evaluations that aren't based on performance.
Among the many glowing books about Enron written before its fall was the bestseller
"Leading the Revolution," by the management consultant Gary Hamel, which tells the
story of Lou Pai, who launched Enron's power-trading business. Pai's group began with a
disaster: it lost tens of millions of dollars trying to sell electricity to residential
consumers in newly deregulated markets.
The problem, Hamel explains, is that the markets weren't truly deregulated: "The states that
were opening their markets to competition were still setting rules designed to give their
traditional utilities big advantages." It doesn't seem to have occurred to anyone that Pai ought
to have looked into those rules more carefully before risking millions of dollars. He was
promptly given the chance to build the commercial electricity-outsourcing business, where
he ran up several more years of heavy losses before cashing out of Enron last year with two
hundred and seventy million dollars.
Because Pai had "talent," he was given new opportunities, and when he failed at those new
opportunities he was given still more opportunities...because he had "talent." "At Enron,
failure-even of the type that ends up on the front page of the Wall Street Journal-doesn't
necessarily sink a career," Hamel writes, as if that were a good thing. Presumably, companies
that want to encourage risk-taking must be willing to tolerate mistakes. Yet if talent is de-
fined as something separate from an employee's actual performance, what use is it, exactly?
Studies show that there is very little correlation
between how someone’s peers rate him
and how his boss rates him.
What the War for Talent amounts to is an argument for indulging A employees, for fawning
over them. "You need to do everything you can to keep them engaged and satisfied-even
delighted," Michaels, Handfield-Jones, and Axelrod write. "Find out what they would most like
to be doing, and shape their career and responsibilities in that direction. Solve any issues
that might be pushing them out the door, such as a boss that frustrates them or travel demands
that burden them." No company was better at this than Enron.
In one oft-told story, Louise Kitchin, a twenty-nine-year-old gas trader in Europe, became
convinced that the company ought to develop an online-trading business. She told her boss,
and she began working in her spare time on the project, until she had two hundred and fifty
people throughout Enron helping her.
After six months, Skilling was finally informed. "I was never asked for any capital," Skilling
said later. "I was never asked for any people. They had already purchased the servers. They
had already started ripping apart the building. They had started legal reviews in twenty-two
countries by the time I heard about it." It was, Skilling went on approvingly, "exactly the
kind of
behavior that will continue to drive this company forward."
What the War for Talent amounts to is
an argument for indulging A employees.
Kitchin's qualification for running EnronOnline, it should be pointed out, was not that she was
good at it. It was that she wanted to do it, and Enron was a place where stars did whatever
they wanted. "Fluid movement is absolutely necessary in our company. And the type of people
we hire enforces that," Skilling told the team from McKinsey. "Not only does this system
help the excitement level for each manager, it shapes Enron's business in the direction that
its managers find most exciting." Here is Skilling again: "If lots of [employees] are flocking
to
a new business unit, that's a good sign that the opportunity is a good one...If a business unit
can't attract people very easily, that's a good sign that it's a business Enron shouldn't be
in."
You might expect a C.E.O. to say that if a business unit can't attract customers very easily
that's a good sign it's a business the company shouldn't be in. A company's business is supposed
to be shaped in the direction that its managers find most profitable. But at Enron the
needs of the customers and the shareholders were secondary to the needs of its stars.
A dozen years ago, the psychologists Robert Hogan, Robert Raskin, and Dan Fazzini wrote
a brilliant essay called "The Dark Side of Charisma." It argued that flawed managers fall into
three types. One is the High Likability Floater, who rises effortlessly in an organization
because
he never takes any difficult decisions or makes any enemies. Another is the Homme de
Ressentiment, who seethes below the surface and plots against his enemies. The most interesting
of the three is the Narcissist, whose energy and self-confidence and charm lead him
inexorably up the corporate ladder.
Narcissists are terrible managers. They resist accepting suggestions, thinking it will make
them appear weak, and they don't believe that others have anything useful to tell them.
"Narcissists are biased to take more credit for success than is legitimate," Hogan and his
co-authors write, and "biased to avoid acknowledging responsibility for their failures and
shortcomings for the same reasons that they claim more success than is their due." Moreover:
Narcissists typically make judgments with greater confidence than other
people...and, because their judgments are rendered with such conviction, other
people tend to believe them and the narcissists become disproportionately more
influential in group situations. Finally, because of their self-confidence and
strong need for recognition, narcissists tend to "self-nominate;" consequently,
when a leadership gap appears in a group or organization, the narcissists rush to
fill it.
Tyco Corporation and WorldCom were the Greedy Corporations: they were purely interested
in short-term financial gain. Enron was the Narcissistic Corporation-a company that took
more credit for success than was legitimate, that did not acknowledge responsibility for its
failures, that shrewdly sold the rest of us on its genius, and that substituted self-nomination
for disciplined management. At one point in "Leading the Revolution," Hamel tracks down a
senior Enron executive, and what he breathlessly recounts-the braggadocio, the
self-satisfaction-
could be an epitaph for the talent mind-set:
"You cannot control the atoms within a nuclear fusion reaction," said Ken Rice
when he was head of Enron Capital and Trade Resources (ECT), America’s largest
marketer of natural gas and largest buyer and seller of electricity. Adorned
in a black T-shirt, blue jeans, and cowboy boots, Rice drew a box on an office
whiteboard that pictured his business unit as a nuclear reactor. Little circles in
the box represented its "contract originators," the gunslingers charged with doing
deals and creating new businesses. Attached to each circle was an arrow. In
Rice’s diagram the arrows were pointing in all different directions. "We allow
people to go in whichever direction that they want to go."
The distinction between the Greedy Corporation and the Narcissistic Corporation matters,
because the way we conceive our attainments helps determine how we behave. Carol Dweck,
a psychologist at Columbia University, has found that people generally hold one of two
fairly firm beliefs about their intelligence: they consider it either a fixed trait or something
that is malleable and can be developed over time. Five years ago, Dweck did a study at the
University of Hong Kong, where all classes are conducted in English. She and her colleagues
approached a large group of social-sciences students, told them their English-proficiency
scores, and asked them if they wanted to take a course to improve their language skills. One
would expect all those who scored poorly to sign up for the remedial course. The University
of Hong Kong is a demanding institution, and it is hard to do well in the social sciences
without strong English skills.
Curiously, however, only the ones who believed in malleable intelligence expressed interest
in the class. The students who believed that their intelligence was a fixed trait were so
concerned about appearing to be deficient that they preferred to stay home. "Students who
hold a fixed view of their intelligence care so much about looking smart that they act dumb,"
Dweck writes, "for what could be dumber than giving up a chance to learn something that is
essential for your own success?"
At Enron, the needs of the customers
and the shareholders were secondary
to the needs of its stars.
In a similar experiment, Dweck gave a class of preadolescent students a test filled with
challenging
problems. After they were finished, one group was praised for its effort and another
group was praised for its intelligence. Those praised for their intelligence were reluctant to
tackle difficult tasks, and their performance on subsequent tests soon began to suffer. Then
Dweck asked the children to write a letter to students at another school, describing their
experience in the study.
She discovered something remarkable: forty per cent of those students who were praised for
their intelligence lied about how they had scored on the test, adjusting their grade upward.
They weren't naturally deceptive people, and they weren't any less intelligent or self-confi-
dent than anyone else. They simply did what people do when they are immersed in an environment
that celebrates them solely for their innate "talent." They begin to define themselves
by that description, and when times get tough and that self-image is threatened they have
difficulty with the consequences. They will not take the remedial course. They will not stand
up to investors and the public and admit that they were wrong. They'd sooner lie.
The broader failing of McKinsey and its acolytes at Enron is their assumption that an
organization
's intelligence is simply a function of the intelligence of its employees. They believe
in stars, because they don't believe in systems. In a way, that's understandable, because our
lives are so obviously enriched by individual brilliance. Groups don't write great novels, and a
committee didn't come up with the theory of relativity. But companies work by different rules.
They don't just create; they execute and compete and coördinate the efforts of many different
people, and the organizations that are most successful at that task are the ones where the
system is the star.
Those praised for their intelligence were reluctant
to tackle difficult tasks, and their performance
on subsequent tests soon began to suffer.
There is a wonderful example of this in the story of the so-called Eastern Pearl Harbor, of the
Second World War. During the first nine months of 1942, the United States Navy suffered a
catastrophe. German U-boats, operating just off the Atlantic coast and in the Caribbean, were
sinking our merchant ships almost at will. U-boat captains marvelled at their good fortune.
"Before this sea of light, against this footlight glare of a carefree new world were passing the
silhouettes of ships recognizable in every detail and sharp as the outlines in a sales
catalogue," one U-boat commander wrote. "All we had to do was press the button."
What made this such a puzzle is that, on the other side of the Atlantic, the British had much
less trouble defending their ships against U-boat attacks. The British, furthermore, eagerly
passed on to the Americans everything they knew about sonar and depth-charge throwers
and the construction of destroyers. And still the Germans managed to paralyze America's
coastal zones.
You can imagine what the consultants at McKinsey would have concluded: they would have
said that the Navy did not have a talent mind-set, that President Roosevelt needed to recruit
and promote top performers into key positions in the Atlantic command. In fact, he had
already done that. At the beginning of the war, he had pushed out the solid and unspectacular
Admiral Harold R. Stark as Chief of Naval Operations and replaced him with the legendary
Ernest Joseph King. "He was a supreme realist with the arrogance of genius," Ladislas
Farago writes in "The Tenth Fleet," a history of the Navy's U-boat battles in the Second World
War. "He had unbounded faith in himself, in his vast knowledge of naval matters and in the
soundness of his ideas. Unlike Stark, who tolerated incompetence all around him, King had
no patience with fools."
The Navy had plenty of talent at the top, in other words. What it didn't have was the right
kind of organization. As Eliot A. Cohen, a scholar of military strategy at Johns Hopkins, writes
in his brilliant book "Military Misfortunes in the Atlantic:"
To wage the antisubmarine war well, analysts had to bring together fragments of
information, direction-finding fixes, visual sightings, decrypts, and the "flaming
datum" of a U-boat attack-for use by a commander to coordinate the efforts
of warships, aircraft, and convoy commanders. Such synthesis had to occur in
near "real time"-within hours, even minutes in some cases.
The British excelled at the task because they had a centralized operational system. The
controllers
moved the British ships around the Atlantic like chess pieces, in order to outsmart
U-boat "wolf packs." By contrast, Admiral King believed strongly in a decentralized management
structure: he held that managers should never tell their subordinates ?how' as well as
what to ?do.' In today's jargon, we would say he was a believer in "loose-tight" management,
of the kind celebrated by the McKinsey consultants Thomas J. Peters and Robert H. Waterman
in their 1982 best-seller, "In Search of Excellence." But "loose-tight" doesn't help you find
U-boats.
The talent myth assumes that people make
organizations smart. More often than not,
it’s the other way around.
Throughout most of 1942, the Navy kept trying to act smart by relying on technical knowhow,
and stubbornly refused to take operational lessons from the British. The Navy also
lacked the organizational structure necessary to apply the technical knowledge it did have
to the field. Only when the Navy set up the Tenth Fleet-a single unit to coördinate all
antisubmarine
warfare in the Atlantic-did the situation change. In the year and a half before the
Tenth Fleet was formed, in May of 1943, the Navy sank thirty-six U-boats. In the six months
afterward, it sank seventy-five. "The creation of the Tenth Fleet did not bring more talented
individuals into the field of ASW"-anti-submarine warfare-"than had previous organizations,"
Cohen writes. "What Tenth Fleet did allow, by virtue of its organization and mandate,
was for these individuals to become far more effective than previously." The talent myth assumes
that people make organizations smart. More often than not, it's the other way around.
There is ample evidence of this principle among America's most successful companies.
Southwest Airlines hires very few M.B.A.s, pays its managers modestly, and gives raises
according to seniority, not "rank and yank." Yet it is by far the most successful of all United
States airlines, because it has created a vastly more efficient organization than its
competitors
have. At Southwest, the time it takes to get a plane that has just landed ready for takeoff-
a key index of productivity-is, on average, twenty minutes, and requires a ground crew
of four, and two people at the gate. (At United Airlines, by contrast, turnaround time is closer
to thirty-five minutes, and requires a ground crew of twelve and three agents at the gate.)
Southwest Airlines hires very few M.B.A.s,
pays its managers modestly, and gives raises
according to seniority, not "rank and yank."
In the case of the giant retailer Wal-Mart, one of the most critical periods in its history came
in 1976, when Sam Walton "unretired," pushing out his handpicked successor, Ron Mayer.
Mayer was just over forty. He was ambitious. He was charismatic. He was, in the words of one
Walton biographer, "the boy-genius financial officer." But Walton was convinced that Mayer
was, as people at McKinsey would say, "differentiating and affirming" in the corporate suite,
in defiance of Wal-Mart's inclusive culture. Mayer left, and Wal-Mart survived. After all, Wal-
Mart is an organization, not an all-star team. Walton brought in David Glass, late of the Army
and Southern Missouri State University, as C.E.O.; the company is now ranked No. 1 on the
Fortune 500 list.
Procter & Gamble doesn't have a star system, either. How could it? Would the top M.B.A.
graduates of Harvard and Stanford move to Cincinnati to work on detergent when they could
make three times as much reinventing the world in Houston? Procter & Gamble isn't glamorous.
Its C.E.O. is a lifer-a former Navy officer who began his corporate career as an assistant
brand manager for Joy dishwashing liquid-and, if Procter & Gamble's best played Enron's
best at Trivial Pursuit, no doubt the team from Houston would win handily. But Procter &
Gamble has dominated the consumer-products field for close to a century, because it has
a carefully conceived managerial system, and a rigorous marketing methodology that has
allowed it to win battles for brands like Crest and Tide decade after decade. In Procter &
Gamble's Navy, Admiral Stark would have stayed. But a cross-divisional management committee
would have set the Tenth Fleet in place before the war ever started.
Procter & Gamble has dominated the consumerproducts
field for close to a century, because it
has a carefully conceived managerial system.
Among the most damning facts about Enron, in the end, was something its managers were
proudest of. They had what, in McKinsey terminology, is called an "open market" for hiring. In
the open-market system-McKinsey's assault on the very idea of a fixed organization-anyone
could apply for any job that he or she wanted, and no manager was allowed to hold
anyone back. Poaching was encouraged.
When an Enron executive named Kevin Hannon started the company's global broadband unit,
he launched what he called Project Quick Hire. A hundred top performers from around the
company were invited to the Houston Hyatt to hear Hannon give his pitch. Recruiting booths
were set up outside the meeting room. "Hannon had his fifty top performers for the broadband
unit by the end of the week," Michaels, Handfield-Jones, and Axelrod write, "and his
peers had fifty holes to fill." Nobody, not even the consultants who were paid to think about
the Enron culture, seemed worried that those fifty holes might disrupt the functioning of the
affected departments, that stability in a firm's existing businesses might be a good thing,
that the self-fulfillment of Enron's star employees might possibly be in conflict with the best
interests of the firm as a whole.
These are the sort of concerns that management consultants ought to raise. But Enron's
management consultant was McKinsey, and McKinsey was as much a prisoner of the talent
myth as its clients were. In 1998, Enron hired ten Wharton M.B.A.s; that same year, McKinsey
hired forty. In 1999, Enron hired twelve from Wharton; McKinsey hired sixty-one. The consultants
at McKinsey were preaching at Enron what they believed about themselves. "When
we would hire them, it wouldn't just be for a week," one former Enron manager recalls, of the
brilliant young men and women from McKinsey who wandered the hallways at the company's
headquarters. "It would be for two to four months. They were always around." They were
there looking for people who had the talent to think outside the box. It never occurred to
them that, if everyone had to think outside the box, maybe it was the box that needed fixing.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Malcolm Gladwell was born in 1963 in England and grew up in Canada. He graduated with a degree
in history from the University of Toronto in 1984.
From 1987 to 1996, he was a reporter for The Washington Post, first as a science writer and then
as New York City bureau chief. In 2000, he published The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can
Make a Big Difference. Since 1996, he has been a staff writer for The New Yorker magazine.
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