Family Vacation 2011

About 12 hours the Chik-Fil-A Leadercast , we loaded up Kahuna One and headed south. We were Orlando bound, for a week of fun in the sun.

Fun and sun were had by all!

We had a full week of fun at my parents’ timeshare (thanks, Mom and Dad), complete with hours and hours of swimming by the pool, ice cream eating, and watching cable TV.

We also met the Mouse. If you’ve met the Mouse, you know that it’s an expensive venture. We were on the fence about doing it,  as I’m sure many parents are, because if your kid wakes up on the wrong side of the bed, you may as well have set fire to a couple of  hundred dollar bills and call it a day. (I wrote about the money aspect of our Disney visit at Persephone this week)

Guess what? The kids woke up on the RIGHT SIDE OF THE BED.

We got there in plenty of time to see the welcoming show and see Mickey open the park.

We met thirteen different characters, including three princesses, Mary Poppins, Woody & Jessie. They signed our autograph books and gave hugs and made the kids feel like a million bucks.

We rode fifteen rides, MaM rode three of them twice. There were no lines, the crowds were thin and navigating the park was easy.

We had a sit down lunch, which was perfect for cooling off and taking a  breather during the heat of the day.

We were actually able to stay through until the park’s fireworks finale.

A week later, the kids are still talking about it.

I love vacation.

Chik-Fil-A Leadercast Indy, Closing Session

So I charged up and hope i have enough juice to make it this last hour.

Right now Muhtar Kent (CEO of Coke) and Dan Cathy (CEO of Chik-Fil-A) are sitting down onstage together. Kent is outlining Coca Cola’s goals — the focus is sustainability in many different ways.

There’s kind of a lot of Coca Cola & Chik-Fil-A love going on here.

Dan’s givig Muhtar credit for being so versatile in business — he can run the grocery store part as well as the higher level management.

What keeps Muhtar up at night? His answer: arrogance.

Coca Cola is the fourth largest private employer in the world. When your out in the marketplace, meeting all types of people, you learn. He visits stores at least once a week, no matter where he is.

Dan Cathy is now talking about how he likes doing things no one has done or other fast food joints wouldn’t dare do. He’s proud of his kitchen staff, drive throughs, etc.

Muhtar is learning how important is for consumers wanting to vote not just for great products, but also the character of the company behind the products. Companies are being held to moral contracts with the consumer.

He’s also talking about how technology is impacting the world — everyone knows everything now. He’s learning about how this technology is changing consumer behavior and what that means for brands. We need to create a dialogue with consumers. No more monologues.

Oh my — now there’s a trumpet call and a Coca-Cola cake in honor of Coke’s 125th anniversary.

My seat mate just said, “Good information, boring delivery”. It was kind of a quiet talk, but yes, good information.

Dave Ramsey is up next!

Tripp Crosby is opening for Dave with a video  at Financial Peace University. He’s talking cheese and cracker envelope vs his khaki pants envelope. And buying his iPad on credit with skymiles, I think. Dave is DYING. Tripp is truly a trip. I hope this one’s on YouTube.

Dave is now getting the crowd excited.

“Seth Godin has so many brain cells he can’t hold hair on his head.” He’s complimenting the whole line up, noting how it goes downhill as the day goes on, and now we’re stuck with him.

He talks really, really fast. But if you’re a fan, you know this.

His business has grown from his living room to a company that employs 300 people.

He tells us his workforce is young, they don’t know how to dress but they are really smart, AND apparently, they’re very fertile. Lots of babies and whatnot. The company picnic ends up being 1000 people (wow!) and there are close to 100 kids under the age of nine.

He had his son look at the bounce house set up, and asked him what he saw. And he told his son that he saw a bunch of little kids, and that if your dad messes up, those kids may not have the good kind of life if I make bad decision. Leadership is a service. Son, I’m not the boss of those people, I’m the servant.  (he’s kind of giving me chills)

He then launched into a responsiblity speech to his teenage son.

That’s Leadership.

What are the key things that have built his business?

5 key things for winning:

He mentioned the I-Surrender-All moment. Everything was going to be God’s way.

1) We believe inthe DNA of our organization — People Matter. Your customers matter. They are not units of revenue.Your team matters. They are not units of production. Does your ream know you love them? The way you treat them? Your vendors matter. Your competitors matter. They’re people too.

2) An incredible team matters where excellence matters. We want a building full a smart people who are nice. Prayer starts the hiring process — kind of a comical prayer, to be hones. Zero tolerance policy for gossip. Shut up and get your work done. Hang your negatives up and your positives down. You get one warning, the second time you are set free.

3) Slow and steady matters. When you’re distracted by shiny things, you can’t run your business. The Tortiose always wins. This is a culture of Hares. Business is cooked in crock pot. I’ve worked my butt off for 15 years, now I’m an overnight success.

4) Financial Principles Matters. Run your company on less than it takes in. When everything screeched to a halt in the fall of 2008? I was not scared. It’s because he was financially secure. When everything’s going good, stupid looks Ok. Even a turkey can fly in a tornado. You can tell you was skinny dipping when the tide goes out. Be generous in your organization.

5) A Higher Calling Matters. When you play for something bigger than you, you try harder. When you play for your country, your Lord, you work harder. How has the Cathy family turned chicken into a higher calling? It’s not about the chicken, is it? Business is tough. If you’re not playing for a higher calling, you’ll quit. It’s not what you do that matters, it’s the WHY you do it. You better know what your “why” is , or you’ll quit.

He doesn’t do exit interviews — he doesn’t need to hear the criticism. He’s getting Americans straightened out with their money.

“Me and Jenny Craig, we got a big job.”

He’s been studying family businesses, and how they transition from generation to generation. Leaving a legacy that’s solid, that’s a higher calling.

What’s that thing that you’ve done?

Chik-Fil-A Leadercast Indy (session 3)

So we are now all sitting happily full of Chik-Fil-A lunch.We just watched a bizarre presentation of Mentos exploding Coke Zero. Who knew? Not me.

Frans Johnansson is now up!

Then 90 second version – he comes from his parents, born/raised in Sweden, he and his sister where the two non-blue eyed, blondes in the country.He went  to Harvard, had a software company and then wrote a book.

The Medici Effect.

He’s got words popping up on screen, generating some word association.You can combine diverse ideas.

Diversity Drives Innovation

He goes on to give the examples of a skyscraper in Africa which mimics the venting system of termite mounds.

He goes on to tell us about the woman who made a suitable swimming suit for Muslim women.

Why do people who change the world try so many ideas? Stats on Einstein, Richard Branson and Google —

We are terrible at predicting what ideas will work.

We are not always going to be successful.

Imagine that you have an idea. You want to make it happen. You set up a goal. It’s huge. Who wants to be involved in anything that’s small? It’s an ambitious, large goal. You use up all your resources….and you learn from the experience, you should have done it differently.

He talks about the Ice Hotel in Sweden — the first winter, he has ice sculptures flown in.

The next year, he creates the snow gallery, an art gallery made of snow

The next year, the world’s first movie screen made out of ice. Some backpackers came to the event and asked if they could sleep somewhere — maybe on a bed made of ice?!!?

And the Ice Hotel was born.

This is how ideas evolve.

Jack Welch is now introducing Suzy Welch.

Suzy is talking about how none of us are the people we used to be — but we are not the people we have yet become. We are always changing.

Sometimes we get stuck between who we used to be and the person that we want to be. We can get stuck in the “i Can’ts”

She’s talking about her first marriage, and how she was living a picture — it all looked very good, but it was all very fake.

While at a conference in Hawaii, she was presenting to a group of insurance agents — when she saw her kids in the back of the room. They’d made a jail break from the hulu-class and made a launch for her down the aisle.

NOT GOOD.

In evaluating her life, she realized she needed to start making better decisions. Not on the two G’s — Gut and Guilt. Her decisions needed to slow down.

10-10-10 works because it connects your decision making to your values. How does this decision effect your life in  10 minutes 10 months, in 10 years?

Legacy. FFWD to your 70th birthday party. What would make you cry from regret?(what a deep question)

Next: What do you want people to say about you when you’re not in the room?  (these are some good questions)

LAst Question: What did you love about your upbringing? What did you hate? (wow, I think I could think about these questions all the way to Florida)

Even if we don’t like something about our past, we tend to relive it.

Alison Levine is up next! I’m running out of juice…don’t know how much more I’ll be able to blog today!