What A Boarder Can Learn From...
What a Boarder Can Learn from Indra Nooyi Purpose, Identity, and the Night Her Mother Sent Her Out for Milk The night Indra Nooyi found out she was going to be appointed CEO of PepsiCo, one of the largest companies on earth, she drove home to tell her family. Her mother stopped her at the door. Not to congratulate her. Not to celebrate. To ask her to go back out and get milk, because they had run out and guests were coming. The CEO-designate of a Fortune 50 company stood in her driveway and was sent to the shops. When she came back, her mother offered a reflection that Nooyi has quoted in speeches ever since: when you come through that door, you are a wife and a mother and a daughter. You leave the crown in the car. Nooyi has told that story many times, and each time she tells it differently sometimes as a lesson in humility, sometimes as a comment on the invisible labour that high-achieving women carry in ways their male counterparts often don't, sometimes as an honest reckoning with the cost of the choices she made. She is not always sure, she has admitted, whether her mother was teaching her something wise or simply reflecting a set of expectations that deserved more scrutiny than she gave them at the time. That ambivalence, the willingness to hold a formative experience up to the light and ask whether it was actually right, rather than simply receiving it as wisdom, is one of the most intellectually honest things about her. Indra Nooyi grew up in Chennai in a middle-class family where ambition was quietly but seriously cultivated. Her mother ran a dinner table exercise in which her daughters were asked to give speeches as if they were world leaders, president, prime minister and then defend their positions to the family. She attended the Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, then Yale. She joined PepsiCo in 1994 and became its CEO in 2006, the first woman of colour to lead a company of that scale a position she held for twelve years, during which she fundamentally redirected the company's strategy around what she called Performance with Purpose: the idea that long-term commercial success and genuine social responsibility were not in tension but were, properly understood, the same thing. She was also, throughout all of it, trying to be a mother. She has spoken about this with a candour that is unusual in the corporate world about the school performances she missed, the moments she couldn't get back, the asymmetry between what ambition costs men and what it costs women. She does not resolve that tension neatly, because it doesn't resolve neatly. She simply tells the truth about it, which is considerably more useful than pretending it doesn't exist. In a boarding house, the Nooyi lesson operates on several levels simultaneously. There is strategic thinking, the ability to see beyond the immediate result, to connect what you are doing today to what you are building over the years. There is the cultural intelligence she spent her career operating at the intersection of multiple worlds, holding her identity steady while adapting her communication to an enormous range of contexts, and never pretending that those things were in conflict. And there is something harder to name but more fundamental: the practice of leading with genuine purpose rather than performing the idea of it. Of asking not just what success looks like, but what it is actually for. She also wrote letters personal, handwritten letters to the parents of her senior executives, thanking them for the contribution their children were making. In a company of hundreds of thousands of people, she found the human gesture that cut through everything else. The crown stays in the car. The milk still needs fetching. And the question of what your ambition is actually in service of is one worth starting to answer now, long before the moment you are handed the role. Care before role. People before systems. Humanity before compliance. | CloudEd360
73 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de What A Boarder Can Learn From...!