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Everybody Matters: The Extraordinary Power of Caring for Your People Like Family Audio CD – Unabridged, March 1, 2021
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- Print length1 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherGildan Audio and Blackstone Publishing
- Publication dateMarch 1, 2021
- Dimensions5.2 x 5.7 inches
- ISBN-13979-8200607273
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"It is almost impossible for me to adequately convey my admiration, excitement, and incredulity...To give people the power and freedom to care for each other, to trust that people want to do well and be good...and to see how these things create value for everyone--it doesn't get better than that. I have (happy) tears in my eyes as I write this."
-- "Amy Cuddy, associate professor, Harvard Business School""Profit matters, but people matter more. Bob Chapman and Raj Sisodia use real-world examples to illustrate how the humanity so often absent in today's boardrooms is actually a direct path to sustained growth. It's a message that should be taken to heart by business leaders everywhere."
-- "Ron Shaich, founder and CEO of Panera Bread"Product details
- ASIN : B08Z5G15RR
- Publisher : Gildan Audio and Blackstone Publishing; Unabridged edition (March 1, 2021)
- Language : English
- Audio CD : 1 pages
- ISBN-13 : 979-8200607273
- Item Weight : 3.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.2 x 5.7 inches
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Raj Sisodia is FEMSA Distinguished University Professor of Conscious Enterprise and Chairman of the Conscious Enterprise Center at Tecnologico de Monterrey in Mexico. He is Co-Founder and Chairman Emeritus of Conscious Capitalism Inc. He has a Ph. D. in Business from Columbia University. Raj is co-author of the New York Times bestseller Conscious Capitalism: Liberating the Heroic Spirit of Business (2013) and Wall Street Journal bestseller Everybody Matters (2015). He was named one of “Ten Outstanding Trailblazers of 2010” by Good Business International, and one of the “Top 100 Thought Leaders in Trustworthy Business Behavior” by Trust Across America for 2010 and 2011. Raj received an honorary doctorate from Johnson & Wales University in 2016 and the Business Luminary Award from Halcyon in 2021. He has served on the boards of Mastek and The Container Store.
Raj has published sixteen books, including Firms of Endearment: How World Class Companies Profit from Passion and Purpose, which was named a top business book of 2007 by Amazon.com. His most recent books are Awaken: The Journey to Purpose, Inner Peace & Healing; The Healing Organization: Awakening the Conscience of Business to Help Save the World; and The Global Rule of Three: Competing with Conscious Strategy. Raj has consulted with and taught at numerous companies, including AT&T, Verizon, LG, DPDHL, POSCO, Kraft Foods, Whole Foods Market, Tata, Tesoro, Siemens, Sprint, Volvo, IBM, Walmart, McDonalds and Southern California Edison.
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Far too many American corporations are run in the interest of maximizing shareholder value. In this worldview, the value of labor counts only insofar as that labor can increase shareholder wealth. Money over people is the rule not the exception. In an earlier day such a set of values would have been considered a form of idolatry, and the people who advocated for money-worship over the protection and enhancement of human beings would have been pariahs. Now business cable networks celebrate them and ask in hushed, submissive tones what can be done to cut so-called entitlements such as Social Security and Medicare.
Fortunately there has always been a strain, often a small strain, of management thinking that considered this ruling paradigm a bunch of hooey. That strain flourished especially in small, privately owned companies where owners felt themselves to be part of the community and where workers were also neighbors and sometimes friends. Occasionally this strain flourished under the name of Servant Leadership and was understood to include broad non-denomination religious overtones, a part of what is referred to as civic religion.
In Western Europe worker rights flourished under the aegis of left-learning social democratic parties. At times overtly communist or socialist parties pushed the social democrats to promulgate labor laws that were strongly pro-worker. Among the pleasant revelations of Michael Moore’s film, “Where To Invade Next,” is a sojourn among Italian business owners and workers. In the two companies Moore visited, both high-end manufacturers, workers had six weeks of paid vacation, twelve paid holidays, and a bonus thirteenth-month of salary given at the end of the year. Even workers in less flush companies receive 20 paid vacation days and 12 paid holidays. In Italy workers must be strongly represented on management committees. The owners Moore interviewed, far from being upset by the power and benefits that their workers have, seemed proud to run companies that contributed to the common good. Profits were still made but not at the expense of exploiting those who produce the wealth. Italy has the tenth largest economy in the world.
Even in the United States until the 1970’s, management saw itself as part of the community and as contributing to community well-being. Likewise, a company’s people were considered its most important resource. This was not mere lip service. During World War II, many rich and powerful people volunteered for active military service. When the country was in danger, those in all social and economic classes assumed the risks of defending freedom. Somewhere along the line the ethic of defending freedom was transformed to defending freedom so long as doing so helped to maximize profits. Some might consider this a change in values worth exploring.
Into this morass of amoral contemporary American business thinking, we are fortunate to have Everybody Matters by Bob Chapman and Raj Sisodia. While not nearly so polemical as I might wish, Everybody Matters turns the ruling corporate management paradigm on its head. Chapman is the CEO of Barry-Wehmiller, a $1.7 billion manufacturing corporation created by and large through the acquisition of small, specialized businesses mostly in the US but overseas as well. Sisota is a chaired business professor at Babson College. The initial insight for this novel, humane, and effective management philosophy came in 1997 as Chapman was introducing himself to some managers at a recent acquisition. To boost morale and alleviate fear, Chapman on the fly invented a game that allowed a play-element into business activities. While employees could earn a small amount of money from participating in the game, play was as important as economic reward. Chapman reflected on this unanticipated success and eventually, in dialogue with his managers and workers, created a set of Guiding Principles of Leadership (GPL) meant to help employees grow personally and not simply serve as functionaries in a for-profit enterprise. It wasn’t enough simply to create principles, however. Enron had done that. Those principles had to be lived from the top down. People on all levels and across the range of companies were asked how the GPL could be implemented more effectively. Along the way, Chapman and his senior managers discovered that success didn’t come from finding the right talent or from recruiting at the best business schools. Success came from positive leadership and specifically from creating passionate experienced people who were prepared to perform in a creative, life-enhancing way. A profitable, high-energy corporation didn’t need to fuel itself on stress and treat people as objects or functions. As Chapman avers (italics in the original), “Business can change the world if it fully embraces the responsibility for the lives entrusted to it” (page 74). Brutal honesty isn’t necessary. Brutal honesty is still brutal. Real leadership cares, inspires and celebrates.
The great recession of 2008-2009 gave depth to this vision. As with the overwhelming percentage of business enterprises, Barry-Wehmiller suffered a drastic downturn in orders and revenue. The conventional wisdom would require laying off employees, cutting benefits, and closing the least profitable divisions. That wasn’t the path that Chapman took. He did have to make painful choices. He ordered everyone in the corporation to take one month of unpaid leave. Besides that, though, the only salary he cut was his own, by more than 95 percent. Because everyone in the organization, including union stewards, saw this process as fair and well-intentioned, it was instituted without objection. No one had to be permanently laid off. Toward the end of the recession, business came roaring back, and when it did, Barry-Wehmiller had experienced, well-motivated employees in place to take the corporation quickly to new levels of profitability.
While the first half of this book is a kind of case study, the second half serves as a description of principles leading to a path forward. It includes group visioning, leading through stewardship, inspiring passion and optimism, and recognizing and celebrating everyone who is actively on the path the Guiding Principles sketch out. The authors recognize that “courageous patience” is sometimes required. Not everyone learns at the same pace or can embrace change easily. Toward the end of their book, Chapman and Sisodia quote Herb Kelleler, the long-time CEO of Southwestern Airlines. Kelleler said, “The business of business is people. Yesterday, today, and forever.”
Everybody Matters goes a long way toward showing how to realize Kelleler’s maxim. It is a powerful antidote to the management by numbers that serves as leadership and strategy in most corporations. While it presents a way that will require continuous improvement and listening carefully to people throughout the organization, a process that is never fully realized, it offers a life-enhancing paradigm and a way to add meaning and profit to the endeavor that occupies most people throughout most of their waking hours. Thank you, Chapman and Sisodia, for writing this book.
John Jiambalvo is the author of Smirk, A Novel, a satiric analogy to the first administration of George W. Bush, and Americana Collection: Poems of War and Peace.
Indeed I did enjoy it.
I'd heard of the Barry-Wehmiller company before, having grown up in southern Illinois, it's a pretty familiar name to those close to the St. Louis metro area. But honestly - I had no idea that Barry-Wehmiller had so wholeheartedly embraced a philosophy of management that should be what lean managers strive for.
The only part of the book that bothered me was the point in the book when they decide to adapt lean methods into their culture...
"We scheduled a kickoff meeting in Green Bay with a group of senior leaders to lean about Lean and begin our continuous-improvement journey. On the first afternoon, a consultant gave an opening presentation on Lean. After forty-five minutes, I stood up and walked out of the room in frustration. The presentation was all about justifying bringing Lean tools into an organization because they help add to the bottom and get more out of people. The presenter actually said these words, "This will help you get more out of people." That's when I left the room...
...With fire in my voice, I said, "Brian, we are never going to have a Lean journey like that in our organization. We are not going to suck the life out of people and take advantage of them in that way. We are going to build a Lean culture focused on people or we're not going to do it at all."
First, bravo Mr. Chapman for being principled enough to follow your own compass. Second, I'm very sorry that was the "lean" you were introduced to. I find it ironic and sad that Bob Chapman had to build a "Lean Culture focused on people" as if it were something new and different.
Ironic because, had Bob gone to Toyota to learn the Toyota Production System he'd have found that's exactly what real lean is. Maybe not in the exact same way they've found to make it work at Barry-Wehmiller, but certainly within the same spirit.
A real lean consultant would have known that:
The Toyota Way is rooted in the concept of "Respect for People" and would never:
overburden employees
create an environment of fear
think of people as "heads" or "variable resources"
Real lean knows that you cannot truly have continuous improvement, everywhere, all the time IF you don't respect people as people.
Real lean knows that the best way to build / show respect for people is to trust them, listen to them, guide them, thereby - building better people.
In this way, people are not a variable cost you want to flex up and down - but a fixed cost, or even a capital investment that continues to appreciate. Like a chunk of gold, that will increase in mass if you only appreciate it - or shrink if you ignore it.
Bob may not have gone to Toyota, but according to his book he did meet with Jim Womack of the Lean Enterprise Institute. Poor Jim Womack even laments:
"Bob, I can't believe I wrote this book that's been around the world, that a huge number of organizations in the country are embracing...I can't believe it hasn't changed the world"
What does this say about us? What does it say that you can't almost hear the angst in Jim Womack's voice about the undelivered potential of this alternative way of management?
You can practically hear Jim thinking, "How many times do we have to say this?"
So many say they're lean consultants, OpEx professionals, etc...but why is it so rare to find a leader that can actually practice it?
(let's be honest here...it's very, very, VERY rare.)
There's also a section of the book detailing how they weathered the financial crash of 2008, asking all employees to share in the burden - rather than having a layoff and catastrophically impacting a few.
This hit close to home for me - as the company I worked for at the time - did nearly the same thing. We did it a little differently, a single week at a time per month and we focused it on salary ranks rather than hourly (as well as giving up all bonuses and merit increases) but it was a similar strategy.
Why would an organization do this? I explained this to another colleague a couple weeks ago:
"Our clients don't care how great you did this year...or how great a team did, or a division...they see us as one company, one team. It's about time we thought of ourselves that way..."
Business organizations don't get to succeed or fail in silos in the real world. This is a team sport - and good teams pick up the slack for a injured member.
Bob Chapman and Barry-Wehmiller should be proud of what they're trying to do, the lives they've impacted, and those they might yet inspire to. I'm sure things aren't perfect, no company ever is. But if Bob is half as sincere as he comes across in this book, and they keep trying - they have a bright future ahead of them.
Top reviews from other countries
Lots of stories, lots of hints, lot of beware of this happening. It will take a brave leader to try this but I am certain that one they learn and practice daily how to listen, respect, interact and help improve their people, the transformation will be amazing.
Unlike many its not packed with great ideas and principles that have never been tried out in anger. Great theories that promise much and just might deliver. Nope....this book is based on a set of proven management principles that have been proven to work and drive exceptional results for business today. It's "People-Centric".
Bob Chapman's observations & experiences are amazing to read. The evolution of the ideas and the act of carrying them though into practice. They makes 'people sense' on a human level unlike anything I've read before and best of all they've created fantastic commercial results that outshine many other Fortune100 businesses.







