Page 185 - The Bible On Leadership
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Courage                                                       171


                  Another leader who took a daring action is Eric Schmidt of Novell.
                He didn’t climb a cliff or swing high on a trapeze. Rather, he told the
                truth when almost everyone was advising him not to. He acted with
                courage, and his actions encouraged others to do the same. ‘‘When you
                enter a downturn . . . you have to fight the instinct to be overly cautious
                . . . Rather, you have to encourage your most creative people to take
                chances . . . The alternative is to succumb to a culture of fear in which
                a bleak vision of the future becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy.’’
                  On Schmidt’s third week on the job, it became evident there would
                be a $20 million loss for the quarter. Some ‘‘leaders’’ would have soft-
                pedaled this, or ‘‘played with the numbers.’’ Schmidt took a courageous
                gamble. He decided to announce the loss. The co-chair of Novell, John
                Young, endorsed this difficult decision. ‘‘Later he told me he knew then
                he’d made the right decision in hiring me. But after that announcement,
                everyone thought that the company was dead as a doornail.’’ Schmidt’s
                courage didn’t stop with an announcement. He took immediate mea-
                sures to cut costs, develop new products, and make divestitures. Thanks
                largely to these courageous decisions, he was able to put the company
                back ‘‘in the black’’ within one year. 20
                  Courage often involves speaking one’s mind despite strong, powerful
                opposition. Barry Diller is known today as one of the world’s most
                powerful media and entertainment executives. But he got there through
                a series of experiences that challenged and gradually built his courage.
                Diller says it’s important to ‘‘plunge into the uncomfortable; push, or
                be lucky enough to have someone push you, beyond your fears and
                your sense of limitations. That’s what I’ve been doing . . . overcoming
                my discomfort as I go along.’’ 21
                  Early in Diller’s career, his boss asked him to read a script and tell the
                producer what he thought. After he gave the producer his honest opin-
                ion, Diller was thoroughly chewed out. Someone with less courage
                might have concluded he was not cut out for the entertainment indus-
                try. However, he learned from this experience and went on to select
                the scripts for Raiders of the Lost Ark and Flashdance as well as launching
                a ‘‘big hairy audacious’’ venture, the Shopping Channel.
                  One of the biggest tests of courage is the willingness to challenge
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