In a Chicago suburb in 1982, a few people were mysteriously affected by cyanide poisoning. Some died. The cause was traced to some bottles of Extra Strength Tylenol. The CEO of Johnson and Johnson, the manufacturer of Tylenol, faced a huge crisis. Despite the high probability that Tylenol bottles had been tampered with in only one locality, J&J recalled all Tylenol and urged all customers to return any Tylenol they had. With little explicit direction from the CEO, J&J employees pitched in to expeditiously remove Tylenol from store shelves.
What accounted for this behavior? Why would the employees so willing do this? Michael Useem, in The Leadership Moment, suggests the mission and values of Johnson and Johnson were so well known by its employees it was natural. One key sentence of their mission statement reads, “We believe our first responsibility is to the doctors, nurses, and patients, to mothers and fathers and all others who use our products and services.” The result was that after J&J redesigned the product with tamper proof packaging they regained 80% of their market within a year.
What can we learn? Clearly knowing our goal and our values is critical for success. Furthermore, the goal and values must be clear to those we are leading. If this isn’t done, dissension results when tough decisions are made in a crisis. Without common values and a clear understanding of the goal, the whole organization won’t be thinking clearly or in unity. Change is made easier when everyone understands where the change is leading (the goal) and why that change is necessary (the values).
Churches are notorious for disagreements and splits. Might this be because the members of the church did not have a unified, clear goal, or a fully understood set of shared values?