
15
Episode 15 48 min
Adam Coffey, Author of the Private Equity Playbook, on Navigating the Stages of Growth for Sustainable Success
Adam Coffey, Author
00:00
00:00
I think in today's world the biggest challenge any entrepreneur has if they're trying to build a big business is finding enough employees - finding enough people.
In this episode
In this episode, we sit down with Adam Coffey, a seasoned CEO with over 21 years of experience leading private-equity-backed service companies. Adam shares his journey from his military career to becoming a leader in the private equity world, where he has overseen 58 acquisitions and facilitated billions of dollars in successful exits.
In episode 15 of season 2, Adam delves into the critical lessons heās learned about leadership, including the importance of building a strong culture and being transparent as a leader. He discusses the concept of the āHappy Meal effectā in startups and how it applies to scaling companies effectively. Adam also emphasizes the need for leaders to adapt to different stages of growth and highlights the value of ongoing learning and self-improvement.
Youāll gain insights into navigating different growth stages, the importance of hiring and empowering great people, and the role of a CEO in inspiring and leading a team. Adamās practical advice on performance management and building a transparent culture offers actionable strategies for leaders looking to enhance their organizations.
Youāll find this episode valuable if youāre looking to elevate your leadership skills, build high-performing companies, and motivate your team.
Like this episode? Be sure to leave a āļøāļøāļøāļøāļø review and share the podcast with your colleagues.
00:46
Adam Coffeyās books
04:56
Lessons from the military and General Electric (GE) on leadership and discipline
06:52
Transitioning from CEO roles to consulting and teaching
09:30
Defining the role of a CEO and the importance of company culture
12:14
The āHappy Meal effectā in startups and growth companies
17:45
The importance of employee engagement and performance management
28:38
Transparency in leadership and making tough decisions
32:41
Building a strong company culture and engaging employees
Resources mentioned in this episode:
- Connect with Adam on LinkedIn
- Read Adamās book The Private Equity Playbook
- Read Adamās book The Exit Strategy Playbook
- Read Adamās book Empire Builder: The Road to a Billion
- Join the Supermanagers Slack community
- Connect with Aydin on LinkedIn
- Follow Fellow on LinkedIn
Transcript
Adam, welcome to the show.
Adam Coffey 00:03:00
Aydin, good to see you. Hello to all your listeners out there.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:03:03
Yeah, very excited to have you on. As I was telling you before we hit record, Iām a big fan. Read two of your books. I know you have three, possibly more. Do you have more than three, or is it the three?
Adam Coffey 00:03:14
Thereās a fourth one coming out in another month, so.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:03:17
Oh, wow. Super exciting. Super exciting. Can you tell us what that is?
Adam Coffey 00:03:21
Yeah. So Iām committed to at least one every two years, and so I enjoy doing it.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:03:27
Oh, amazing. Amazing. Can you tell us what the topic is of the new one, the next.
Adam Coffey 00:03:31
Book coming out, which is in a month? The private equity playbook was my first book. I wrote it during 2018, and it came out early in 2019. Itās more than five years old now. A lotās happened in the world over the last five years. So itās the second edition of the private equity playbook thatās being released in another month. And so bunch of new content completely went through the entire book, expanded certain sections, and excited about it. It was kind of like a Marty McFly moment, though. This was the first book, but in the first book, now Iām referring to my other books, which actually came after the first book was written, but because itās a second edition, itās now itās like back to the future.
Adam Coffey 00:04:12
So thatās whatās coming out. Itās the second edition of the private equity playbook, and that book has never left the top ten since 2019, since it was released. So thank you to everybody around the world who continues to make that book fly off the shelves.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:04:26
Yeah, thatās awesome. And again, thatās how I first got introduced to your work. So one thing that might be a good intro is, as I have it, you started in the military. You spent some time at General Electric. You learned about management philosophies and things like that, and then you went on into becoming the CEO of your first company. And maybe just walk us through that journey just so everybody can kind of get a sense for your background and what kind of things you achieved once you became CEO during your tenure.
Adam Coffey 00:04:56
Sure. I think for all of us as entrepreneurs and business people, itās like life is a set of experiences. I was in the military as a young guy. Military taught me about discipline, teamwork, and leadership. I was an engineer. Engineers are typically meticulous planners. Thereās always a plan in place that was very helpful to business. Iām a pilot.
Adam Coffey 00:05:16
Pilots donāt take off unless we know where weāre going. And if youāre thinking about, like, a typical private equity type of five year hold period, or Iām building a company to sell one day, knowing where youāre going, and then deconstructing the trip. That was a useful pilot skill. Being at GE, working for Jack Welch during the Camelot era of GE tech doesnāt exist. Number one on the Fortune 500 list. Companies growing so fast, itās doubling in size every 2.8 years. It was GE who informed my thinking about how to run a big business. What was the good growth rate for a big business, or any business, for that matter? And then 21 years as a CEO building three different companies for nine different private equity firms kind of parlayed all of that previous experience.
Adam Coffey 00:06:05
And I did 58 acquisitions, and I have almost two and a half billion in exits as a CEO. And I got bored. I totally got bored after 21 years of building companies and decided I need a different challenge. So I hung up my CEO cleats and said, Iām done. I just turned 60, and Iām like, Iāve got ten years left in my career. Iām going to spend the next ten years educating as many human beings on the planet as I can, and Iām going to teach entrepreneurs how to beat the odds, how to be successful, how to use the tools that I learned through my career, and teach people how to build a successful business, but on a smaller scale than these giant companies that I was building. And itās been fun. Itās reinvigorated my career.
Adam Coffey 00:06:52
I work more hours today than I ever did as a CEO.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:06:56
Oh, wow.
Adam Coffey 00:06:56
But Iām having fun and have clients all over the globe. Iām working with 68 different companies right now. And so itās been a lot of fun. And all of it was a cumulative experience. Donāt think for a minute that, hey, I got an MBA at age 50. And so itās like, never stop learning and enjoy the journey, and donāt think that any time youāve ever spent was wasted, because itās not. All of these things that we learn are cumulative. And the only reason I can write books about it and help others is because Iāve already stepped in every pothole and made every mistake a guy can make.
Adam Coffey 00:07:30
And so by me making mistakes, I can help you avoid making mistakes, then thatās kind of my journey.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:07:37
Yeah, I love it. And so today youāre writing, you have a big following on LinkedIn, and so is most of the work that youāre doing. Youāre coaching CEOās of fast growing companies.
Adam Coffey 00:07:47
So I work with private equity firms. I work with about a dozen PE firms. I help them evaluate investments, I help them evaluate leadership teams. I serve on boards, I coach their CEOās mentor. I also work with founders. So itās interesting because Iām on both sides of the table. So with private equity firms, I help them identify risk. I help them with value creation planning.
Adam Coffey 00:08:10
I help coach to mitigate risk of execution. Theyāre paying a lot of money for companies and thereās a lot of risk if they donāt execute effectively. When Iām working with founders, I help them eliminate risk. And so I help them learn how to scale, learn how to do a value creation plan, learn how to maximize and put together a strong leadership team and help them eliminate risk so that when a private equity buyer eventually comes calling, they trade for, call it an outsized multiple. And so Iām maximizing value on kind of both sides of the table. And then third thing I do, I write my books, I teach seminars globally, and I do coach and enjoy working with, Iāll call it executive MBA students at a bunch of different universities that I speak at regularly.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:08:56
Yeah, awesome. Very cool. So Iād love to dive in. Maybe one of the places that we can start. Like you said, CEO, for 21 years youāve helped hire CEOās, you work with a lot of companies. How would you define the role of a CEO? Like what do you think a CEOās main jobs are? And do you think that theyāre different at various stages of growth or once youāre a growth stage company, itās about the same. How do you think about that?
Adam Coffey 00:09:19
These are really good questions. So to unpack some of that. First of all, you know, I think about leadership versus management. Managers manage things. They handle the affairs of a company. Leadership. You know, leaders inspire people. And if youāre going to excel at one of these two things, you know, the CEOās primary role is to inspire people.
Adam Coffey 00:09:42
Itās to build a strong culture. Itās to be the leader of that culture. We donāt have to be the smartest people on the planet. As a CEO, I can surround myself with talented people. Matter of fact, I would tell you, if Iām the smartest guy in the room, Iām in the wrong room. And so I can hire subject matter experts who are great at sales or at marketing or manufacturing or operations. A CEOās primary role as youāre scaling. Iām not talking about startup.
Adam Coffey 00:10:08
Iāll get back to startup in a minute because I think there is a different skill set there that is important to have. But I think the biggest, you know, Iām the chief cheerleader, Iām the chief entertainment officer, Iām the chief culture builder. And itās all about inspiring people by articulating, creating and articulating a vision, creating a shared aspiration that causes people to be inspired and to work hard to achieve something that is special. And hey, Iāve run some companies in some pretty boring industries, but we had great cultures and people loved working there and they loved coming in to work in the morning and they brought their friends when we had openings. And so Iād say chief skill that a CEO needs to have is an ability to articulate a vision, a shared vision, and get people to aspire for more, to achieve more. And that all starts with culture. But in the startup days, if weāre coming out of the gates, if we have an idea, itās like we need to be an anal retentive control freak. I call it the Happy meal effect.
Adam Coffey 00:11:12
And so right now, anybody listening to this broadcast knows what McDonaldās is. And if I go to any McDonaldās anywhere in the United States, many places in the world, and I order a happy meal, I know exactly what Iām going to get. Iām going to get a red cardboard box with yellow handles, you know, itās going to have a cardboard hamburger in there, apple slices that were packaged 100 years ago, and a little thing of fries and a toy, you know, itās like, and I know itās consistent. Everywhere I go when weāre getting out of the gates and weāre building a company and weāre looking for that initial success, we have to be anal retensive control freaks. And if you think about just business in general, thereās 34 million small businesses just in this country. Only 7% ever get to a million dollars in revenue. Only 4% of those get to 10 million in revenue. And the people who find success learn how to make sure that they create the Happy meal effect so that thereās a consistency, delivery of product or service, whatever that company does.
Adam Coffey 00:12:14
The problem with most entrepreneurs is those who beat the odds and are one of the 7% who get to that million dollar mark, they remain a control freak and eventually they top out. They get to about 20, 30 million in revenue. Is my experience that I see. And all of a sudden, they have no more bandwidth. But the control freak part doesnāt go away. And this is where entrepreneurs need to learn how to grab this shifter and change gears and go from being the anal retentive control freak, the first chair player in every section of the orchestra, to becoming a conductor, and to become that person who inspires and creates that culture, hires great people and empowers them, holds them accountable, but empowers them to achieve and to own different pieces of the business. And so thereās a multiple skill set at place. You know, at Ge, I was a turnaround guy.
Adam Coffey 00:13:10
I was thought of as an expert in operations, but as a CEO, I need to put the operations away. Think of it this way. Let me use an analogy. Weāre in a big ocean lining vessel and weāre out at sea. The captain of the ship needs to be on the bridge, because the captain of the ship needs to decide to what course that ship is going to take. And if Iām too in the weeds and operations, Iām spending too much time below decks. Iām not on the bridge watching where the shipās going. And so a CEOās place is to inspire, to lead, to articulate the vision, to hold people accountable, to be the chief Rah rah officer, to hire that core group of people and empower them.
Adam Coffey 00:13:55
And itās not to be an anal retentive control freak whoās below Dex micromanaging everything, but you need that to start. So for your startup people, we have to be control freaks to create the happy meal effect. Then we switch gears, learn how to inspire others, hire good people, get out of the way, and hold people accountable. And if you can master these basic skills, then I think you can go far as a CEO.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:14:19
Yeah, Iām really glad that you talked about both of those things, because I think one of the challenges with leadership advice in general is there will be something that people say, but itās all about context. This is true, but itās true in these sorts of cases. And in these other cases, maybe you need a slightly different approach. And it is really cool to hear you actually articulate that, because youāre right. If youāre a startup founder and you start by on day one, before you have product market fit doing the orchestra leader role, maybe thatāll work, but chances are that it might not.
Adam Coffey 00:14:53
Youāre going to burn a lot of cash. Youāre going to burn a lot of other peopleās cash because youāre hiring that team. Itās like, no. So I call it their stages of growth. And how we act is different in each stage. And a startup is different than a company with 50 million or 100 million in revenue. But there, again, thatās very different than a company with 700 million or a billion in revenue. Entrepreneurs who can recognize these different stages and the different behaviors and consciously kind of shift gears and adopt different behaviors, theyāre the ones who find the most.
Adam Coffey 00:15:26
Iāll call it long term sustainable success.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:15:29
Yeah. And so you worked at GE, and one of the things that GE did at the time, Jack Welsh and team day, I donāt know if they invented it, but they certainly were one of the poster childs for this idea of stack ranking employees having very rigorous performance management programs in place. Iām curious how you thought about, obviously, growing up in GE and then running your own company. Iām wondering what methodologies you use for performance management and what kind of things work for you in the companies and what kind of approaches do you recommend to people you advise today?
Adam Coffey 00:16:05
Well, if you go back to the early days of GE and performance management, there was this thing, if youāre old enough, people will remember. And if you read about it for sure, and thereās case studies about it, itās like GE used to turn over the bottom 10%. It was forced. You know, it was forced. There were a players, b players, and C players, and C players were not long for the earth, and we would turn over the bottom 10%. And that worked for a while. However, that forced pruning of the bush, if you will, and that forced turnover. The hardest thing for human beings to do in general, is to make personnel changes.
Adam Coffey 00:16:40
Most of us tend to care about people, and we genuinely want to see people succeed. And we wait too long to take action, potentially on someone. So Jack didnāt allow that. He forced that turnover. But after a few years of doing that, there was no bottom 10% anymore. You know, you got very compressed. Itās like, we had a players, we had B players, we didnāt have C players. Theyāre all gone and they didnāt make it.
Adam Coffey 00:17:04
And so we started to relax that mentality that C players must be let go. And so we moderated. But I think what Jack essentially was doing is he was teaching the business world of that era. Itās like to be successful. It requires a plan, a strategic plan, and weāre not talking about. Jack always used to talk about, we canāt do it when thereās a thousand things wrong. We canāt do a thousand things at a time. We need to do four or five or six things at a time.
Adam Coffey 00:17:34
And if I canāt measure the performance, I donāt know if my actions are having an impact. And so while Iād like to fix it, I I canāt fix it, because I canāt measurement and see if Iām having an impact. So handful of initiatives must be measurable, must have metrics put around them. Someoneās got to own each of these initiatives in an organization, and we need to hold people accountable to their performance. And so I donāt think I ever let go of that original mentality. I recognized early, though, as the CEO, that culture was kingdom. I donāt manage revenue from the top down. I was a service business.
Adam Coffey 00:18:12
And if you think about your company and you think about, geez, I canāt store service in a box, put it on a shelf, and when a cat scanner breaks, when Iām running a medical company, I canāt pull down a box of service and sprinkle it on a broken cat scanner. It magically works. Itās people, my product. So if you canāt store your companyās product in a box and put it on a shelf, your productās people. And if your products people, then culture is everything. And if I have a strong culture, I get an engaged workforce. They take care of customers. Customers give us more stuff.
Adam Coffey 00:18:43
Revenue range from the sky. Revenue is an output of culture and engagement. But that doesnāt mean I coddle people. So I was always known for building very strong cultures and companies. People loved working there, but that didnāt mean that it was easy to succeed there. I held people accountable. Itās like, Iām going to take care of you. I will bleed for you.
Adam Coffey 00:19:04
I will take the hill, which I learned in the military as a servant leader before we knew what a servant leader was. And someone put a name on it. And Iām going to take care of you, but I expect you to get up every day and to work hard and to be engaged and to do your best to make a difference. And so my thinking has certainly morphed. I think in todayās world, the biggest challenge any entrepreneur has if theyāre trying to build a big business is finding enough employees, finding enough people. Itās like people donāt want to work anymore. Everybody wants to be a TikTok star and make a million dollars as an influencer. And itās like, you know, Iām sorry, but most businesses need people, and itās hard enough to get people to come, we have to treat them well, but at the same time, we have to hold them accountable.
Adam Coffey 00:19:47
And we canāt just coddle them and hope that weāre going to get good output from these people. And so I think thereās a balance in there somewhere between how we drive, how we hold people accountable. And generally speaking, what I find is that every job, in every company, at every level, thereās two or three or four key metrics. How do I know when Iām being successful? And I believe in using relative ranking, which came from GE. So if I have a workgroup of ten people, I want to know whoās my best, I want to know whoās my worst. I donāt want to give reviews at their twelve month mark. I want to give all ten people a review at the same time. And Iām going to look at those basic key metrics of each of their performances and Iām going to ultimately rank them one to ten.
Adam Coffey 00:20:35
And if a typical company has a 3% wage pool or 4% or 2%, pick your number. My top of the scale is going to get double bank raise. My bottom is going to get nothing. And if itās a really good workforce, then maybe the bottom gets one and this person gets a little bit less than double bank. But itās like Iām going to pay people who perform. And so when I think of this mentality, I give you another example. I ran a lot of blue collar companies that had a lot of guys and trucks. And so how do you decide who gets a new truck when youāre buying new trucks? Well, most companies would say, well, the guy whoās got the oldest truck with the most mileage on it gets the new truck.
Adam Coffey 00:21:12
Well, bull, you know, sorry, but in my world, the person whoās got the best metrics gets the new truck. And that best person in the truck, a construction company or service business, they may get a new truck every year. And the person on the bottom whoās not performing well, they get the crappiest hand me down truck Iāve got and theyāre going to get the newest hand me down, crappiest truck the next year. So itās like, I think about effort, I think about metrics and ranking peopleās performance in a workgroup and then assigning, call it the reward, whether itās raises or perks or bonuses or what have you, based on that individual performance. And I think most employees, when they come into a business, they donāt mind having certain key metrics that they know that theyāre responsible for. In most of my experience, people actually prefer that kind of environment. I donāt have to guess or wonder. And if Iām in a tough patch and Iāve got to lay someone off in a work group, itās no surprise to anybody.
Adam Coffey 00:22:14
When these metrics are published, theyāre visible, and itās like that low performer knows theyāre the lowest performer. And if I let that person go, it wouldnāt be a surprise to anybody in a workgroup. And I think when people know how theyāre going to be rated, how their performance is going to be measured, then they know the rules of the game and they can choose to play it either because they want to be on the top or they just donāt want to be on the bottom. They want to be somewhere in the middle. Generally speaking, a lot of those behaviors that I learned, call it back in. Iāll even go back to the military. Itās like the best at one rank were promoted to the next rank and et cetera. And so between all of these different life experiences, I think they all helped inform my thinking about building a company and building an accountability in a workforce.
Adam Coffey 00:23:01
But we also looked at things like employee engagement scores. And it could be simple. Itās like, do you like working here? Yes or no? Would you recommend this company to a friend if we had an opening? Yes or no? And do you think that we treat you fairly? And so I always had one goal as a CEO. My one goal was I wanted to create an environment where employees could spend their entire career in one place. And to do that, I had to do four things. I had to pay a fair wage, or Iām going to lose talent. And in todayās world, we canāt afford to lose talented people. We have to pay fairly, have to have good retirement plans, have to have good benefit plans.
Adam Coffey 00:23:41
Most importantly, we have to create opportunity. You know, we have to create opportunities for people who seek growth potential. I started my career as a guy in a trial engineer coming out of the military. I was a field service engineer at GE. I was fixing Cat scanners and mris in a hospital environment. And I knew I didnāt want to be a guy in a truck for 40 years. God bless the person that did, because they taught the next generation how to do the work that we were doing. But I wanted to get out of the truck.
Adam Coffey 00:24:09
I wanted to become a service manager. I wanted to become a branch manager, a district manager, a regional manager, a vice president, a chief operating officer someday. I wanted to be a CEO. So we have to create opportunities for good people to run who want to run. Otherwise weāll lose them. I measure everything. I would measure my employee engagements. I would measure my turnover rates.
Adam Coffey 00:24:31
And I did care about people. But Iām not going to create an environment where they get paid to do nothing. You got to work hard. You work hard, Iām going to take care of you. Iām going to bleed for you. But you need to work hard because the company needs to continue to propel itself forward.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:26:07
This is super interesting, just around the way that performance management has been done, you know, has changed over the course of time, and it goes through different waves. We went from like annual reviews to quarterly to continuous and everything in between. But I think the things that you said that really resonated with me is this idea of creating a transparent environment where you always know where you stand. I mean, thatās just a great thing to do. And I agree with you that people will likely want to know that, and they want to know what it takes to succeed in an environment.
Adam Coffey 00:26:40
And let me just say too, from a CEO perspective, people need to be transparent. You want to be a CEO thatās respected by people. Your goal and objective isnāt to be loved by all. Itās like a politician. Half the worldās going to hate you no matter what you do. My goal was transparency. I didnāt keep secrets unless I had an NDA that forced me to keep a secret. My last company, I had 3000 employees.
Adam Coffey 00:27:01
I would do monthly town halls and a thousand people would pull over and spend 15 minutes of their day with me. And I would be talking to them a thousand at a time. And then we would record it so that the other people. And so being transparent is you have to walk that walk. And I think in todayās world, a leader who talks a good game but doesnāt live it very quickly is exposed for the fake that they are. You know, itās like when you care about people, when youāre transparent, itās like I would talk to them about the good, the bad, the ugly. Hereās whatās working, hereās whatās broken, and hereās what revenue is, hereās what earnings are. And boy, I tell you what, 3000 people knew how much EBITDA we had.
Adam Coffey 00:27:41
Only about 800 probably knew what the hell EBItda was. But they all knew what we had and they knew I would walk into a company and say, Iām going to sell this company in four years and Iām not going anywhere. Iām going to keep going. So are you. But Iām going to be kicking shareholders out, bringing new shareholders in, because weāre going to grow and Iām going to create a billion dollar company and at some point itās going to go public. Youāre going to get a chance to be an owner of it. Itās like, hereās the ten year vision and shareholders will be coming and going. I would have dress up days around headquarters when Iām selling a company and saying, hey, Iāve got potential investors coming in.
Adam Coffey 00:28:15
Everyone dress up. Be on your best behavior tomorrow.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:28:17
Thatās awesome.
Adam Coffey 00:28:18
Weāve got investors coming in and so many entrepreneurs are just, everything is done in secret. Iām going to go to the dankest, darkest hotel room, 20 miles from headquarters because I donāt want anybody to know that I might be thinking about selling this. And Iām like, Iām announcing itās dress up day tomorrow. Iāve got investors coming in. I would start the year by showing a graph. Hereās revenue and earnings today. When we get to this point, Iām going to kick our current shareholders out. Iām going to sell it, bring in a new set.
Adam Coffey 00:28:44
And as weāre getting there every year, itās like, okay, this is the year. This is the year that itās happening. And I explain to them the difference between private companies and public companies and private equity backed companies and founder led companies. And itās like transparency is everything. And I think todayās employee wants to be working in an environment where the leadership is transparent, where they understand the good, the bad, the ugly. They know the vision, and they buy into that vision and they participate in the success.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:29:16
Yeah. So I think this makes a lot of sense on the transparency. So it sounded like you said you talked about all of the things. So, for example, if you had a situation where things werenāt looking so rosy and if you werenāt able to turn things around, that you might have to have layoffs or something like that, would you announce those sorts of things in advance, too? Like, was it that transparent?
Adam Coffey 00:29:38
You know what, I wouldnāt necessarily pre announce it that in 30 days Iām going to lay off 20 people. But certainly Iām transparent about whatās happening. And I always tell people, look, Iām the captain of the ship, and thereās 3000 souls on this ship. And if I have to throw one overboard to save the other 2999, then, by God, Iām gonna do that, because thatās what the captain of the ship does. But that doesnāt mean I donāt care about that person. It doesnāt mean I donāt put them in a lifeboat and strap a pillow on their ass as theyāre falling off the train. So I do have this one weird little tidbit that I can share with you. In my life as a CEO, I have had to fire people many times over that 21 year career, including my ten years at GE.
Adam Coffey 00:30:19
So 30 plus years of management. And to this day, anybody that I have fired who once upon a time worked for me was on my staff. Iām still friends with them. They still follow me on LinkedIn, they still reach out, and they like stuff that I post on social media. Itās like, there is a way to be respectful of people and respectful of a need for change. And itās never about what their failures were or they were a dirt bag. I treated people, all people, with respect. We did our best if we were in a negative situation to try to take care of people.
Adam Coffey 00:30:55
I remember during COVID when Covid first hit, I was owned by Aries Management, one of the largest PE firms on the planet at the time. And people talk about these cold hearted bastard PE people who donāt care about people. Aries started a foundation in every portfolio company that they own, which is like 100, and they put in a six figure sum into each one of these companies foundations, and they said, take care of your employees. Take care of the people who are impacted by Covid, people who were sick at that time and had to miss work for an extended period of time, people who lost loved ones. And so itās like we cared about people greatly. But there came a time, I remember in 2020, it was like the lockdowns disrupted a lot of businesses in different ways. And there came a. A time in the summer of 2020 where I had to lay a bunch of people off.
Adam Coffey 00:31:43
I didnāt like doing that. And we did our best to take care of people, but itās like, you make tough decisions that have to be made. And I was always a turnaround guy. So when I was hired, it wasnāt because the company was performing well and it was growing like a weed. It was. This thing screwed up beyond repair, and we need somebody to come in and fix it, and then out of the ashes, build a culture, and then grow it like itās never grown before and sell it for a massive multiple and make shareholders a bunch of money. And that was my role. And so I was always in a turnaround type situation.
Adam Coffey 00:32:18
So thereās. You learn through experience that, hey, how we treat people matters. There are times, and I can tell you that the reason why I got hired in the first place is because another CEO before me, or the one before that or a founder didnāt do incrementally the things that needed to be done year after year after year. And because of their neglect, the company finally got to a point to where a turnaround guy like me needed to come in and do ten years worth of housekeeping and cleaning in one fell swoop to save something that had gone astray. And so if we would just take the time to call it, to do the maintenance on the house that needs to be done year in and year out, the company would never get into that kind of position. So I talked about a couple of different concepts there. Itās like we have to make tough decisions. I remember once being in a room with a couple hundred CEOās, and we were debating the topic.
Adam Coffey 00:33:18
We had, like, a thousand plus years of CEO experience. We were debating a topic, when is the right time to let someone go? And the collective wisdom of that room went all over the map. But when we were done arguing about it, the collective wisdom was, the first time you think it might be necessary is the time that you should act. And every day or week or month or year after that, you are no longer managing in an optimal fashion. Call it the performance of your company. Youāre afraid to make the tough calls. Iām a people person. I used to tell my HR leader in every company, itās like, look, Iām going to work to rehabilitate people.
Adam Coffey 00:33:59
To me, the glass is always half full, not half empty. And this is my weakness. And you need to kick me in the ass when you see me coddling somebody that I need to action on, and I should be kicking them off the bus rather than constantly trying to work with them and save them. I think we also need to recognize what our strengths and weaknesses are and then surround ourselves with people who donāt give us groupthink, but create a good, diverse base of thought that we can then leverage in situations to propel the company to the next level.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:34:34
Yeah, and I love how you said that in the majority of cases, even when you do have to decide that, you have to sub a person out and sub another person in that, a lot of times you can maintain a good relationship. So Iām wondering if there are any good tips or tricks on, because inevitably, for a growing company, youāre going to need a new set of talent that needs to come in, that wants to do the roles that the next version of the company needs. And, yeah, and yeah, so this is a common thing. How do you do it so that you can continue to maintain?
Adam Coffey 00:35:05
Well, let me start by telling you what happens if we donāt. If youāre a small business owner who aspires to be a big, big company someday, and you promote someone and theyāre a vice president or a c level executive in a small company. Every company that I built was growing at better than 30% a year, which means they were quadrupling in size every five years. And so you take a company with $100 million in revenue, and itās 500 million just a few years down the road, and itās pushing a billion, and within ten years, and itās like weāre going to outgrow peopleās skill sets. And what usually happens in a small company is if I promote someone too fast and as Iām getting bigger, that person can no longer handle the job. I add a new layer. I add another person horizontally, and very quickly, I get top heavy, and I have way too many executives or I have too many layers of management rather than having developed the talent that I had be my first goal and objective. And if they canāt make the journey, actually helping them off the bus and bringing in someone who can, itās like, what happens is I wind up getting my entire company out of whack.
Adam Coffey 00:36:16
You know, geez, I have a regional manager, and that regional manager can handle this size business. And so therefore, I hire two, three, four additional regional managers, and I got a bunch of them where if I had a good regional manager, you know, at that level, they could do twice as much as that person that was in that role. And so thatās what tends to happen is we put band aids on the problem by creating additional layers of management. And so Iāll tell you, that frequently has happened to me. I just get done selling a company. A ton of money was made, bunch of millionaires created in a leadership team. And then Iām now retooling with a new owner whoās looking at it and saying, I got to go from x to four times the size. And Iām now Iām the manager of the baseball team who just won the World Series, and itās a new season.
Adam Coffey 00:37:03
And Iām looking at the pitchers I got out in the bullpen, and Iām thinking, this person just won the Cy Young Award, but theyāre not going to get me back to the championship next year. And key players start getting traded. Itās like, boy, this happens with every, every great athletes on a team. Theyāre on a championship run. Think about Tom Brady. You know, Tom Brady won all these Super Bowls and yet got traded, you know, at the end of his career, and then went, won another Super bowl to show the world that he was still on top. But it happens to all of us. We do need to retool from time to time.
Adam Coffey 00:37:37
Time. And so there were times where Iām sitting around and right after a companyās been sold and a bunch of people made a bunch of money, Iām looking at my team and thinking, do I have the right people on the bus, in the right seats for the journey ahead? And if not, I have to make the tough call now. And theyāre going to go through the stages of grief. Theyāre going to be shocked, then theyāre going to be angry, then theyāre going to negotiate, and then thereās going to be some level of acceptance, and Iām going to power through that with them, and then Iām going to help them get the next job, and Iām going to be a resource for them for the rest of their careers, and Iām going to not just kick them off and ignore them. And so I think, for me, thatās why I still maintain good relationships with people that Iāve had to let go. Itās because at a human level, they helped me win a championship. And I felt at a time that I needed different talent on the field to continue to be competitive as we were growing to the next level. And so how we treat people matters, but when we donāt and when we ignore the obviously, then what results is our overhead costs start going through the roof.
Adam Coffey 00:38:41
We add layers, we add more width, and before you know it, weāve got a whole bunch of leaders and not enough worker bees, and weāre out of balance and the performance of the company starts to drop off.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:38:54
Yeah, itās very interesting. And like you said, if you neglect these things for long enough, you need to hire a turnaround expert to come take care of the years of, letās call it, management debt that has accumulated.
Adam Coffey 00:39:06
Yes.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:39:07
And being able to take care of those things, I did also want to, just as a final topic, talk to you about culture, because one of the things that you did mention is that people loved coming to work and loved being part of the company. So Iām curious, what are some of the things that you did? So when you would take over a company, how would you turn around the culture in the process?
Adam Coffey 00:39:27
You know, I tell people oftentimes when I would get to a company again, these were turnarounds. Every company I led started with a turnaround. Iām John the Baptist. Iām one voice crying out in the wilderness, talking about this company that has fallen into this state of disrepair or malaise and how I would start by articulating the vision and really starting to connect with people. And so Iāve done it differently at different companies, but it starts with, generally speaking, if Iām evaluating a company, Iām coming into it. I would ask HR for a census before I ever got there. Asked the people who are hiring me, the board of directors. Iām looking for an HR census.
Adam Coffey 00:40:08
So if I take my last company as an example, 3000 employees. Well, we had 1900 guys in trucks service. We had 425 construction workers. You know, we got 1500 service techs. I got 60 some odd salespeople. Itās like, and I want to know, where are the people? Where are all the people? And then I want to go spend time working with those people. I want to immerse in the company, in the culture. I want to understand what people do for a living.
Adam Coffey 00:40:31
I donāt want to look at a spreadsheet and see numbers. I want to see peopleās faces and jobs. And I want to have walked in their shoes, even if itās only for half a day or a day. I want to understand the people, and Iāll make friends with people, call it in the trenches. So I call it my informal feedback loop. Iāll have a staff who sometimes tells you what you want to hear, and Iāll sanity check if Iām driving change in an organization. I can drive change much faster than the culture can assimilate the change. And so I need to know when I need to back off, when Iām pushing too hard, and I keep that informal feedback loop.
Adam Coffey 00:41:08
You know, Iām driving a lot of change. Iām getting information from metrics and from a leadership team. Iām sanity checking that with people Iāve got relationships with in the trenches, and I can understand how Iām driving culture, but it starts with articulating the vision and taking that message to everybody in the company, and I acknowledging the problems and issues that weāve got and asking for them to give me a little bit of time to do the things that I need to do. Iām here. Iām one voice crying out in the wilderness. But I promise you, good times are coming. And so always transparent. And so I call it.
Adam Coffey 00:41:46
I made a lot of visible investments. When I got to my last company, there was about a 40% turnover rate. Employees. Itās like, how the hell are you supposed to grow a successful company if 40% of your people are walking out the door every day? It didnāt seem logical to me. I got to dig in to figure out, why are people leaving the company? And it was a different answer in different parts of the country. And we started fixing it in all the different parts of the country. Within twelve months, turnover was reduced by more than 50%. And it wasnāt always wages, it was wages in the Pacific Northwest, because we were competing with a heavy union crowd that was trying to pick off our employees in Texas.
Adam Coffey 00:42:22
It was. It had to do with paid days off and sick days, which wasnāt mandatory in Texas. And their brothers in California were getting it, but they werenāt getting it because of where they lived. And so I learned about what was causing the turnover. I made visible investments to fix some of these things, which means the company had to be willing to make investments. So thatās kind of the hockey stick before it turns around and starts to come back. But I. But there were tangible results, and so people would see, okay, the guy told me what he was going to do.
Adam Coffey 00:42:56
By God, I see him doing it. Who would have thought he would have restructured management, invested in us. And so at first, itās, people give me the benefit of the doubt. But very quickly, my actions reinforced what I told them I was going to do. Okay, he told me what he was going to do. Now I see him doing it. Itās a different kind of world than what Iāve been used to, which is no transparency, people not talking to me, just laying off people and doing these restructure after restructure, trying to figure out how to make the company profitable again. And so itās, I articulate the vision, I communicate it throughout.
Adam Coffey 00:43:35
I start to take action. I make sure that they see me doing what I said I was going to do. I build the credibility very quickly. I could turn companies around. Youāre talking months, not years, months. And people who had stopped engaging because they werenāt on the inside, understanding what was going on with that lack of transparency, now start getting reengaged. They start working hard. Employee engagement start scores start going through the roof.
Adam Coffey 00:44:03
And so it starts with brute force, but it starts with vision and then walk in the walk.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:44:08
Yeah, Iām definitely seeing a theme in all the topics that weāre talking about. It just goes back to this idea of, again, you have to have a shared vision. You have to set it. You have to show people that youāre executing against it. You have your informal feedback loops, like you said, you have your employee engagement surveys, and all of them fit into the same puzzle pieces, come together so that you can execute on that one goal as a CEO. So, Adam, this has been an awesome conversation. Weāve talked about so many different topics. Obviously, the role of the CEO.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:44:38
Weāve talked about performance management. Weāve talked about creating a great culture and so many topics in between. The final question we always like to end on is for everybody in the audience looking to constantly get better at management and leadership. Are there any final tips, tricks, or words of wisdom that you would leave them with?
Adam Coffey 00:44:58
I would say a couple of things. First and probably foremost, never stop learning. The minute you stop learning and the minute you think youāre Godās gift to anything is the day you stop growing and the day the problems start to happen. So surround yourself with good people. If youāre a small business owner or in a startup, peer groups are a great way to engage other leaders to talk about topics. You know, youāve got groups like YPO and vistage, and Iām a consultant and a coach. Thereās a lot more people in todayās world who are open to the idea of coaching. Boy, roll tape back 2030 years.
Adam Coffey 00:45:34
Yeah, there wasnāt a lot of that going on when I was starting out, and there was a lot of youthful arrogance and exuberance that a successful person used to have. And I think the worldās kind of morphing, and I think social media certainly has helped. And just the electronic digital world has become so much smaller. Iāve got clients all over the globe. Itās like, and so build a support network. If you donāt have it, challenge your status quo and never stop learning. Whether itās reading books or taking courses. I can look on the wall in preparation.
Adam Coffey 00:46:05
I knew I was going to be hanging up my CEO cleats. I went to a university and I became a certified director. Itās like, I know Iām going to spend more time on boards of directors. Iām going to go learn about being a director. What constitutes being a good director? As I told you, for me, Iām in school teaching, and then Iām a student at age 50. Itās like, never stop learning. Thereās always more that we can learn and build a support network. And if we do these things, we have a higher probability of being able to leverage, call it shared wisdom and shared expertise from others, which will help accelerate our own journey and help us prevent from kind of stepping in those.
Adam Coffey 00:46:45
Those potholes that we all fall in from time to time. So I think thatās probably number one, never stop learning. You know, it doesnāt matter how old you are or how successful you think you are, thereās somebody out there whoās a lot more successful than you, and youāre not Godās gift to anything. So be a good steward to people. Take care of people. Theyāll take care of. You have a strong culture, but that doesnāt mean we donāt hold people accountable. So keep learning, keep investing in your people, and your journey will go far.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:47:13
Thatās great advice and a great place to end it. Adam, thanks so much for doing this.
Adam Coffey 00:47:16
Aydin, good to see you. Yeah, we didnāt even really talk about private equity. Weāre gonna have to come back another time, talk about finance and all that good stuff. This was all about leadership, which was great. That was kind of refreshing. Yeah.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:47:28
Weāll definitely have to have you on once the, the new edition comes out. And for everybody, weāll link to your books into your LinkedIn page and the show notes, and hopefully weāll. Weāll send some people your way there too.
Adam Coffey 00:47:40
Sounds great. Talk soon.
Aydin Mirzaee 00:47:42
And thatās it for today. Thank you so much for tuning into this episode of the Supermanagers podcast. You can find the show notes and transcript at www.fellow.app/supermanagers. If you like the content, be sure to rate, review and subscribe so you can get notified when we post the next episode. And please tell your friends and fellow managers about it. Itād be awesome if you could help us spread the word about the show. See you next time.
Latest episodes
-
Topaz Adizes, Founder of The Skin Deep, on The Five-Act Framework for Transformative Leadership Conversations
Episode 26
Topaz Adizes
-
Zabeen Hirji, Executive Advisor and Retirement Disruptor, on How Gen AI and Purpose-Driven Organizations are Shaping the Future of Work
Episode 25
Zabeen Hirji
-
Alan Todd, Udemy Executive and Author, on Cohort-Based Learning, Psychological Safety, and Inspiring Curiosity in Teams
Episode 24
Alan Todd
Fellow Newsletter
Get exclusive interviews and leadership best practices directly into your inbox.