At the core of this book by former Yum! CEO David Novak, is the idea that “active learners are painters. Artists. When you see life as a “masterpiece in progress,” you are always learning, always engaging, always thinking, and always contributing. From 2 to 102 and beyond, life is an opportunity to create, and learning is at the core of that journey.
With this mindset, Novak brings together lessons from his career at PepsiCo, in marketing agencies, and as a global CEO, blending stories with key leadership principles. What I liked most about his presentation was his honesty about failure and challenge, his compelling use of stories from some of his best marketing and leadership moments (think Crispy Strips!), and his transparency about what it takes to succeed in a large organization. I think his perspective translates to anyone who sees leading and learning as a lifelong journey. For Novak, the imperative is, “to learn, to be disciplined about that learning,” and to see where it takes you.
The book is organized into three parts: learn from (we are all surrounded by people, ideas, experiences that are available right now); learn to (this is a breakdown of the most essential skills you need to learn – listening, asking better questions, developing pattern thinking, etc.); learn by (learning by pursuing joy, simplifying, solving problems, exposing yourself to new experiences and environments).
The chapters are short, story-driven, and you can pick one section up and read it pretty quickly. I underline books as I read them, which helps me write these reviews pretty quickly as I have a method for taking notes right in the pages that helps me outline what I think are the most salient points to include in the reviews. Novak’s book is one I can pick up at any moment, flip to a page, and read something pretty incredible and powerful that I go away thinking about. I would buy this one in hardcover and keep it around as a reference. It really is great and it continues to shape the way I lead.
Key ideas I loved:
I think the best stories he tells are the unique ways he seeks to give credit to and honor others. He calls it, “the power of recognition.” Part of recognition is staying connected to teams at every level in the organization. He warns against getting disconnected from the people carrying out the vision on the ground. “Leaders are taught to delegate, but you have to avoid becoming disconnected, especially from the fundamental work of the business and the people making it happen.”
When you become an active learner, when you make growing, trying new things, attempting, part of the way in which you approach the world. You “learn about what you’re capable of, and that opens up so many possibilities in our lives.”
One of the ways I have benefitted from David’s wisdom beyond this book, is listening to his Podcast, “How Leaders Lead.” He opens each episode by introducing the person he is about to interview as: “my friend, and soon to be yours…” and it really is such a warm, inviting, open conversation with leaders from Jamie Dimon to Peyton Manning. I highly recommend reading this book, and then becoming a regular listener to his podcast.