100 Great Questions Every Entrepreneur Should Ask
Paul Graham, Jim Collins, Tony
Hsieh, and other business leaders share the questions you should be asking if
you want to improve your company.
There’s no Superman versus Iron Man
face-off between paths to
brighter destinations. Jim Collins, Marshall Goldsmith, and other thinkers have
compiled their own stocks of questions, which they urge leaders to pose to
themselves and their teams. The right questions don’t allow people to remain
passive. They require reflection, followed by action.
Warren
Berger, author of A More Beautiful Question, praises inquiry’s ability
to trigger divergent thinking, in which the mind seeks multiple, sometimes
non-obvious paths to a solution. Asking good questions and doing so often
“opens people to new ideas and possibilities,” says questions and answers over which is the better tool for
innovation. But if there were, questions would be winning. Questions ignite
imaginations, avert catastrophes, and reveal unexpected
Berger.
To compile this list of provocative
questions for business owners, we reached out to entrepreneurs and
management thinkers, scanned blogs, and revisited our favorite business books.
(Though we tried to identify the origin of each question, some had competing
claims of authorship. In those cases, we made our best call.) Have you got a
great question that you use at your company? We welcome you to add your own to
the list via the comment box below the story. Rigid mindsets are dangerous
things. We hope the following will keep your mind supple.
- How can we become the company that would put us out of business? -Danny Meyer, CEO of Union Square Hospitality Group
- Are we relevant? Will we be relevant five years from now? Ten? -Debra Kaye, innovation consultant and author
- If energy were free, what would we do differently?
-Tony Hsieh, CEO of Zappos
Hsieh explains, “This is a thought experiment to see how you would reconfigure the business if you had different resources available or knew that different resources would one day become available. Another question might be, what if storage was free? Or what if labor costs half as much or twice as much?” - What is it like to work for me? -Robert Sutton, author and management professor at Stanford
- If we weren’t already in this business,
would we enter it today? And if not, what are we going to do
about it? -Peter Drucker, management expert and author
The late Drucker posed a variation on this question to Jack Welch in the 1980s. It inspired General Electric’s “fix, sell, or close” strategy for exiting or restructuring unprofitable businesses. - What trophy do we want on our mantle? - Marcy
Massura, a digital marketer and brand strategist at MSL Group
Massura explains, “Not every business determines success the same way.Is growth most important to you? Profitability? Stability?” - Do we have bad profits? -Jonathan L. Byrnes,
author and senior lecturer at MIT
Byrnes explains, “Some investments look attractive, but they also take the company’s capital and focus away from its main line of business.” - What counts that we are not counting? -Chip
Conley, founder of Joie de Vivre Hospitality and head of global
hospitality for Airbnb
Conley explains, “In any business, we measure cash flow, profitability, and a few other key metrics. But what are the tangible and intangible assets that we have no means of measuring, but that truly differentiate our business? These may be things like the company’s reputation, employee engagement, and the brand’s emotional resonance with people inside and outside the business.” - In the past few months, what is the smallest change we have made that has had the biggest positive result? What was it about that small change that produced the large return? -Robert Cialdini, author and professor emeritus of marketing and psychology at Arizona State University
- Are we paying enough attention to the partners our
company depends on to succeed? -Ron Adner, author and professor at
Tuck School of Business
Adner explains, “Even companies that execute well themselves are vulnerable to the missteps of suppliers, distributors, and others.” - What prevents me from making the changes I know will make me a more effective leader? -Marshall Goldsmith, leadership coach and author
- What are the implications of this decision 10 minutes, 10 months, and 10 years from now? -Suzy Welch, author
- Do I make eye contact 100 percent of the time? -Tom Peters, author and management expert
- What is the smallest subset of the problem we can usefully solve? -Paul Graham, co-founder of Y Combinator
- Are we changing as fast as the world around us? -Gary Hamel, author and management consultant
- If no one would ever find out about my accomplishments, how would I lead differently? -Adam Grant, author and professor at Wharton
- Which customers can’t participate in our market because they lack skills, wealth, or convenient access to existing solutions? -Clayton Christensen, author, Harvard Business School professor, and co-founder of Innosight
- Who uses our product in ways we never expected? -Kevin P. Coyne and Shawn T. Coyne, authors and strategy consultants
- How likely is it that
a customer would recommend our company to a
friend or colleague? -Andrew Taylor, executive chairman of
Enterprise Holdings
"Taylor’s use of this question at Enterprise Rent-A-Car inspired Fred Reichheld to create the Net Promoter Score, a widely used metric for customer loyalty. - Is this an issue for analysis or intuition? -Tom
Davenport, author and professor at Babson College
Davenport explains, “If it’s a decision that’s important, recurring, and amenable to improvement, you should invest in gathering data, doing analysis, and examining failure factors. If it’s a decision you will only make once, or if for some reason you can’t get data or improve the decision-making process, you might as well go with your experience and intuition.” - Who, on the executive team or the board, has spoken to a customer recently? -James Champy, author and management expert
- Did
my employees make progress today? -Teresa Amabile,
author and Harvard Business School professor
Amabile explains, “Forward momentum in employees’ work has the greatest positive impact on their motivation.” - What one word do we want to own in the minds of our
customers, employees, and partners? -Matthew May, author and
innovation expert
May explains, “This deceptively simple question creates utter clarity inside and outside a company. It is incredibly difficult for most people to answer and difficult to get consensus on--even at the highest levels. Apple = different. Toyota = quality. Google = search. It’s taken me three years to get one of my clients, Edmunds.com, to find and agree on their word: trust.” - What should we stop doing? -Peter Drucker, management expert and author
- What are the gaps in my knowledge and experience? -Charles Handy, author and management expert
- What am I trying to prove to myself, and how might it be hijacking my life and business success? -Bob Rosen, executive coach and author
- If we got kicked out and the board brought in a
new CEO, what would he do? -Andy Grove, former CEO of Intel
In 1985, with the company’s memory-chip business under siege, CEO Grove famously posed this hypothetical to Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, leading them to ditch memory for microprocessors. - If I had to leave my organization for a year
and the only communication I could have with employees was a single
paragraph, what would I write? -Pat Lencioni, author and founder of The
Table Group
Lencioni explains, “Determining the substance of this paragraph forces you to identify the company’s core values and strategies, and the roles and responsibilities of those hypothetically left behind.” - Who have we, as a company, historically been when we’ve been at our best? -Keith Yamashita, author and founder of SYPartners
- What do we stand for--and what are we against? -Scott Goodson, co-founder of StrawberryFrog
- Is there any reason to believe the opposite of my current belief? -Chip and Dan Heath, authors who teach at Stanford’s and Duke’s business schools, respectively
- Do we underestimate the customer’s journey? -Matt
Dixon, author and executive director of research at CEB
Dixon explains, “Often, companies don’t understand the entirety of the customer’s experience and how many channels may have already failed them. They don’t understand that the customer goes to the website first, pokes around but can’t find the answer to their question, and then tries to start up a chat with an agent, only to get frustrated by the delayed response. Only then do they go to the Contact Us tab and call. From the company’s perspective, the call is square one. The customer sees it as, you’ve already wasted 15 minutes of my time.” - Among our stronger employees, how many see themselves at the company in three years? How many would leave for a 10 percent raise from another company? -Jonathan Rosenberg, adviser to Google management
- What did we miss in the interview for the worst hire we ever made? -Alberto Perlman, CEO of Zumba Fitness
- Do we have the right people on the bus? -Jim Collins, author and management consultant
- What would have to be true for the option on the table
to be the best possible choice? -Roger Martin, professor, Rotman
Business School
Martin uses this question when members of a group bring diverse opinions to a decision. It allows people to step back from their strongly held beliefs and contemplate a range of circumstances that might--or might not--support each option. - Am I failing differently each time? -David Kelley, founder, IDEO
- When information truly is ubiquitous, when reach and connectivity are completely global, when computing resources are infinite, and when a whole new set of impossibilities are not only possible, but happening, what will that do to our business? -Jonathan Rosenberg
- Do we aggressively reward and promote the people who have the biggest impact on creating excellent products? -Jonathan Rosenberg
- What is our Big Hairy Audacious Goal? -Jim Collins
- Is our strategy driving our strategy? Or is the
way in which we allocate resources driving our strategy? -Mark Johnson,
co-founder, Innosight
Johnson explains, “You might think you have a strategic plan, but your people may be doing things on a day-to-day basis that are undermining it. It’s essential that people believe in the strategy so they can make the daily decisions that support it.” - How is the way you as the leader think and process
information affecting your organizational culture? -Ari
Weinzweig, co-founder Zingerman’s Community of Businesses
Weinzweig explains, “Describe the culture you'd love to have in your organization. Then check the desired characteristics of the culture against the way you think and process information. Are they congruent? Do you want collaboration but think in isolation? Do you want a flat organization but think hierarchically? - Why don’t our customers like us? -James Champy
- How can we become more high-tech but still be high touch? -James Champy
- What do we need to start doing? -Jack Bergstrand, CEO, Brand Velocity
- Whom among your colleagues do you trust, and for what?
-Charles Handy
Handy tells this story: “One CEO had a problem with his best subordinate, who was very good at his job. But he was also personally ambitious, so the CEO could not trust him to be totally loyal. The dilemma was whether to keep him because of his abilities or lose him because he couldn't be sure of him. The answer was for the CEO to either assign the subordinate jobs where his loyalty wasn’t relevant or to confront him with his feelings. After some pushing from me. the CEO did the latter, and it cleared the air.” - Are you satisfied with your current role? If not, what is missing from it? -Charles Handy
- Do you keep 50% of your time unscheduled? -Dov
Frohman, engineer and executive, author
The 50% stat may be somewhat arbitrary. But Frohman’s point, laid out in his book “Leadership the Hard Way,” is that leaders should make sure they maintain sufficient “slop” in their schedules to allow space for reflection and the assimilation of lessons learned from experience. - What would I recommend my friend do if he were facing this dilemma? -Chip and Dan Heath
- What kind of crime could a potential new hire have
committed that would not only not disqualify him/her from being hired by
our organization, but would actually indicate that he/she might be a
particularly good fit? -Pat Lencioni
Lencioni explains, “In this case "crime" is a metaphor. This question speaks to values. A particularly idealistic organization may be okay with hiring someone that was previously reprimanded for standing up for his beliefs or blowing the whistle on something. A particularly competitive organization may be okay hiring someone who in prior positions was reprimanded for being overly arrogant or difficult to work with.” - If our customer were my grandmother, would I tell her to buy what we’re selling? -Dan Pink, author
- If our company went out of business tomorrow, would anyone who doesn't get a paycheck here care? -Dan Pink
- What is something you believe that nearly no one agrees with you on? -Peter Thiel, partner, Founders Fund
- Do you have an implicit bias for capital investments
over people investments? -Tom Peters
Peters explains: “Capital enhancements are important. They're also cool. You can get your picture taken next to a new robot. People investments are invisible and hard to measure. The tendency is to favor the hard stuff over the soft stuff. But the soft stuff is invariably more related to long-term strategic success than the hard stuff.” - Do we have enough freaky customers in our portfolio pushing us to the limit day in and day out? -Tom Peters
- Who are you going to put out of business, and why? -Brad Feld, managing director, Foundry Group
- What happens at this company when people fail? -Bob Sutton and Jeff Pfeffer, Stanford professors
- How will you motivate the dishwashers? -Bill Keena,
independent casino consultant
Job interview questions comprise a genre unto themselves, so we chose not to include them in this article. With one exception. Keena says the only correct answer to this question, posed to manager candidates in a hotel chain, is “If they are overloaded I would roll up my sleeves and start washing right alongside them.” That speaks to the candidate’s ability to create employee engagement. Turned inward, however, the question reveals even more about culture. Ask yourself this: Are we the kind of company that cares whether our dishwashers are motivated? - Do your employees have the opportunity to do what they do best everyday? -Marcus Buckingham, author
- Where is our petri dish? -Tim Ogilvie, CEO. Peer Insight
- What Microsoft is this the Altair Basic of? -Paul Graham
- Do we say “no” to customers for no reason? -Matt
Dixon
You may have created your customer policies at a time when you lacked resources, technology wasn’t up-to-snuff, or low service levels were the industry norm. Have those circumstances changed? If so, your customer policies should change too. - Instead of going to current contacts for new ideas, what if you reconnected with dormant contacts--the people you used to know? If you were going reactivate a dormant tie, who would it be? -Adam Grant
- Do you see more potential in people than they do in themselves? -Adam Grant
- Are you taking your company in the direction of better and revenue or cheaper and cost? -Michael Raynor, director, Deloitte Services LP
- Would you rather sell to knowledgeable and informed
customers or to uninformed customers? -Don Peppers, founding partner,
Peppers and Rogers Group
Partly it’s a matter of values: uninformed customers can be easy targets who swallow your pitch without pushing back. Selling to knowledgeable customers, by contrast, “is a mark of a trustable firm--one that is working to advance its customers’ best interests,” says Peppers. And there’s another benefit: “Your most valuable customer references are not the ones who spend the most, but the ones who have the most expertise and authority. That gives them credibility with their peers.” - What are we challenging, in the sense that Mac
challenged the PC or Dove tackled the Beauty Myth? -Mark Barden and
Adam Morgan, founders, eatbigfish
Barden and Morgan explain that for companies challenging market leaders with greater resources, competing on the status quo is death. Instead they must assault the dynamics of a category (the dominance of PC) or a cultural meme (what society defines as “beautiful” in women). - In what way can we redefine the criteria of choice in our category in our favor, as Method introduced style and design to cleaning and Virgin America returned glamor to flying? -Mark Barden and Adam Morgan
- In the past year, what have you done (or could you have
done) to increase the accurate perception of this company/brand as ethical
and honest? -Robert Cialdini
Cialdini explains: “Of course, the preferred way to increase the perception of a company as ethical is to foster ethical practice within the organization. However, sometimes a company can be ethical without a corresponding perception in the marketplace that this is indeed the case. Therefore, companies should strive not only to enhance and reinforce an ethical culture but also to arrange for a warranted perception of that ethicality to be part of their brand.” - To whom do you add value? -Dave Ulrich and Norm Smallwood, co-founders, The RBL Group
- Why should people listen to you? -Dave Ulrich and Norm Smallwood
- How would our PR, marketing, and social media change if
we did not use outside agencies? -Guy Kawasaki, founder, Garage
Technology Ventures and Alltop
Kawasaki explains, “Let’s see what happens when a company can't abdicate these functions to hired guns. I'd bet that employees, because they know and love their product more than any agency, can do a much better job at less expense to boot.” - What was the last experiment we ran? -Scott Berkun, author
- Are your clients Pepsi or Coke drinkers?” -Marcy
Massura
Massura explains: “This is a symbolic question that gets at how deeply you have researched your target clients. Business leaders can find out more about their customers than ever before thanks to the ability to collect data on a grand scale. Such detailed information allows the company to interact with targets in new ways and to assess current product development and marketing roadmaps.” - What is your BATNA (best alternative to a negotiated agreement)? -Roger Fisher and William Ury, negotiation experts
- What's the best design framework for an organization in a post Industrial-Age if the top-down, command and control model is no longer relevant? -Traci Fenton, CEO, Worldblu
- Who are four people whose careers I’ve enhanced? -Alex Gorsky, CEO, Johnson & Johnson
- Where can we break convention? -Shane Snow, co-founder, Contently
- Whose voice (department, ethnic group, women, older workers, etc) might you have missed hearing from in your company, and how might you amplify this voice to create positive momentum for your business? -Jane Hyun and Audrey Lee, partners, Hyun & Associates
- In retrospect, of the projects that we pulled the plug on, what percent do we wish had been allowed to keep going, and what percent do we wish had ended earlier? -Ron Adner
- Do you, as a leader, bounce back quickly from setbacks? -Bob Rosen
- Who do we think the world wants us to be? -Geoffrey Moore, organizational theorist and management consultant
- How will we build a 100-year startup? -Phil Libin, CEO, Evernote
- What successful thing are we doing today that may be blinding us to new growth opportunities? -Scott D. Anthony, managing partner, Innosight
- If you could go back in time five years, what decision would you make differently? What is your best guess as to what decision you're making today you might regret five years from now? -Patrick Lencioni
- What stupid rule would we most like to kill? -Lisa Bodell, CEO, FutureThink
- What potential megatrends could make our business model obsolete? -Michael A. Cusumano, professor, MIT
- What information is critical to our organization that our executives are ignoring? -Max Bazerman, professor, Harvard Business School
- What have we done to protect our business from competitive encroachment? -Tom Stemberg, managing general partner, Highland Venture Capital
- If you had to rebuild your organization without any traditional competitive advantages (i.e., no killer a technology, promising research, innovative product/service delivery model, etc.), how would your people have to approach their work and collaborate together in order to create the necessary conditions for success?” -Jesse Sostrin, founder, Sostrin Consulting
- What are the rules and assumptions my industry operates under? What if the opposite were true?Phil McKinney, innovation expert
- Do the decisions we make today help people and the planet tomorrow? -Kevin Cleary, president, Clif Bar
- What is your theory of human motivation, and how does your compensation plan fit with that view? -Dan Ariely, professor, Duke University
- How do you encourage people to take control and responsibility? -Dan Ariely
- Who do we want out customers to become? -Michael Schrage, professor, MIT
- How do I stay inspired? -Paul Bennett, chief creative officer, IDEO
- Do I know what I’m doing? And who do I call if I don’t? -Erin Pooley, business journalist
- Do they use it? -Howard Tullman, CEO, 1871
- What is our question? -Dev Patnaik, CEO, Jump Associates
- How is business? Why? -Thomas A. Stewart, chief marketing and knowledge officer, Booz & Company
BY Leigh Buchanan http://www.inc.com/magazine/201404/leigh-buchanan/100-questions-business-leaders-should-ask.html?cid=em01016week14d
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