Leading in the 21st century: An interview with Shell’s Ann Pickard
After building a career in Africa, Australia, and now the Arctic, the Royal Dutch Shell executive vice president has developed core leadership principles to safeguard employees and the environment.
Ann Pickard, the executive vice president, Arctic, at Royal Dutch Shell,
built her career in the far-flung corners of the global oil-and-gas industry.
In this interview with McKinsey’s Rik Kirkland, she discusses her leadership
principles, the impact of listening, and the satisfaction of empowering all
employees. An edited transcript of Pickard’s remarks follows.
Interview
transcript
Distributed
leadership
I believe in pushing leadership all
the way down, so that every single person is a leader and making choices, and
in holding them accountable and responsible for those choices and for delivery
of the performance. When I got to Nigeria, after some time I realized we
actually had a second-class group of citizens in Shell. And that was an attempt
by Shell to do the right thing to get local employment into the right places,
but these were people who didn’t have the education or the background,
necessarily, to meet Shell’s traditional hiring standards.
But what you ended up with, effectively,
was a second class of citizenship in Shell. And once I figured that out, to me
it wasn’t the right thing to do. So how do we go about changing it? And this
was a large group of people. What became clear to me is that we needed to make
some of these people full-time, real Shell employees.
And we went through a long process
of talking to people, involving people in the decisions, and testing people.
And not lowering Shell’s standards, but broadening Shell’s standards so that if
you were really competent at your job, you should be a Shell employee. If you
were not, you should not be. And out of that, we ended up with about 400 new
Shell employees and a lot more that didn’t become Shell employees and who were
let go.
I never had a single complaint from
the people that we let go. And on the other hand, to this day, there’s not a
week that doesn’t go by that I don’t get an e-mail from somebody saying, “You
changed my life.” And those people—today, five years later—are still talking
about this, and their loyalty in doing the right thing for Shell is just
stronger than ever. I mean, to me, that’s empowered leadership down there.
Sprints
and marathons
I think the world is far more
interconnected. We’ve got Alaska thinking about Norway thinking about Greenland.
The interconnectedness becomes absolutely important. I think, again, building
resilience is talking to my organization about how this is not a sprint; this
is a marathon.
You know, we are building energy
resources for 20, 30 years, not for tomorrow. So we’ve got to think about this
as the long term, not as the short term, getting that mind-set into things.
There may be a lot of data coming at you today, a lot of things happening real
fast, but we need to go slow and steady for the future here. We did a rather
forensic look back, as you can imagine, on what happened in 2012,1
and I think one of the key things that became apparent is there was an on/off
switch.
Now, sometimes the on/off switch was
caused by external events, but sometimes the on/off switch was caused by Shell.
In other words, don’t spend the money unless you’re sure you’re going to have
the legal environment to go forward. Don’t spend the money unless you’re sure
you’re going to have the permit. No, I can’t tell you that I’m going to have
that permit until June, but we need to plan like we’re going to have
that permit in June. And so probably the biggest lesson is to make sure we
could smooth out the on/off switches wherever we could and take control of our
own destiny.
Knowing
when to listen
When I think about the big things
that have had an impact on me in my life, people would be surprised that it’s
not necessarily actual business things, sometimes. Sitting there in Australia,
in the Great Sandy Desert, with the aboriginals, and Shell was sponsoring a
program of taking some of their old legends and marrying them up with modern
science. And listening to their stories and trying to understand why, now,
their lake, which was traditionally dry ten months a year but always had water
at least some of the time, no longer had water.
Going to Gabon and sitting there in
some of the most pristine forests and talking to WWF about why these areas were
pristine and them telling me, not knowing who I was, that it was because Shell
held the keys and protected access to these environments.
When I look back on my career, those
are the highlights, you know? Not necessarily operating to get this oil out of
the ground at a cheaper rate or a faster rate or whatever. It’s more, how do we
impact the communities and the environment that we operate in?
Ann Pickard is executive vice president, Arctic, for Royal Dutch Shell.
This interview was conducted by Rik Kirkland, McKinsey Publishing’s
senior managing editor, based in McKinsey’s New York office
1 comment:
Yes, listening from the experienced seniors helps a lot, but sometimes it creates pre-notions in mind
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