Battle-tested: From soldier to business leader
Tracey
Lloyd went from Army captain to Wal-Mart's junior military officer
program, and is now a manager of a supercenter in Palm Coast, Fla.By Brian
O'Keefe, senior editorMarch 8,
2010: 10:50 AM ET
(Fortune
Magazine) -- In the spring of 2008, Wal-Mart threw an annual
shareholders meeting befitting its stature as the world's mightiest
retailer. It was a gala event hosted by rapper and actress Queen Latifah
and featuring performances by American Idol winners David Cook and
Carrie Underwood, teen sensation Taylor Swift, '80s rockers Journey, and
country stars Keith Urban and Tim McGraw.
Away from the
festivities, though, senior Wal-Mart (WMT,
Fortune
500) executives met to confront a potential crisis: a looming
shortage of young talent in the store management ranks. The company was
so big, and growing so fast, that it was exploring the outer limits of
manageable expansion. Its revenue was on track to grow by $30 billion
that year -- roughly equivalent to adding a company the size of
Coca-Cola (KO,
Fortune
500) to its operations. Wal-Mart's usual strategy of promoting from
within and poaching from other retailers just couldn't keep up. The
executives needed a plan to address the junior-leadership void.
Bill
Simon, the chief operating officer of Wal-Mart U.S. and a 25-year
veteran of the Navy and Naval Reserves, had a suggestion. What the
company should do, he argued at the time, was create a program to
recruit junior military officers, or JMOs -- the lieutenants and
captains who had recently led soldiers, sailors, Marines, and airmen.
"The
thinking was that we could bring in world-class leadership talent that
was already trained and ready to go," says Jennifer Seidner, a senior
recruiting manager at Wal- Mart. "And then we could teach them retail,
because we know that pretty well."
The company sent recruiters to
job fairs and headhunters with links to the military. Over the next four
months it hired some 150 JMOs and paired them with store manager
mentors to learn on the job. By that fall Wal-Mart realized it had
tapped into a gold mine of talent.
In October the company hired a
retired Army brigadier general, Gary Profit, to expand military
recruiting to all levels and divisions of the business. Less than two
years since the JMO program was launched, according to Seidner, the
focus on veterans is ingrained in the recruiting strategy. "It's been a
fairly dramatic change," she says.
Wal-Mart is an enthusiastic
member of the large and growing group of companies that have begun to
discover -- or rediscover -- the benefits of recruiting military talent.
For the first time in more than a generation, business is absorbing
substantial numbers of combat veterans, young men and women tempered by
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The annual Military Friendly
Employers list published by G.I. Jobs magazine has swelled from a
Top 10, when it was first published in 2003, to a Top 50 in 2006, to a
Top 100 this year. And it's not just populated by the defense
contractors. The survey includes big-box retailers like Home Depot (HD,
Fortune
500) and Lowe's (LOW,
Fortune
500), State Farm Insurance, AT&T (T,
Fortune
500), Bank of America (BAC,
Fortune
500), and Merck. (MRK,
Fortune
500)
Headhunting firm RecruitMilitary reports that it has
worked with more than half the companies in the Fortune 100 in the past
three years. And the competition for the best candidates is getting
increasingly fierce, according to RecruitMilitary senior vice president
Larry Slagel. "It's sort of blood in the water," he says. "Companies
really want these folks."
Of
course, the relationship between the business world and the military is
long and rich. (Sam Walton himself, after all, was an Army man.)
Ambitious executives have long studied Sun Tzu for tips on defeating the
competition. The Marines have dispatched officers to the New York City
commodities-trading pits to learn split-second decision-making. And
plenty of ex-soldiers, such as Ross Perot at EDS and Fred Smith at FedEx
(FDX,
Fortune
500), have had great success over the years as entrepreneurs and
CEOs.
Certainly many soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan
have a hard time readjusting to civilian life. Some remain profoundly
affected by injuries suffered on the battlefield that once might have
been fatal. Many find the prospect of job hunting to be daunting and
struggle to translate their military experience to prospective
employers. The unemployment rate for young enlisted soldiers returning
from the war zones is unusually high.
But there is a flip side:
Veterans reentering the civilian workforce are increasingly finding a
warm welcome. That's especially true for young officers who have led
combat units on the front lines. According to headhunters, human
resources executives, and business school admissions officers, these
candidates -- most in their late 20s or early 30s, with a college degree
and leadership experience far beyond that of their civilian peers --
are stars waiting to happen.
Whatever one may think of the wars
they have been sent to fight, there's no question that these people can
lead. And they are products of a military that has now learned, in
response to unconventional warfare, to value independent and adaptive
thinking.
We'll
let Gen. David Petraeus, the man in charge of U.S. forces in Iraq and
Afghanistan, explain their appeal. "Tell me anywhere in the business
world where a 22- or 23-year-old is responsible for 35 or 40 other
individuals on missions that involve life and death," he tells Fortune.
"Their tactical actions can have strategic implications for the overall
mission. And they're under enormous scrutiny, on top of everything else.
These are pretty formative experiences. It's a bit of a crucible-like
experience that they go through."
That sentiment is echoed by Noel
Tichy, director of the Global Business Partnership at the University of
Michigan and one-time head of GE's famed Crotonville leadership center.
"There's a big pool of these officers who have had the kind of
under-fire judgment experience that makes them really valuable," he
says. "Whoever has the best screening and development is going to get
some great leaders."
Steve Mumm never used to think of himself as a
future business leader, or even as a businessman at all. "Until the day
I left the Army, I planned on being in the military for my career," he
says, gazing up at a four-story, 750,000-pound hunk of metal. The $35
million drilling safety system, known as a "stack," is designed to
prevent gas blowouts during deepwater exploration. And it's his baby.
Today
Mumm, 30, is a project manager for GE Oil & Gas in Houston, and
just the sort of rising star that GE (GE,
Fortune
500) is known for grooming. A little under 6 feet tall, with brown
hair, blue eyes, and a modest demeanor, the former Army captain doesn't
come across as anything close to a drill sergeant type. But for the past
six months he's been pushing a team of about 50 people to finish
building the stack ahead of schedule and under budget. If all goes well,
later this year the drilling system will be installed on a deepwater
drill rig bound for the Black Sea.
When asked about his role in
the project, the soft-spoken Mumm isn't shy in responding. "Leader,
absolutely," he says. "To get the pieces where they need to be at the
right time takes someone out there motivating, directing, organizing. It
takes a leader to do it."
Mumm grew up on a 1,200-acre farm in
northeastern Nebraska and followed his brother to the United States
Military Academy at West Point, where he studied economics and
mechanical engineering. After graduating in 2002, he was assigned to
lead an engineering platoon and deployed to Tikrit in early 2004 as part
of the first wave of replacements after the initial invasion.
During
his year in Iraq, Mumm and his men did everything from blowing holes in
walls during routine foot patrols to leading the 7th Iraqi Army into
Samarra during an all-out assault. When Iraq held its historic elections
in 2005, Mumm was put in charge of security across the Salahuddin
province and designed fortifications to protect the voting sites.
Mumm
often found that the mission involved going beyond his assigned duties.
When he observed that the local Iraqi police were easy targets for
insurgents at checkpoints, Mumm designed a simple concrete barricade
system for the Iraqis called Checkpoint in a Box that was adopted by the
rest of his division.
And when he noticed that insurgents had
begun to use unexploded ordnance to build improvised explosive devices
(IEDs), he organized a program that hired local Iraqi workers, with
security from his men, to find and destroy the bombs. At the end of each
day they would pile up the weapons they had gathered and explode them.
"There was no manual for how to place C-4 on the pile when we got
there," he says wryly. "We wrote that." (He recently saw the celebrated
movie The Hurt Locker, which follows a bomb squad in Iraq. "It
was pretty good," he says. "There were some situations that I felt were
very real.")
Mumm was in Houston in 2007 serving a stateside
deployment when, on a whim, he tagged along with some friends to a
military job fair and found himself being recruited by a GE Oil &
Gas executive to be a founding member of its Junior Officer Leadership
Program (JOLP). (Information about hiring veterans can be found at a
Department of Labor website, hirevetsfirst.dol.gov.)
The JOLP idea came out of
GE Energy in the late 1990s and has been spreading throughout the
company. Each year 15 to 25 junior officers are hired fresh out of the
military, and they each spend two years rotating through different jobs
in a particular division of the company. It's an easy fit with the
culture, because GE has long been recruiting ex-military talent, from
enlisted soldiers all the way up to retired generals. The company
employs over 10,000 veterans, or more than one in 14 employees.
JMOs
are heavily represented in elite management-development programs at
other companies. A good example is PepsiCo (PEP,
Fortune
500), where seven of the 25 coveted positions in its Leadership
Development Program currently happen to be filled by junior officers.
One of them is Donovan Campbell, a Princeton-educated former Marine who
published a bestselling memoir last year called Joker One about
his experience as a platoon leader in Iraq.
In 2008, Campbell was
midway through his final year at Harvard Business School and had
already accepted an offer from Pepsi when he was recalled from the
reserves to deploy to Afghanistan. When he phoned his contact at Pepsi
to explain, the company was more than supportive. Within a few hours the
head of human resources had called to tell him that Pepsi planned to
hire him early so he would earn the equivalent of a full salary while he
was on active duty. He got an e-mail of support from CEO Indra Nooyi
later that same day.
Now in his first assignment in the leadership
program, Campbell is running a 167-person organization in a $100
million Frito-Lay sales zone in Dallas. He says that his job commanding a
platoon has given him valuable perspective.
"Combat experience
was very humbling, because mistakes happen," says Campbell, who in Joker
One details the anguish he experienced when several of his men were
wounded and one was killed during his platoon's deployment to Ramadi in
2004. "In school you're rewarded for not making mistakes. And then you
get out and get a job, and a lot of times you get promoted because you
make very few mistakes. And so what you do is you develop a mindset that
mistakes are to be avoided at all costs. What you learn in the military
is that it doesn't matter how hard you try or how good you are. One,
you will make mistakes; and two, sometimes events or the enemy or a
changing situation will mean that you do not succeed, and in fact you
fail. And you become comfortable with the idea of, I do not have to have
zero defects to be successful."
That's the kind of maturity that
corporate recruiters covet, says headhunter René Brooks, who with her
husband, Roger Cameron, runs a firm, Cameron-Brooks, that specializes in
placing junior military officers. Brooks says that her clients noticed a
difference right away when she began sending them veterans of the
conflict in Iraq. "There's definitely a difference in the breadth of
experiences of the officers who are coming out of combat," she says.
"They're able to go from Plan A to Plan B to Plan C without missing a
beat."
While officers such as Mumm and Campbell have leadership
experience that their peers can rarely match, they are typically lacking
in skills like financial modeling. So business school has become a
popular way station on the road to the executive track. And the MBA
programs are clamoring to have them.
Schools like MIT, New York
University, and the University of Virginia have created special programs
to market to junior officers. Harvard doesn't market specifically to
veterans, but the current class of MBA students is about 3% ex-military.
"I would be happy to have that number go up," says admissions director
Deirdre Leopold.
And on a campus where ROTC hasn't been welcome
since the turbulent days of Vietnam, vets get a warm reception. Maura
Sullivan, a former Marine logistics officer who, like Campbell, went to
HBS and is now in Pepsi's leadership program, was stunned when she first
visited a class and the students stood and applauded for her. "I had
chills," she says. "That really drew me in to the school."
Mumm of
GE is close to completing an executive MBA with the University of
Texas. He realized that the degree would allow him to take on bigger
roles with the company, and he's eager for the challenge. "I have no
doubt that leadership is my core competency," he says. "And I have the
Army to thank for that."
On a recent Wednesday GE CEO Jeff Immelt
traveled from the company's headquarters in Fairfield, Conn., to West
Point, 45 miles up the Hudson River from New York City. Several hundred
cadets wearing casual green camouflage uniforms filed into a lecture
hall to hear Immelt give a speech he called "Renewing American
Leadership."
Immelt began by citing a recent Gallup poll in which
Americans were asked to rank their confidence in various institutions.
The military received the highest marks, with an 82% approval rating,
whereas less than 20% of Americans expressed confidence in big business
or Congress. "People have lost faith in many big institutions," he said.
The
CEO told the cadets that GE had been doing its own soul-searching. In
view of the economic turmoil of the past couple of years, he and his
team had been studying what attributes of leadership would be important
for the future. Twenty-first-century leaders, Immelt said, need to be
better listeners. They need to be comfortable with complexity. And they
must be willing to delegate so that the organization can move quickly.
GE
has cultivated a close relationship with the academy, bringing in the
head of West Point's leadership program, Col. Tom Kolditz, to teach at
Crotonville. After Immelt was done speaking, I asked him what intrigued
him about military leadership. "Dealing with ambiguity," he replied.
"That's something that I think the military is quite good at. Tom and
his team here are willing to be incredibly introspective, to challenge
paradigms. And I find that to be quite compelling."
Not so long
ago, America's elite companies probably wouldn't have gone shopping for
out-of-the-box thinkers from the military. A logistics expert to make
your railroad run more efficiently? Sure. A retired admiral with sway
inside the Pentagon to help you land the next weapons contract?
Absolutely. But the new generation of officers is a product of a
revolution in thinking about leadership in the military that anticipated
GE's.
In 2000 the Army convened something called the Army
Training and Leader Development Panel to study what qualities officers
would need in the post-Cold War world. Since World War II, the military
had focused on giant weapons systems and large force-on-force conflict.
The system favored specialization and top-down control. But the Army
knew that the world had changed, and in the spring of 2001 the panel
issued its report and concluded that it needed officers with two basic
qualities: self-awareness and adaptability.
Knowing and doing are
two different things, though. The Army didn't meaningfully change its
ways until it reached Baghdad three weeks after the 2003 invasion of
Iraq, says Leonard Wong, a 1980 West Point grad and retired Army
lieutenant colonel who is now a research professor at the Army's
Strategic Studies Institute. "Suddenly we looked around and said, 'What
are we supposed to do now?' and no one knew," says Wong. "We didn't have
the doctrine and we didn't have the guidance for that scenario.
Suddenly it was, 'You, leader on the ground, make it up. You're a
college graduate. You're a leader supposedly. We're not sure what's
going to happen. Just make it up.' And so at that point all the 20-page
orders, the 500-page manuals, all the substitutes for leadership were
lifted off. It was a serendipitous, unplanned experience that has now
gone on for eight years."
Wong says that the result has been
liberating. "The Army has accepted that the future is uncertain and
learned to embrace risk," he says. "And the impact of that on developing
leaders is cascading through the Army, and it's a good thing."
Still,
the business world has been changing at a rapid clip too, and one has
to wonder: Can a former officer who's used to issuing orders feel
comfortable "leading" an eccentric computer programmer who does his best
work at 3 a.m. while scarfing down Cheetos and may be more important to
the company's bottom line than his boss?
There's no reason why
not, argues Doug Raymond, 37, a former Army captain who is now the head
of monetization for Google (GOOG,
Fortune
500) in China. "I don't think it's empirically true that it's
difficult," he says. But in his experience Silicon Valley is dubious
about any sort of leadership paradigm and skeptical of structure. In his
four years at Google, Raymond has never had any direct reports. To get
people working on a project, he has to get them excited about an idea
and lure them to meetings. "Pretty soon they start asking for work, and
all of a sudden you've got 35 people on it," he says.
That
environment may sound as un-military as possible, but Raymond says it's
not really so different. "I think the people who are doing interesting
stuff in the military are very much entrepreneurial in mindset," he
says. "And they don't look up for approval and permission to do stuff.
They just are doing it, and then after a while, the chain of command
recognizes that what they're doing has value, and they kind of put a
veneer of respectability around it. And that's exactly how a tech
company works."
Outside the reflexively iconoclastic tech sector,
modern military attributes serve 21st-century business models in many
other ways. On Wall Street the long hours, ability to work on little or
no sleep, and adrenalin buzz when things get tense are comfortingly
familiar to combat veterans like Croft Young, 37, a first-year
investment banker at Morgan Stanley (MS,
Fortune
500). When Young, a one-time women's college soccer coach, led a
Marine reconnaissance platoon near Fallujah in 2005, he found himself in
charge of a group of enlisted men who in many cases had many more years
of experience than he did. Like most young officers, he learned to lean
on his squad leaders. "I'd say nine times out of 10 I listened to what
they thought I should do," he says. "But the order always came from me."
That,
he has found, is not so different from the role of an associate in
investment banking. "The officer comes in, and everyone in the platoon
has more expertise than he does," he says. "You come in as an investment
banker, and the analysts are infinitely better versed than you are on
the companies and industries involved."
Officer experience can
even stand out at a defense company. Consider John Whang, 30, now a
financial analyst at Northrop Grumman (NOC,
Fortune
500). Whang is a Naval Academy grad and former Marine captain who
served three tours in Iraq and, like Young, led a recon platoon, a job
that often involved being away from the base and on the move for weeks
at a time. He says that experience scored extra points in his interviews
with recruiters. But relatively few of his new colleagues can relate.
"A lot of people here, despite working at a defense contractor, know
very little about the military," he says.
Firsthand knowledge of
combat has faded from the corner office as well in recent years. For the
World War II generation, military experience was almost a necessary
line on the résumé for a CEO. That is less and less true today, despite
the generally high regard for military leadership. According to a
forthcoming study called "Military CEOs" by a pair of economists at
Harvard and MIT, in 1980 59% of chief executives of large, publicly
traded U.S. companies had military experience. By 2006 the figure was
8%.
Might the new generation of junior officers reverse that
trend? They're off to a fast start at companies like Wal-Mart. Consider
Tracey Lloyd, one of Wal-Mart's JMO recruits. Lloyd, 30, added a double
major in French and Spanish to her engineering degree at West Point and
trained as a communications officer. She deployed to Iraq in April 2007
and was put in charge of a network serving almost 4,000 troops across
seven operating bases. "Think about how often something goes wrong with
the computer in your office," she says. "Now imagine that it's 120
degrees and you're getting bombed all the time."
In her final
weeks in Iraq, Lloyd was given a mission to build a fiber-optic ring
around Baghdad. She had to negotiate with Iraqis for the frequency
space, but her counterpart wouldn't deal with her because she was a
woman. "I had to focus on not being prideful," she says, "and find a man
to stand in my place to get the job done."
Six months ago
Wal-Mart gave Lloyd her own supercenter to run in Palm Coast, Fla. It's a
long way up the chain of command from manager to CEO, and Lloyd says
she still has a lot to learn about merchandising. But leadership? "Oh,
I've got that covered," she says. Just give her time.
Additional
reporting by Jon Birger and Doris Burke