Founder's Mentality: The CEO Sessions

What does it take to back a decision that may take years to prove itself? 
  
Soon after becoming CEO of Stryker, Kevin Lobo backed a $1.6 billion acquisition of Mako, a loss-making robotics company many customers, investors and industry experts believed was unnecessary. The deal would reshape both orthopedic surgery and Stryker’s growth trajectory. 
  
Join host Jimmy Allen of Bain & Company as Kevin explains why he saw asymmetric upside in robotic-assisted surgery, how he sustained his conviction through disappointing early results, and how one bold bet became the foundation for a repeatable acquisition model spanning more than 60 deals. 
  
Kevin and Jimmy also explore the tension between autonomy and scale. How do you capture the advantages of size without inviting bureaucracy? What should remain decentralized, and where can shared capabilities create a real edge? 
  
This is a conversation about repeatable growth, the cost of complexity, and the CEO’s role in helping leaders think like founders. 
  
https://www.bain.com/founders-mentality/ 
  
LINKS 
Ask for Help - Jimmy Allen - Blog [https://shorturl.at/qvzxe] 
Bain & Company LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/company/bain-and-company/] 
Bain & Company X [https://x.com/BainandCompany] 
Jimmy Allen LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-allen-3442b/] 
Kevin Lobo LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevinalobo/] 

  • (00:00) - Introduction
  • (01:35) - The potential in robotics that no else saw
  • (02:27) - Taking the $1.6 billion proposal to the board
  • (03:28) - Why Stryker had to act immediately
  • (05:48) - The hard part begins after the board says yes
  • (06:36) - Telling Wall Street about the slow first quarter
  • (08:05) - Leading through the time lag
  • (08:32) - Winning over employees and building M&A credibility
  • (09:37) - Cold-calling Larry Culp, former CEO of Danaher, for advice
  • (10:18) - Turning mistakes into an integration playbook
  • (11:16) - Discovering the "Stryker way”
  • (13:09) - Are you the right parent for the company you acquire?
  • (15:12) - Building a repeatable acquisition machine
  • (17:09) - The outer game and inner game of growth
  • (18:14) - Preserving autonomy across 22 business units
  • (20:21) - Good complexity versus bad complexity
  • (21:00) - What is the CEO's job in a decentralized company?
  • (22:52) - Creating a team of entrepreneurs
  • (24:18) - The real meaning of conviction
 
About the Host: 
Jimmy Allen is an Advisory Partner at Bain & Company with over 35 years’ experience advising leading organizations. He’s the author of multiple best-selling books on growth and leadership and the host and founder of Bain’s Global CEO Community Forum. Jimmy is a regular speaker at global business events, including the World Economic Forum, and serves on the Botswana Economic Advisory Council. Outside of consulting, Jimmy started his own record label [Abubilla Music] in 2008 and supports Singing Wells, a project dedicated to preserving Kenyan village music. 
  
Bain & Company: 
Founder’s Mentality: The CEO Sessions is brought to you by Bain & Company, a global consultancy trusted by the world’s most influential business leaders. With decades of experience guiding organizations through growth, transformation, and leadership development, Bain’s executive insights offer what it takes to lead at scale. 

What is Founder's Mentality: The CEO Sessions?

Before a strategy becomes a success story, it's a judgement call.

Now in its second season, Founder's Mentality: The CEO Sessions gets inside the decisions that defined some of the world's greatest leaders - a bet the market couldn't yet see, a crisis that put the organisation's purpose to the test, and the courage to keep showing up even when you don't have the answer.

How do you stay close to the frontline as the organisation scales?
What does AI mean for the thing you have spent years building?
How do you transform the company without breaking what makes it great?

Hosted by Jimmy Allen, Advisory Partner at Bain & Company, bestselling author and leader of Bain's Global CEO Forum, each episode is a candid, in-depth conversation with leaders from Mars, The Economist Group, Khan Academy, and more.

Each episode is built around one real story, one defining moment, and the lessons that come from living through it. Dense with insight and designed for leaders who listen with a pen in hand, the series explores the outer game of markets, technology and growth, and the inner game of energy, humility and courage, and what it takes to master both.

The question this season isn't just what the CEO should do.
It's who does the CEO need to become?

Join the Conversation:
https://www.bain.com/founders-mentality/
https://www.bain.com/insights/topics/ceo-agenda

Links:
Bain & Company LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/bain-and-company/)
Bain & Company X (https://x.com/BainandCompany)
Jimmy Allen LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-allen-3442b/)

About the Host:
Jimmy Allen is an Advisory Partner at Bain & Company with over 35 years’ experience advising leading organizations. He’s the author of multiple best-selling books on growth and leadership and the host and founder of Bain’s Global CEO Community Forum. Jimmy is a regular speaker at global business events, including the World Economic Forum, and serves on the Botswana Economic Advisory Council. Outside of consulting, Jimmy started his own record label (Abubilla Music) in 2008 and supports Singing Wells, a project dedicated to preserving Kenyan village music.

Bain & Company:
Founder’s Mentality: The CEO Sessions is brought to you by Bain & Company, a global consultancy trusted by the world’s most influential business leaders. With decades of experience guiding organizations through growth, transformation, and leadership development, Bain’s executive insights offer what it takes to lead at scale.

- If we're right, this
is an asymmetric upside.

Rarely do you get a
chance to change a market

and that first mover advantage
is gonna be significant.

We will be right for a
decade if we're right.

- Sometimes, the biggest decisions

just don't happen at the right time.

They happen before you've
built a track record,

before you're known, before you're trusted

and you don't have any data
because you're the first.

And yet, every now and then a leader

has to decide anyway to act.

Not because they're comfortable

with what might happen if they're wrong,

but because they're so confident

about what could happen if they're right.

(upbeat music)

I'm Jimmy Allen

and this is Founder's
Mentality: The CEO Sessions.

(upbeat music)

Kevin Lobo is chair and CEO of Stryker,

one of the leading medical
technology companies.

He was born in Mumbai, raised in Montreal,

and he's from a family

where getting a college
degree wasn't the norm.

He spent his career
moving through industries

he didn't grow up in,

asking questions other
people weren't asking

and taking decisions other
people weren't ready for.

Kevin joined Stryker in 2011
and became CEO within a year.

And almost immediately he did something

that surprised his board,
upset some of his customers,

went against the advice
of industry experts

and sent the stock down 4% in a day.

He was right, but it
wasn't clear right away,

which makes for a pretty
uncomfortable ride.

(gentle music)

- People felt that robotics wasn't needed

in orthopedic surgery.

Surgeons would be trained
on a certain implant

and they would use that implant
for their entire career.

Prior to being CEO, I saw
that Mako had made progress

with robotic assistance for partial knee

as well as hip replacement.
Then I became CEO

and I decided that this is
a deal I wanted to pursue.

It was highly risky

because it was a publicly traded company,

about a hundred million
dollars of revenue,

loss making, partial knee is
only 4% of the knee procedures.

It was a small portion of the market,

but they were making great progress

and I felt that the
total knee application,

which was going to come in the years ahead

was gonna be the killer application.

The cost for this
acquisition was 1.6 billion,

which seemed gigantic at the time

given it was a hundred million
dollars company losing money.

But I really felt it was
going to be a game changer.

But I would tell you it
was extremely unpopular.

- Kevin, take us back to you
recommending that decision.

I imagine you fairly new
CEO walking into your board

with customers opposed with
your advisory council, opposed,

bring us into that room.

- So when we walked into the board,

the pitch to boil it down
simply we have a chance

to transform the orthopedic industry

and to differentiate our company

from all the other orthopedic companies.

Historically, market share
never moved in orthopedics.

Whatever they were trained with

is what they ended up retiring with.

We will be able to move
massive market share.

We will improve the satisfaction
of total knee replacement

through the use of
robotic assisted surgery.

We will be less invasive to the patient.

We will be more precise, more
accurate, more consistent,

and Stryker will become
the number one company

in hips and knees.

- What was that like for you?

And now that you've probably looked back,

what the hell was that
like for your board?

- The board ultimately supported the deal,

but it was difficult.

They pushed back and frankly
it was understandable

that they would push back.

The first area of pushback

was why should we do this deal now?

It's a publicly traded
company, they're not for sale

and you're a brand new CEO,

why do you want to take such
a big risk at this time?

And there were two major reasons

why I wanted to move at that time,

this total knee application was going

to happen a year before we did the deal.

The stock was at $44.

It had dropped all the way down to $16.

And I felt that once they announced

they had a total knee application,
the stock was gonna jump.

The second reason was one
of our major competitors

was going through a very
tricky, difficult integration

of a different acquisition

and I knew that they would have
interest in this technology

and they had deep pockets
so they could afford

to spend 1.6 billion.

If we moved quickly, we would be able

to take the asset out.

And then of course the
second question was,

"Well, what happens if you're wrong?"

You believe this is gonna
be a value creating deal?

What happens if we're wrong?

And so what I said at the
time was that if we're wrong,

it's not gonna kill the company.

We have such a strong balance sheet,

we could afford to make
a $1.6 billion bet.

At the time we were a roughly
$7 billion sales company.

We're now 25 billion.

But back then it was a
sizable deal for our company.

We had not done very many acquisitions,

certainly not of that size,

but I felt that wouldn't kill the company.

And if we were wrong, it would be a niche

like navigated surgery and we'd write off

about a billion dollars of goodwill.

And so I said that and a couple

of directors reacted a
little bit anxiously with,

"We've never had a write off of any size,

let alone a billion dollar write off."

But I said, "That's if
we're wrong, if we're right,

this has an asymmetric
upside, we will be right

for a decade if we're right

and that first mover advantage
is gonna be significant."

So I leaned in hard and I felt

that it was the right
decision for the company.

On a personal level,

I knew that I was betting my job on this.

Many CEOs have gotten fired

because they've missed on acquisitions,

but usually they're larger
transformational deals.

In this case, I really
wasn't betting the company

when I was pitching this.

Some of the board members
were totally with me.

Some of the board members were
totally shocked and surprised

and some were doubtful.

But eventually they backed me.

They could feel my conviction.

They knew I was willing
to bet my job on this,

that it really was a risk worth taking.

(upbeat music)

- Most leadership stories end right there.

The pitch, the room, the
moment the board was convinced

by the CEO to go from no to yes.

But Kevin would tell you that was the easy part

because then he had to live
with the decision to buy.

Kevin was changing an industry.

This acquisition was a smart one

only if he changed the market,

changed the behavior of surgeons,

changed the way his customers bought

and his salesforce sold.

But behavioral change takes time.

And Kevin knew this.

He could measure the market moving

and the behaviors changing
by how many robots he sold.

So he told analysts and he told the board

to focus on that single metric.

- Kevin, you answered one of my questions,

which is while the company could survive,

you were fairly certain

that you might not
survive if you were wrong.

During those two years,

was there any point during that
2013 to 16 that you thought,

oh my goodness, maybe
this was the wrong bet?

- No, I really didn't know

until we launched the
Total Knee Application.

And as we developed and
had surgeons involved,

some of them started to feel,

"Okay, this does make sense."

So I think I got enough positive
signs over the three years.

Believe me, they weren't all sunny days.

The first quarter after we did the deal,

we only sold one robot.

(ominous music)

I told Wall Street

'cause I told them I'd
communicate how many robots.

So I said, "We've had
challenges with integration

and we only sold one
robot in the quarter."

It was a bit embarrassing
to say the least.

Even at the time we did the deal,

They said, "When are we gonna
know if it's a good deal?"

The investors?

I said, "You have to wait till we launch

the Total Knee and give us 18 months

after and you'll see market share move

in a very significant way,

hundreds of basis
points of market share.

To which they said

that's never been done
in orthopedics before.

And I said, "Well actually
Mako with Partial Knee

didn't move market share very
significantly over four years

and they're not even
an orthopedic company."

And so I had conviction throughout,

well there were some rocky
days during that couple years.

I just was patient and investors actually

surprisingly stayed with us.

- Often the way these things are described

after the fact is, you know,
you made a tough decision.

You were right and then went on.

But what people don't talk
a lot about is the time lag.

You made a tough decision

and then that decision looked
pretty tough for two years

during that time were you still able

to make other tough decisions

while kind of waiting for that
first big one to be right.

- First of all, just related to Mako,

we had to win over our own employees.

That was very difficult.

And honestly we didn't
really understand robotics.

We thought we did, we didn't really,

we understood orthopedics.

It was very humbling for the team.

They had very difficult two years.

Their bonuses were not good in
their first couple of years.

And we realized that

if we don't get our sales forces behind,

this is gonna be a problem.

But the other thing we did
is we started doing other

tuck-in acquisitions.

We're now known as a serial
acquirer of companies,

which had not been the case before,

but this was the first deal.

The other deals became more normal,

just standard small product tuck-ins

that fit inside our existing business.

And those started creating value

and that started to earn
credibility with investors...

is that we were doing smart deals,

they weren't all swinging for the fences.

There were some write-ups that, you know,

this new CEO is crazy or he is
making these wild decisions.

And so I think during
the intervening period

before the Total Knee,

we did a series of other smaller deals

that made a lot more logical sense

to people and delivered
value very quickly.

And through that process I reached outside

for help on acquisitions to get advice

and one of the people I
reached out to was Larry Culp,

who I'd never met

but who was, you know,
legendary leader of Danaher

and had been a great serial acquirer.

And so I cold called him

and he actually took a lunch with me.

He was excellent, he was
very gracious with his time.

And then I asked him to come and speak

to my total global leadership team.

And we talked about acquisitions
as well as integrations.

And what we learned

is that we were not great at integrating.

We didn't move swiftly enough

to bring them into the
Stryker way of working.

And Larry provided a lot of advice

and I reached out to other people as well.

And then we started to
build our own playbook.

So what I'd like to say now is
that every time we do a deal,

we do make mistakes

but they tend to be new mistakes,

not the same mistakes we
made from prior acquisitions.

We now have an integration
team that works on these deals

and we have a best practice playbook.

But I think that during
that intervening period,

doing well with other deals,
bought grace with the board,

with Wall Street and we also started

to raise our growth profile.

So we were growing roughly
4% organically back in 2013.

And in the last three years at Stryker

we've grown double digits

and acquisitions has
been a big part of that

'cause if you buy a company
that's growing faster

than you are after one year,

it rolls into your organic growth.

And all of our acquisitions
we've done over 60

in the last decade are all growing faster

than Stryker's growth rate.

And so they've raised our growth profile,

but we've done a much
better job integrating

and frankly learning

being humbled by some of the
deals that didn't go as well.

- You know, one thing I've
heard from CEOs is they often

don't know what their
company's way of working are

until they need to begin
to explain it to some

of the M&A targets that they've done.

How much has your integration been?

We had an existing way of working

and we teach the new group.

How much has been, we
actually learned what our way

of working was through these acquisitions.

And how much did your
way of working change

because of these acquisitions?

- You know, our way of working
was pretty well understood.

We operate in a very
decentralized operating model

where each of our 22 business units

has direct control over
their sales marketing R&D.

So when we do a tuck-in acquisition,

it's really not being bought
by Stryker, it's being bought

by Stryker Endoscopy or
Stryker Neurovascular.

It's really being bought by that business

and it tends to be very
intimate with the customer.

At least for tuck-ins
that's been the case.

Larger deals, which
happened later in my tenure,

like our Wright Medical,

which was about a billion
dollars of revenue,

when we did that acquisition,

we actually took our shoulder business

and moved it into their shoulder business

and we had their leaders
leading foot and ankle

and shoulder for the total company.

So that was different

where we realized they had practices

in many cases that were
better than our own.

And we started adopting
some of their practices

and made those Stryker wide practices.

In the early days, we knew
the way we were operating,

we tucked them into our business.

The problem was with
some of the adjacencies.

If I think about Sage, which
was standalone business,

we left it alone too
long didn't migrate it

into our quality system quickly enough.

And those are the kind of
things we started to do faster,

not leave those alone,

but the tuck-ins were
actually not as difficult,

very good return on investment

because we have great sales forces

and those are frankly pretty easy for us

to implement the integrations
that were more tricky

with the adjacencies or the larger deals.

- Yeah, yeah.

I'm looking up in my shelves right now.

You know, one of the very
first books on strategy

I read was about what
is corporate strategy?

And the question was always,
are we the right parent?

It's not is the company good or bad

that we're trying to acquire,

but are we the right parent?

And I'm tying the two things together.

You know, you said we are scalers,

but I think part of that is
because you ask the question,

what if we're right?

One of the things that I've seen

so often in corporations
is they don't actually play

to the asymmetric risk.

They'll take all the downside,

but they'll leave so much
of the upside on the table

because they don't shift
resources to the winners,

they don't back 'em all the way.

And it feels like that's one
of the main lessons of Mako

is it forced you to ask the question,

what if we're right?

- Absolutely.

I mean the other thing I
didn't mention with Mako

is it was dilutive to
earnings for two years.

And, you know, shareholders
don't love dilution to earnings.

So it was a long-term bet.

And the write-ups, I still
keep some of the clippings

because they were pretty
negative, to say the least.

Again, most of the deals we do

have really limited
upside, limited downside,

they're tuck-in deals,

they're range bound,
they're not asymmetric.

This is one of those asymmetric ones.

And you do want to take
swings every once in a while.

The other thing I didn't mention

was that our two
competitors were coming out

with their own new knees and
we did not have a new knee

being designed at all.

So I felt pressured to
do something different

to differentiate ourselves.

One of the biggest risks
wasn't just doing Mako

was not doing a new knee

because all the implants were really good.

And by doing Mako, we didn't
have to do a new knee,

which would've been a
$400 million investment

and we never did.

Right now our knee design
is the oldest on the market

and we have the fastest growing knee,

which had never happened
in orthopedic history

over 50 years.

There was a series of risks
building upon each other.

There was a big, big bet.

(upbeat music)

- So here's what Kevin
built in those two years

while he and the board were waiting.

Wasn't just credibility, it was a machine,

a repeatable model for buying companies,

60 plus acquisitions, 22 business units,

double digit growth, which
would've been, in his words,

unheard of over the last
50 years in his industry.

From the outside, that looks like a hell

of a lot of complexity.

But from the inside, Kevin would
tell you it's the simplest,

repeatable model in the world.

We are scalers, we know
what we're great at,

and we only buy companies

that we can grow faster
than anyone else could.

And that's it.

That's the whole thesis.

And here's what I love
about Kevin's story.

He remained humble, he remained curious.

Mid crisis stock down one
robot sold, he calls Larry Culp,

Former CEO of Danaher,

one of the great serial
acquirers in history,

someone he's never met
and he asked him to lunch

and asked for advice.

He changed the question
from what if we're wrong

to what if we're right?

That's conviction.

Conviction isn't arrogance,
it's not a misplaced confidence

that you know it all or can do it alone.

It demands curiosity, it
demands you ask for help

so you can turn your
journey into a playbook

and then a repeatable model.

(upbeat music)

And by the way, if you want a masterclass

on repeatable models,

go to episode five of
season one where we talk

to Sunny Verghese at Olam.

Kevin built a well-oiled machine,

which actually then surfaced
a very different question,

what happens when the model
starts working too well?

And that's the inner game and
that's where we're going next.

(upbeat music)

One of the themes

that's come up in the CEO
discussions is the distinguishing

between the outer and
inner game of strategy.

And what I mean by that is on one hand,

CEOs talk about acquisitions.

We change the rules of the
game with Mako to do X and Y,

an unprecedented change in
market share differences

within knee replacement that
had never happened before.

We are taking share here.

We have this growth rate
that's kind of outer game.

Inner game is growth, creates complexity

and that complexity kills our growth.

And so how do we manage almost
the unintended consequences

of our success?

If you take a moment and
you take 22 business units,

60 tuck-in acquisitions,
double digit growth,

all those dimensions scream complexity.

How have you kept the culture,

kept simple leadership principles,

kept the magic of Stryker
when all of this success,

and I'm putting quotations around it,

"Has the seeds of your own destruction

with the complexity that might come."

How have you played the inner game?

- It's a bit of an art
to be honest with you.

What we've decided is
that certain functions

and responsibilities of
our business unit leaders

and presidents are kind of sacred.

So sales marketing, R&D,
business development,

solid line finance, solid line HR.

And those business leaders

feel like they're running
their own business.

They can pay their people
whatever they want.

I had an HR person come from
another company and say to me,

do you realize

we have 400 different sales
compensation programs?

I said, "Yeah, that's interesting

why you're telling me this?"

Well, she said, "Shouldn't we have less?"

I said, "No, they're creative.

You're selling a bed is very different

than selling a neurovascular coil

that's put in someone's brain."

They have the freedom,
they have the authority,

they can pay them whatever they want.

If they wanna pay more
to their salespeople,

they still have to hit their
numbers so they're gonna have

to cut money from somewhere else.

And we've maintained that autonomy.

But to your point, we have
decided and evolved over the time

to create some what I'll
call shared services.

So for example, robotics.

So the joint replacement
division developed Mako

for hip and knee replacement.

We have a different business,
upper extremities for shoulder

that wanted a shoulder
application with Mako.

It would make no sense

to create a new R&D
team within the shoulders

to do a robotic application.

We have a shared service for that.

We have a shared service for 3D printing.

So we did have to evolve our org structure

to create some of these shared services.

Now that's not easy in
a company that likes

to have control over
everything as business leaders.

So what had to change?

We used to be fiercely decentralized

and almost competitive
between our business units.

Now we are much more collaborative.

We're also starting to move
people more between divisions,

which we didn't do before.

So, we have evolved as an organization.

But the concept of you're
running a business,

you're an entrepreneur, you
have freedom to make decisions,

to pitch acquisitions, that type of thing

we've given them tremendous autonomy

and we fought against like
having these corporate functions

sort of overrun them.

It's challenging because
corporate functions

have good intentions,

but they do have to sort
of keep their hands out

as it relates to the decisions around R&D,

the decisions around investments

and let them make their decisions.

And we live with the decisions
that those leaders make.

So we managed to maintain
the right balance

but it's not easy.

Your point's a very good one

'cause complexity can be a silent killer,

but there's also good complexity.

I think the 400 different sales comp plans

is good complexity, but
there's a lot of bad complexity

that can be created as well.

And I wrestle with that a
lot, which is how do you keep

that special sauce but
also not do dumb things

and induce complexity

that you then choke on as an organization.

It is constant struggle,
honestly very challenging

not to become bureaucratic,

not to slow down with good intentions.

People will put practices in place

that can then slow down
the business units.

And I would say defang, the
leaders of the business.

- With a CEO who is working so hard

to actually create 22
entrepreneurial CEOs.

My question was gonna be then
"Kevin, what's your job?"

And in many ways I think you answered it,

which is I'm the guy that
is trying to create trust,

collaboration and avoid the
false synergy of bureaucrats.

You know, someone from the
corporate center that says,

I've got the solution that's better

than all 22 of you.

Is that your job?

- The first part of the
job is strategy, right?

So where are we gonna play?

Where are we not gonna play?

So a big part of the job is
deciding on new adjacencies

that are not in those 22
business units for sure.

The mission, the values common
brand which we've created.

So what are the things
that are not negotiable

that everybody has to adopt?

So there's all these other areas

that those people aren't
managing day to day

that I spend a lot of my time overseeing

and making sure that they
work for our organization

and that I do spend time in
reviews with these leaders

poking and prodding.

The job is not really
to give people answers,

it's to ask them questions

to make sure they're thinking more fully.

And, you know, what about this deal?

What about that company?

What about, so I'm all
constantly meeting startups

and listening and it's just
creating the provocation

and the push for growth
and the push for ambition.

I think part of my job is to
try to shrink the company,

"Hey, I saw this division
do this really well."

Maybe that can be helpful to you

to be a connector across the organization.

And obviously telling
the story to investors,

managing the board, the
standard CEO responsibilities.

But it is different in
a decentralized company

because honestly I'm the coach,

I'm not the player, I'm not on the field.

That distance, you know, some
people would find challenging.

I quite enjoy it.

Enabling these leaders to
make their own decisions

and to push their business forward.

But having this mindset
of growth orientation,

playing for growth, betting on them,

coaching them on leadership
principles and things like that.

That's really the job.

- Can we just pause here,

Kevin speaking about a very classic

corporate strategy question.

What is the role of center?

He creates entrepreneurs?

So he runs a decentralized model

empowering his business units
to compete and then he says,

and so we have a lean
corporate center focusing

on a few shared services.

And when he said this,

I kind of expected the next words to be,

you know, legal, IT, HR

'cause that's what most of us think

when we hear the word shared services.

But Kevin then said
robotics and 3D printing.

Of course he did because
this was the thesis

of the original deal.

Used technology to transform markets,

shift competitive advantage.

The lesson of Kevin isn't this,

be brave and take tough
decisions against all advice.

The lesson is ask the
question, what if we're right?

Because if we're right,
we've changed the basis

of competition and we've
created a repeatable model

of M&A and post-merger integration

because we know something others don't.

Because if we're right,

we create 22 business unit presidents.

Each of whom feels like a
founder of their own business

and they have a few shared technologies

and a CEO who's mastered
the science of poking

and prodding. The outer
game, redefine markets,

the inner game.

Act like an insurgent,

bring founders mentality
into every business unit.

Leverage scale advantages

where you can while shrinking the company,

the inner game, and the outer game.

And underneath it all, this
is a story of conviction.

It's knowing the solution
is right for the customer.

It's having the courage to
wait until behaviors change.

It's about asking for help
to create a repeatable model

that 22 founders can use
to redefine their markets.

You know, most organizations
ask what if we're wrong?

Kevin asks a very different question.

(upbeat music)

Everything from today's episode

and every episode is at
bain.com/founders-mentality.

And we'll be back in
two weeks, stay curious.

Next time on Founder's
Mentality: The CEO Sessions.

- This is gonna sound funny, Jacqueline,

but we actually had a debate about Acumen

and specifically about you
that if you got to a crisis

and you had to choose between
the poor and your LPs,

people thought you would choose the poor.

And I said, "Are we really
having this conversation?"

(upbeat music)