Grit

Guest: Mark McLaughlin, chairman of the board at Qualcomm 

When he was 24, Mark McLaughlin thought his career was over. Since childhood, he had dreamed of attending West Point and joining the Army, but a helicopter crash left him unable to serve, with a medical discharge. However, the crash also let him stay closer to his then-girlfriend Karen. They married and raised three children, and Mark found success in his new career, serving as CEO of Palo Alto Networks and now chairman of the board at Qualcomm. “In hindsight,” he says, “I would tell you the worst thing that ever happened in my life was the best thing that ever happened in my life.”

In this episode, Mark and Joubin discuss semi-retirement, Palo Alto Networks, identity crises, West Point, homeschooling, self-awareness, working on the plane, Walter Reed Hospital, Nikesh Arora, Cristiano Amon, non-founder CEOs, Paul Jacobs, Verisign, reference interviews, rising to the occasion, and fortitude.

Chapters:
  • (00:57) - Mark’s reputation and family
  • (09:40) - “What am I doing?”
  • (14:58) - Deciding to step away
  • (16:55) - Overcoming work addiction
  • (22:15) - Mandatory sacrifice
  • (24:25) - Carl Eschenbach
  • (27:12) - The people who matter
  • (32:11) - Energy vs. adrenaline
  • (37:31) - The helicopter crash
  • (44:02) - Leaving Palo Alto Networks
  • (50:05) - Bungled CEO transitions
  • (54:24) - “Detox” time off
  • (57:32) - Waiting for the right pitch
  • (01:04:48) - The at-home interview
  • (01:08:59) - Work in perspective
  • (01:12:10) - What “grit” means to Mark

Links:
Connect with Mark
Connect with Joubin
Learn more about Kleiner Perkins
This episode was edited by Eric Johnson from LightningPod.fm

What is Grit?

Grit explores what it takes to create, build, and scale world-class organizations. It features weekly episodes highlighting the leaders who are pushing their companies to make a difference. This series is hosted by Joubin Mirzadegan, go to market operating partner at Kleiner Perkins, a venture capital firm investing in history-making founders.