
Carly Fiorina, MBA’80, is
arguably one of the Smith School’s most influential
graduates, but she almost didn’t make it here at all. Her
application to the MBA program was rejected at first. But
Fiorina didn’t let a rejection stop her. She had to do some
swift talking to convince the Professor Emeritus Ed Locke,
then head of the admissions committee, to take her in, but
take her in he did.

Carly
Fiorina’s New Memoir Tops Must-Read
List at Smith School
“I started out as a
secretary, and success was never obvious,” said
Carly Fiorina, former CEO of HP and author of
the new book Tough Choices: A Memoir at a
book signing and Robert H. Smith School of
Business alumni networking event on November 13,
2006. “I wanted to tell the story of business
the way I experienced it. I wrote it myself
because I wanted it to be authentic,” she said,
explaining that she didn’t use a ghostwriter or
co-writer. The book is on the New York Times
Best-Seller List.
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That kind of determination shaped
every corporate success that would follow in a truly
extraordinary career. Fiorina spent nearly 20 years with
AT&T and Lucent Technologies, where she held a number of
senior leadership positions and directed Lucent’s initial
public offering and subsequent spin-off from AT&T. From
there she went on to lead Hewlett-Packard, the venerable
“Gray Lady of Silicon Valley,” as its chairman and CEO,
becoming one of the most powerful executives in America.
Fiorina plunged into the challenge
of revitalizing HP. “By the late 90s HP had fallen badly
behind. The company had missed nine quarters in a row in the
middle of the biggest technology upturn in history, and was
not even in the top 25 innovators in the world,” explains
Fiorina. “Then in 2000 and 2001, the global economy had
slowed to a crawl and it was clear that there were
structural changes occurring in the technology industry, not
simply a cyclical downturn. We acquired Compaq to give HP
the opportunity to control its own destiny, to master
change—to lead in the 21st century, rather than be a
laggard.”
The controversial merger of HP with
Compaq Computer Corp., led by Fiorina, is now widely
regarded as the most successful high-tech merger in history.
But many within the company were threatened by the changes
she was making and put off by her leadership style; this
caused a furious backlash by some within HP. She was fired
from the company in 2005.
HP’s fortunes have changed
dramatically in the past year, and it’s now clear that the
course she set during her tenure as its CEO was the right
medicine for the faltering company, no matter how bitter it
tasted at the time. Determination propelled Fiorina to the
top of the corporate ladder, but this kind of vision and
foresight are what keep her front-and-center at the
intersection of business and technology.
Smith Business sat down with
Fiorina on a busy Monday just an hour before she was
scheduled to give the keynote address at graduation. In the
midst of myriad distractions— from the bobbing boom mike of
a national television crew to the popping flash bulbs of a
still photographer—the Smith grad reflected on her career,
leadership, sexism, technology, globalization, and her days
at the Smith School.
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| In her new book, Tough Choices: A Memoir, Carly
Fiorina takes a thoughtful look back at her career,
from the early days at AT&T through the difficult
years at Hewlett-Packard. For those who have
followed the seemingly endless debate and
controversy surrounding Fiorina, it’s a chance to
finally see the person behind the persona. Fiorina
isn’t coy about relating some of the trials of her
early years, including the time her boss at AT&T
arranged a meeting with important clients at a strip
club, assuming Fiorina would be too embarrassed to
come. Instead, armed with a briefcase and garbed in
her most conservative business suit, she showed up
at the strip club and tried to ignore her
surroundings. But her boss, who was feeling the
effects of several gin and tonics, kept calling
strippers over to dance on the table. “In a show of
empathy that brings tears to my eyes still, each
woman who approached the table would look the
situation over and say, ‘Sorry, gentlemen. Not ‘til
the lady leaves,’” writes Fiorina. Returning to work
the next morning, she found that the incident had
won her the respect of her male colleagues: “I had
shown … that I would not be intimidated, even if I
was terrified.” |
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Digital, Mobile, Virtual, and
Personal
When Fiorina graduated from
the Smith School, the fax machine had yet to be invented.
Today it would require surgery to detach a college student
from his or her cell phone. Fiorina understands the way
technology is reshaping our world, and she believes we are
at the cusp of an era that will last for some time: an era
dominated by the power of the individual, driven by
technology that is “digital, mobile, virtual, and personal.”
And companies that do not seize the
advantages offered by technology will inevitably fail, says
Fiorina. “Everything I know after 25 years in business and
technology tells me that business models that resist
technology will ultimately fail, and business models that
resist individual human beings’ desire for more power and
control over their own lives ultimately fail as well,” said
Fiorina. “And everything I know after 25 years tells me that
those who do not seek to master change are eventually
swallowed by it.”
Fiorina believes that mental
power—brain power—is the engine that will drive business
success in the 21st century. “We say all the time people are
our most important asset, but companies need to invest in
leadership development the same way they invest in physical
plant,” says Fiorina. Getting and keeping the best and
brightest minds—the ones that create change and harness
innovation—must be a key concern for businesses in this
digital economy.
When thinking about the nation’s
public policy, Fiorina also thinks in terms of mental power.
Take immigration policy: in the last 15 years three billion
people have joined the world economy. “If even a tenth of
those people are educated and motivated, that means 300
million new people outside the United States are trying to
compete in the global economy,” says Fiorina. “We’re not
going to win through sheer force of numbers. In order for
America to remain competitive, ideas and mental power have
to be harnessed.”
Public policy objectives, then,
should focus on investing in education and innovation, and
immigration policies should focus on attracting and keeping
the brightest and most competitive people from around the
world. “I’m not sure that those considerations are shaping
the debate on immigration or education to the extent it
should,” says Fiorina.
This may be because policy makers
have yet to truly grapple with the sea changes now taken for
granted by the business world. “In many ways our public
policy is based on 20th century paradigms,” says Fiorina.
“Business, on the other hand, is out at the forefront of
change. It has to be.”
Moving Beyond “Our Token Bimbo”
Technology has changed business, but the culture of business
has likewise been changed by society’s evolving view of
women in the workplace. Early in her career, Fiorina was
introduced by her boss as “our token bimbo.” Even as a
seasoned, experienced executive, she still found that being
a woman set her apart from other top executives in ways that
border on the ridiculous. “My hair, my shoes, my clothes,
were endlessly discussed. I was routinely referred to as a
bimbo, or that other b-word,” she says ruefully.
For many years Fiorina simply
didn’t discuss gender issues, choosing instead to be judged
on the results she generated. She held the top spot in
Fortune magazine’s “50 Most Powerful Women in Business”
for six years running, but she felt that the very existence
of such a list sidelined women leaders, implying that there
was a men’s ladder to success and a women’s ladder, and that
women couldn’t compete side-by-side with their male
counterparts.
Working in the high-tech field also
presented challenges. “When I came to HP, 85 percent of the
people I was leading were men,” says Fiorina. “My gender
separated me from my employees. So I didn’t want to talk
about women’s issues, I wanted to talk about what we had in
common—the mission, the company, our business objectives.”
In the effort to move the
discussion of her career beyond gender issues, Fiorina has
sometimes alienated other women. She once famously said
there was no glass ceiling, which some women interpreted as
Fiorina saying that barriers didn’t exist. For Fiorina, who
has been through many of those barriers herself, the issue
was not whether barriers existed but whether or not women
chose to acknowledge those barriers. “The most important
choice I made as a woman in business is not to be defined by
other people’s prejudices, but to be defined by my own sense
of possibility, and what I thought I was capable of,” says
Fiorina.
While law schools, medical schools,
and public policy schools now average a roughly equal
male/female enrollment, business schools have a much lower
female enrollment, between 25 and 35 percent, according to
the Wall Street Journal. (The Smith School has 41
percent women students in the undergraduate program and 34
percent in the graduate program.) And very few of those
women go on to achieve elite leadership roles in major
companies.
Fiorina thinks perception of
competence may play a role. “People look at a man in a job
and think that he is capable of doing that job; they look at
a woman in the same position and they’re not sure,” says
Fiorina. Business also lacks the benchmarks to prove
competency that mark other professions. “If you’re a lawyer,
you pass the bar; if you’re a physician, you pass
certification,” says Fiorina. “In business, you need to
produce results, but those results come about through a team
effort. I think people sometimes get confused between style
and substance. I think we have a long way yet to go to
understand that results can be achieved through lots of
different styles and isn’t dependent on gender.”
The Making of a Leader
Technology has had profound changes on the business
world; it has also had profound changes on business schools.
“When I was here at the Smith School we talked about
‘international business;’ no one would do that now!” Fiorina
laughs. “Today all business is global business. The pace of
business is so different; no business can hide from
technology or the global realities.”
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Women
MBAs at Smith The
Smith Association of Women
MBAs (SAWMBA), a chapter of the
National Association of Women MBAs, has been an
important venue for personal support, development
and networking for women in the Smith community.
SAWMBA sponsors a variety of events throughout the
year, including conferences and symposia, resume and
interview coaching, golf lessons, and social events.
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During her time as a student at
Smith, Fiorina was a teaching assistant for Bill Nickels,
now professor emeritus of marketing, whom she credits with
showing her the power of humor as a teaching tool. “He was
like a stand-up comedian in his ability to make you laugh,
yet each story or joke he told had an important point, which
people remembered because they weren’t falling asleep,” says Fiorina. Nickels also permitted Fiorina to challenge him
with knock-down, drag-out debates in the classroom. Fiorina
respected Nickels for being the kind of person who would
allow students to argue with him, and discovered both that
she could hold her own in that kind of exchange and that she
and her classmates learned a lot from it.
As a leader, Fiorina found out that
she was the kind of person who processed best through
debate; she became the person who either instigated debate
or caused it. It was a signature part of her management
style. “I actually think better when someone is challenging
me,” says Fiorina. “It helps me identify soft spots in a
plan. Creating an environment where debate can occur takes
work; it’s actually easier to have the kind of environment
where debate doesn’t occur, but it’s less effective.”
Fiorina is also the kind of person
who truly enjoys helping others live up to their potential.
She has often spoken of the role Rudy Lamone, former dean of
the Smith School and now professor emeritus, played in her
early development. “Rudy brought me into the dean’s office
to work for him, and he treated me like a peer,” remembers
Fiorina. She values the memory of being treated like a peer
by a powerful and influential leader, and while she doesn’t
care for the term “mentoring,” implying as it does a
formalized relationship, she is enthusiastic about informal
opportunities to help others grow. Recently she has begun to
work with organizations that seek to alleviate global
poverty; she is also serving on the boards of several
start-up firms—both opportunities to foster human potential
in unexpected ways.
These days, Fiorina is busier than
ever and spends much of her time traveling for speaking
engagements or board meetings. But what she prizes most
about her post-HP life is the freedom to do things she’s
never done before, like writing a book. Fiorina is the
author of Tough Choices: A Memoir, which will be
published this fall by Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin
Group (USA).
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Q&A
What
makes a good leader?
A manager’s job is to produce quality results within a
known set of conditions and constraints. A leader’s job is
to create something new. So the essence of leadership is to
master change. The essence of leadership is to make a
difference, not maintain the status quo.
Whether it is in business, politics, or leading a family,
there are three essential qualities to leadership:
character, capability, and collaboration. In some ways
character matters more now than ever, because the
constraints that keep people on the straight and narrow are
easier to break today. Capability is important, but good
leaders know what they’re good at and use it. They also know
what they’re not so good at, and bolster their weaknesses by
surrounding themselves with people who are different from
them. A big part of capability is never to stop learning or
adapting. Collaboration is all about the reality that
nothing really important or difficult happens through
individual heroics; everything important happens through
team effort.
What’s the best career advice you ever received?
Get all the input you can; get all the advice you can;
listen to all the pros and cons; fill yourself up with
information and expertise, and then go with your gut.
If I was giving career advice, I would add: Dare to be
brave, to define yourself and not be defined by others. Know
that there are barriers, but that you achieve as much as you
choose.
Why are we hearing about so many legal and ethical
lapses in business today?
If you study Enron, which I have, you see a culture that
over time was corrupted because there were no clear
boundaries about what behavior was permissible and what was
not. The ends—in that case, perhaps stock prices—justify any
means. Unfortunately, the only way to keep the tone at the
top is to make the tough decisions, and that may entail
taking people out if they don’t have the character necessary
for that job.
What responsibility do business schools have in
providing ethical guidance to students?
I think business schools have a huge responsibility…we
have become a society where people expect quick fixes, and
stock price has become the single most important metric for
everything. Unfortunately we tend to reward results, even if
they’re being obtained in questionable ways.
Business schools have a responsibility to teach
leadership as surely as they teach finance. Some people are
born to lead, but most people learn to lead. You can and
should teach people how to lead according to their values.
I myself was fired, in part because I wouldn’t sacrifice
a principle I felt strongly about. Leadership is all about
the tough choices, and they’re frequently the ones made in
solitude, because they’re choices only a leader can make. |