This summer we saw two
serious corporate crises that resulted in significant monetary losses and consequent
damage to the reputations of two major international companies. However, it’s
likely one will recover more quickly than the other – if the other, in fact,
recovers at all. The difference may lie in the responses of the respective
CEOs.
On August 10, if you were relying on
Delta Airlines to get you from Point A to Point B, you probably did not make it
on time. In fact, you probably didn’t even get there on the right day. Over the
course of three days, Delta had to cancel 2,300 flights due to a massive
computer failure at its central facility in Atlanta. Placement of Delta airliners
was out of synch for more than a week, resulting in extended residual cancellations
and delays.
Initially, the company blamed it on a
pre-dawn local power outage. But on closer examination, it turned out that
power was uninterrupted. The problem proved to be faulty routing equipment that
shut down their entire computer system.
The airline handed out untold
thousands of travel vouchers to inconvenienced (and likely angry) travelers. A
month or so later, Delta assessed their total losses in the neighborhood of
$150 million.
Delta’s CEO, Ed Bastian, immediately took
full responsibility for the failure while promising to fix the problem and make
it up to his inconvenienced customers. There was no hesitancy in his response,
per the headline in the Wall Street
Journal two days after the outage:
Delta
Air Lines CEO Takes Responsibility for Outage
Computer failure
suggests past tech investments may not ‘have been in the right place’
Aug. 12, 2016
Now, for a study in contrasts, consider
what happened at Wells Fargo – in this case a very much self-inflicted wound.
It came to light that at least since 2011, the bank had opened roughly 1.5
million bogus bank accounts and applied for 565,000 credit cards that appear not
to have been authorized by its customers. Sometimes, customers’ signatures were
forged.
This blatantly unethical and illegal behavior
was the result of performance metrics that incentivized the opening of new
accounts by existing customers, a practice known in the business as “cross-selling.”
A massive scam on this scale has not been seen in recent memory. Upon discovery
by federal and state regulators, the bank was fined a total of $185 million.
More than 5,300 bank employees have been fired.
And how did Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf
publicly react to the news? The headline in the Wall Street Journal says it all:
Wells
Fargo CEO Defends Bank Culture,
Lays Blame With Bad Employees
Lays Blame With Bad Employees
Says that at the bank,
‘There was no incentive to do bad things’
Sept. 13, 2016
Think about the difference
between the reactions of these two CEOs in the context of your notion of a
CEO’s role.
Compounding the bank’s
transgressions, Stumpf appeared before the Senate Banking Committee on Sept. 20
for a grilling that yielded some stunning truths. In a nutshell, while 5,300
mostly lower-level employees were fired for their misdeeds, most of the senior
level people are still in place, reaping the rewards of a rising stock price
that increased with analysts’ praises of the bank’s allegedly successful
“cross-selling.”
Stumpf himself has realized a paper
profit of some $200 million from his holdings of nearly 7 million shares.
Carrie Tolstedt, the senior-most person in charge of retail banking where the
scam occurred, “retired” in July and is expected to receive tens of millions of
dollars in separation compensation, not including the company stock she holds.
Who’s Responsible?
While editorial
columns across the country reacted indignantly toward the bank and its CEO the
day after the hearing, I’d like to address one key point: senior executives’
responsibilities.
During the Senate hearing, Stumpf backtracked
from his initial blame placing and, reading from prepared remarks, said he took
“full responsibility” for the illicit activities. But what exactly does that
mean?
A CEO taking
responsibility for what goes on within his/her company – for both the good and the bad – is
self-evident. It goes with the job. It’s why CEOs are well compensated. With
high-level responsibilities come high-level rewards – seven-figure salaries,
bonuses, stock options, private jets, etc.
But
all too often in business (as well as in government agencies), “taking
responsibility” for organizational improprieties is a hollow feel-good phrase worn like a figurative
hair shirt until the storm passes. Afterwards, the hair shirt comes off. The
top people resume their normal activities and collect their inflated salaries.
Rarely
today does “taking responsibility” for an organization’s misdeeds result in
falling on one’s sword – i.e., resigning in disgrace. When organization-wide
malfeasance is uncovered and the senior-most person “takes responsibility,” it always
seems done in an effort to end the conversation. In fact, that's what usually happens.
During
the Senate hearing, Sen. Elizabeth Warren repeatedly suggested that Stumpf
resign – to no apparent effect. Stumpf just glared back at her and said that
that would be up to the Wells Fargo board. Clearly, Stumpf does not feel compelled to step
down of his own volition.
I
strongly suspect that, in a month or two, he will still be CEO of Wells Fargo,
still collecting his seven-figure salary, bonuses and stock options. Alas.
Plus ça change plus c'est la meme chose.
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