Thursday, April 21, 2016

CEO lifestyles: “Excessive?” or “Mind your own business?”


 
Every Friday, the Wall Street Journal features a back-end section called “Mansions.” The slick editorial content that anchors and bolsters the numerous real estate ads generally features stories and glamorous photos of high-end estates of the rich and famous: movie stars and rock musicians, hedge fund manages and, yes, CEOs.
            Likewise, the ads feature more eight-figure offerings than I knew existed – entire islands on the Georgia seacoast, 1,000-acre Montana ranches, and hilltop Napa retreats (complete with working vineyard).
            One time a couple years ago, “Mansions” ran a story accompanied by many photos about the home offices of a few CEOs. Suffice to say, these lairs were large and pretty plush, complete with massive antique desks, dark wood paneling, Oriental carpets, and magnificent views.
            The piece got me thinking about the public face of high profile executives and the implications of that image inside their organizations. Certainly leaders of successful and growing corporations are entitled to the generous remuneration their hard work and leadership might bring them. No one, least of all me, is going to begrudge them their well-earned wealth.
            Unfortunately, it’s the exceptions to the rule that get the most attention, raise the public’s ire, give fodder to grand-standing politicians, and impugn other CEOs’ personal lives: e.g., Bernie Ebbers of Worldcom, and Jeffrey Skilling of Enron, to name but two. And then there are the Larry Ellison types who vulgarly wallow in their wealth publicly. Unfortunately, these bad apples cast aspersions on other CEOs.

Role models
Company leaders and their behaviors on the job serve as important role models for how people within the organization should operate and think of their companies. On the other hand, CEOs’ private lives (and behaviors) off the job are out of bounds and not a matter of concern inside the company  – that is, unless the multi-million-dollar birthday party he threw for his wife in Tuscany is featured in mass media (i.e., Dennis Kozlowski, ex-CEO of Tyco).
            In these kinds of cases, we’re in different territory and a CEO’s private life is public, as they apparently wished, and therefore open for critique.
            Jet set behavior, high profile public affairs and divorces, arm candy girlfriends, immense yachts, or palatial mansions featured in places like Mansion, Country Living, People, TMZ, Inside Edition, or the society pages of major newspapers present to all the world images of people of substantial means gleefully living life to its fullest.
            But that kind of public behavior also creates an image and effect inside the CEO’s company that may be less than ideal. It should also give pause to all corporate leaders and boards. For instance, imagine what life was like within Tyco for the other members of the leadership team working to build a sense of common mission among all employees, while their showboating CEO’s very public activities became the butt of late night comedy jokes and, ultimately, Congressional hearings, criminal investigations, trials and convictions.
            The typical hard-working employee, ardently striving to do his job well and meet or exceed his targets hopes for an occasional “thanks,” “atta boy,” or perhaps even a bump in pay, bonus, or promotion. What impact does a fast-living, high profile CEO have on his attitude about the company and how he operates going forward? Should he care? How does he feel about his modest 5% raise while his CEO is pulling down a $100 million salary, plus bonuses and stock options?
            One could argue that the life being led by a successful and highly visible CEO might serve as a model to which employees can aspire: hard work and dedication to helping the company succeed might ultimately pay off with such a life for themselves – after one dedicates years of hard work contributing to the company’s success, climbing the corporate ladder in the footsteps of the incumbent CEO.

The CEO’s burden
No one is kidding anyone: the CEO bears a massive responsibility for which he/she is handsomely rewarded. But, as already noted, the CEO needs to be ever mindful of how his/her external public image is being perceived inside. A CEO’s involvement in community organizations or charities is good, especially when such activities underline and reiterate the company’s own choices for community outreach and enhance its image in its markets.
            And there’s nothing wrong with enjoying the fruits of one’s success with one’s family in a large home in an upscale community, with the kids enrolled in private schools, and Aspen ski vacations – provided it’s done privately and not flaunted publicly.
            It’s the plush home office or the seaside summer estate paraded in mass media that creates a different and not altogether positive aura inside the organization that the CEO would be wise to avoid. And what’s worse is when that image is magnified and worsened internally by an attitude of aloofness and indifference toward employees within the CEO’s company.
            That kind of disconnect between a CEO and his company leads to disaffected employees. Eventually, the better ones begin to migrate away from the company to competitors, while the remainder toil away joylessly in the shadow of a showboating CEO. At the end of the day, that company will not thrive. In fact, it’s on a fast track to self-destruction. Ask yourself where Enron, Worldcom and Tyco are today.