InsideWork

Volume 3, Issue 2

January 16, 2008

Back To The Cottage
Chapter 6
The Case Study

by John Sipple

After his time at the Charmin Paper Products plant in Germany, John Sipple's leadership team at Proctor & Gamble offered him a less glamorous task: turning around a run-down pulp mill in the Florida swamplands. Here's an excerpt:

They went on to describe the "opportunity" — I took the word opportunity to mean big problem. They said the business at Foley was struggling and needed someone to lead a transition from its outdated, stuck in the mud, traditional ways to something more in keeping with the current pace of business. At that point I had spent my entire career managing "high performance" systems, employing modern approaches to get everyone in an organization involved and contributing to their full potential. I had no experience with anything like this turnaround effort.

I wasn't about to be won over by their "opportunity", and my response was pretty negative: "Thanks for your interest in me and the offer of this opportunity but I don't think I'd be interested, what else do you have?" Thanks, but no thanks!

To their credit they didn't take my negative attitude at face value. They just said, "Well, why don't you talk it over with your wife tonight, and we can talk more tomorrow."

Click here to download Chapter 6

Back to the Cottage — More PDF Downloads

Back to the Cottage unpacks John's numerous leadership experiences and traces the development of the values that made him an effective leader. These are the lessons learned not in a high powered educational institution or a corporate leader development boot camp, but in the family's cottage business of his youth.

Back To The Cottage
Preface
Chapter 1: Field Tested
Chapter 2: The Cottage
Chapter 3: Cottage Principles
Chapter 4: Shuttering the Cottage
Chapter 5: From the Cottage to the Corporation

Sponsors