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Stanford Graduate School of Business
Stanford Business

May 2004

Grove Offers Sobering View of American Dream

Robert Burgelman and Andy Grove
Andy Grove (right) chairman of Intel Corp., was honored with the 2004 Arbuckle Award.
PHOTOGRAPH BY
ANNE KNUDSEN

The chairman of Intel challenges the School to help put rungs back in the ladder of upward mobility for American workers.

Andy Grove has challenged the Business School to take a leading role in putting some missing rungs back in the ladder leading to the American Dream.

The chairman of Intel recalled a chance meeting recently with a woman named Polly, who had been a technician at Intel in its early days. "She said, 'I want you to meet my daughter. She's a school counselor and has a PhD in psychology. Intel put her through school,'" Grove recalled. Then she added, "Intel also put her son through school. He's an engineer."

Later, Grove said, "I had this image of the American Dream being a ladder, a ladder where Polly starts as a technician at Intel and two generations of accomplished professional people are the result of her work and her opportunity to do a fairly significant job for a startup company. The problem is that a rung or two are being taken out of that ladder, and the generational climb is going to be interrupted."

When Grove, a Business School lecturer, and management professor Robert Burgelman teach the MBA elective Strategy and Action in the Information Processing Industry, they describe the strategic inflection point, a critical period of huge changes in one or more forces guiding an industry. These periods create tremendous opportunities but also threats to companies that cannot change or are too slow in recognizing the need for change.

Today, businesses are faced with "the mother of all strategic inflection points," Grove told the audience at the Business School's February dinner honoring him with the 2004 Arbuckle Award. The inflection, he said, is being caused by the advent of global networks allowing demand for intellectual work to flow out of the United States to countries like India with well-educated workforces. This comes at a time when industry is struggling with self-created internal threats, such as the recent wave of corporate criminal conduct and of governance issues, that hamper its ability to survive. "The key task of governance is to apportion the responsibility for and management of the company, distinguishing the corporation from the personal fiefdom or piggy bank of its managers," said Grove.

However, he said the most serious problem facing American business is its value system. Strong corporate cultures develop strong control mechanisms with less need to supervise and develop policies and procedures for every situation.

"There is an assumption that our business culture and values got worse because of the bubble," said Grove, who with Burgelman has taught his Business School course through two business cycles, the Internet boom, and the following bust. "But I really wonder if that's true.

Society's expectations of business have gotten tougher and more discriminating, he said, but the nation is not responding well to these demands. "We all know that in the absence of strong corporate cultures, companies turn bureaucratic; our business mechanisms, roles, infrastructures become ossified and less competent. Today, this is happening at the very time we as a business society face the strongest competition yet from a lean, hungry, well-educated workforce well served by a modern infrastructure.

"I can only describe this as the perfect storm. Coping with the storm requires doing what is necessary for the rungs to be there and for the American Dream to continue.

"At Intel, we see five stages for dealing with a new problem: First, you ignore its existence; second is denial; third, you blame others for it; fourth, you assume responsibility for it; and fifth—a solution is coming. I think it is safe to say we are past the ignore stage and are straddling the deny and blame others stages. It is mandatory for us to figure out ways to assume responsibility and look for solutions.

"What could be a better mission for the Stanford Business School, in association with Stanford Law School, Engineering School, the Hoover Institution, etc., than a unifying mission to move us to stage five and lead the way to an intellectual prescription for putting rungs back in the ladder of the American Dream?"

Stanford Business Home

Features In This Issue

Global View: Capturing the Contours of a Global Economy

Global View: The Business of Fighting Poverty

Global View: Latin American Conference Looks at Changes

Alumni Bookshelf: The Latest Alumni Authors

Alums Take to the Pen: Walt Disney's Revolution, by Buzz Price, MBA '51

Alums Take to the Pen: Preparing Heirs to Run Family Fortunes, by Victor Preisser, MBA '64

Work Teams: Differing Views Cultivate Better Decisions

Work Teams: Gains Worth Pains of Diversity

Leadership: Grove Offers Sobering View of America Dream

Counterpoint: The Value of Health vs. The Cost of Medicine

 

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