What Got You There With Sean DeLaney

The Distillation of former Disney CEO Bob Iger

The Distillation of Bob Iger

Bob Iger
“My instinct throughout my career has always been to say yes to every opportunity. In part this is just garden-variety ambition. I wanted to move up and learn and do more, and I wasn’t going to forgo any chance to do that, but I also wanted to prove to myself that I was capable of doing things that I was unfamiliar with.

 

It would be easy in a book like this to act as if all the success Disney experienced during my tenure is the result of the perfectly executed vision that I had from the beginning… But you can only put that story together in retrospect… I had no real idea, though, especially then, where this journey would take me… Determining principles of leadership is impossible to do without experience, but I had great mentors. I’d absorbed everything I could from them. Beyond that, I trusted my instincts, and I encouraged the people around me to trust theirs. Only much later did those instincts start to shape themselves into particular qualities of leadership that I could articulate.

 

There’s a way in which I still can’t quite believe it. It’s a strange thing, to think on the one hand that the narrative of your life makes complete sense. Day connects to day, job to job, life choice to life choice. The storyline is coherent and unbroken. There are so many moments along the way where things could have gone differently, though, and if not for a lucky break, or the right mentor, or some instinct that said to do this rather than that, I would not be telling this story. I can’t emphasize enough how much success is also dependent on luck, and I’ve been extraordinarily lucky along the way. Looking back, there’s something dreamlike about it all.”

 

Bob Iger’s 10 principles for great leadership

Optimism

Courage

Focus

Decisiveness

Curiosity

Fairness

Thoughtfulness

Authenticity. 

The Relentless Pursuit of Perfection

Integrity

 

“How could that kid, sitting in his living room in Brooklyn watching Annette Funicello and the Mickey Mouse Club, or going with his grandparents to his first movie, Cinderella, or lying in his bed a few years later replaying scenes of Davy Crockett in his head, find himself all those years later becoming the steward of Walt Disney’s legacy?” 

 

Bob Iger’s Early Years 

 

Bob Iger’s relationship with his father

 

With few exceptions in my life, I’ve never worried too much about the future, and I’ve never had too much fear about trying something and failing.

 

Driven to Succeed 

 

Importance of Exercise

Bob Iger’s exercises for 3 reasons 

  1. Health 
  2. Vanity
  3. Sanity 

Both of Bob’s parents had heart attacks at 40 so he knew a healthy lifestyle could save his life. He changed his diet and exercise routine in his early 20’s to encompass a healthier lifestyle. 

 

Exercising for Sanity

 

Bob Iger’s Morning Routine 

 

Bob Iger’s on Stress

 

Bob Iger’s Mentors 

Roone Arledge 

 

The Relentless Pursuit of Perfection

There are moments in our careers, in our lives, that are inflection points, but they’re often not the most obvious or dramatic ones.”

 

Tom Murphy & Dan Burke’s leadership at Capital Cities 

 

Know What You Don’t Know & Trust in What You Do 

 

Managing Talent 

 

“I’d much rather take big risks and sometimes fail than not take risks at all.” I didn’t want to be in the business of playing it safe. I wanted to be in the business of creating possibilities for greatness. Of all the lessons I learned in that first year running prime time, the need to be comfortable with failure was the most profound. Not with lack of effort but with the unavoidable truth that if you want innovation—and you should, always—you need to give permission to fail.

 

 

Bob Iger’s on Leadership

 

Bob Iger’s on Managing Your Time

 

At every stage, I worked hard to absorb as much as I could, knowing that if I performed, they had larger plans in place. As a result, I felt profoundly loyal to them.

 

Bob Iger’s Creating Disney’s Future 

 

Bob Iger’s Lessons to Lead 

They are the lessons that shaped my professional life, and I hope they are useful for yours. 

 

“No matter who we become or what we accomplish, we still feel that we’re essentially the kid we were at some simpler time long ago. Somehow that’s the trick of leadership, too, I think, to hold on to that awareness of yourself even as the world tells you how powerful and important you are. The moment you start to believe it all too much, the moment you look yourself in the mirror and see a title emblazoned on your forehead, you’ve lost your way. That may be the hardest but also the most necessary lesson to keep in mind, that wherever you are along the path, you’re the same person you’ve always been.”

 

 

 

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