God & Business. (cover story)
Authors:
Gunther, Marc [email protected]
Source:
Fortune. 7/9/2001, Vol. 144 Issue 1, p58-80. 13p. 6 Color Photographs.
Document Type:
Article
Subject Terms:
*BUSINESS
*WORK
*BUSINESSPEOPLE
RELIGIOUS aspects
RELIGIOUS life
SPIRITUAL life
Geographic Terms:
UNITED States
Abstract:
This article discusses the advantages of bringing spirituality into the workplace. The group called Business Leaders for Excellence, Ethics, and Justice have confronted the questions about the way in which business promotes family life and the issue of just wage. The executives who are members of the group are in the vanguard of a diverse, mostly unorganized mass of believers, a counterculture bubbling up all over corporate U.S., who want to bridge the traditional divide between spirituality and work. The spiritual revival in the workplace reflects a broader religious reawakening in the U.S., which remains one of the world’s most observant nations. The Princeton Religious Research Index, which has tracked the strength of organized religion in the U.S. since World War II, reports a sharp increase in religious beliefs and practices since the middle of the 1990s.
Full Text Word Count:
7248
ISSN:
0015-8259
Accession Number:
4729415
Database:
Business Source Complete
Publisher Logo:
GOD and Business:
Bringing spirituality into the workplace violates the old idea that faith and fortune don’t mix. But a groundswell of believers is breaching the last taboo in corporate America
Three dozen middle-aged rebels in business suits are gathered for lunch in a conference room on the top floor of the LaSalle Bank building in Chicago. They have come for sandwiches, and for spiritual sustenance, and before long they are floating radical ideas: Work less. Slow down. Stop multitasking. Listen to your heart.
The burly, long-haired man stirring up this talk is a 59-year-old scholar, theologian, and health-care consultant named Jack Shea. As the business people recount the pressures they face, Shea recalls a Latin phrase from parochial school: Age quod agis. Do what you do, it means, and do it with all of yourself. We’ve all had the experience of having much too much to do, getting frustrated, and finally saying, ‘Oh, the hell with it,’ and giving up,†Shea says. Doing less means you can work from the center of yourself. It means you can work from your soul.â€
Work from your soul. That, too, sounds subversive. Yet that goal is what animates these executives, most of them Catholic, who belong to a Chicago-area group called Business Leaders for Excellence, Ethics, and Justice. For more than a decade they have wrestled with big questions: How canbusiness promote family life? What is a just wage? When are layoffs justified? They have held dialogues with bishops, published papers, and guided one another through crises. They say the struggle to integrate faith with work is never-ending. Lately they find their numbers have grown a lot.
Why would we want to look for God in our work?†asks BEEJ co-founder Gregory F.A. Pearce, a publishing executive and the author of a new book called Spirituality@Work. The simple answer is most of us spend so much time working, it would be a shame if we couldn’t find God there. A more complex answer is that there is a creative energy in work that is somehow tied to God’s creative energy. If we can understand that connection, perhaps we can use it to transform the workplace into something remarkable.â€
These executives are in the vanguard of a diverse, mostly unorganized mass of believersa counterculture bubbling up all over corporate Americawho want to bridge the traditional divide between spirituality and work. Historically, such folk operated below the radar, on their own or in small workplace groups where they prayed or studied the Bible. But now they are getting organized and going public to agitate for change.
The spiritual revival in the workplace reflects, in part, a broader religious reawakening in America, which remains one of the world’s most observant nations. (Depending on how the question is asked, as many as 95% of Americans say they believe in God; in much of Western Europe, the figure is closer to 50%.) The Princeton Religious Research Index, which has tracked the strength of organized religion in America since World War II, reports a sharp increase in religious beliefs and practices since the mid-1990s. When the Gallup Poll asked Americans in 1999 if they felt a need to experience spiritual growth, 78% said yes, up from 20% in 1994; nearly half said they’d had occasion to talk about their faith in the workplace in the past 24 hours. Sales of Bibles and prayer books, inspirational volumes, and books about philosophy and Eastern religions are growing faster than any other category, with the market expanding from $1.69 billion to about $2.24 billion in the past five years, according to the Book Industry Study Group. Literally hundreds of those titles address spirituality at work, from Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, and nondenominational perspectives.
Spirituality in the workplace is exploding,†declares Laura Nash, a senior research fellow at Harvard Business School who has followed the topic for a decade. But while the movement to bring spirituality to work has spawned countless books and conferencesincluding a major gathering to be held next April in New York, at which the Dalai Lama will speak to global business leadersno author, guru, clergyman, or celebrity CEO has emerged as its leader. It’s very much a grassroots affair.
People who want to mix God and business are rebels on several fronts. They reject the-centuries-old American conviction that spirituality is a private matter. They challenge religious thinkers who disdain business as an inherently impure pursuit. (The great Harvard theologian Paul Tillich once wrote, Any serious Christian must be a socialist.â€) They disagree with business people who say that religion is unavoidably divisive. Most of all, they refuse to bow to the all too common notion that much of the work done in corporate America must be routine, dull, and meaningless; they want and expect more. Says author Greg Pierce: I like to think of us as the anti-Dilberts.†In other words, the goal here isn’t to rally the troops behind yet another office blood drive; it’s to make the workplace a more ethical and humane arena, one where believers and nonbelievers alike can find fulfillment.
None of that is entirely new, of course. In fact, FORTUNE in 1953 published an article titled Businessmen on Their Kneesâ€yes, those were the days when women and non-Christians weren’t welcome in the executive suitewhich reported that American businessmen are taking more notice of God.†The story noted that prayer groups were forming and that religious books were climbing up the bestseller lists, and asked, Is it a superficial, merely utilitarian movement, or is it a genuinely spiritual awakening?â€
Then, as now, the topic caused some people’s hackles to rise. As much as Americans say they believe in God, most also believe in religious freedom, and hence in the separation of church and boardroom. And considering all the crimes committed in the name of one god or another, it’s only natural to imagine zealous executives doing more harm than good. So while the business world has found ways to talk about race, gender equity, sexuality, disability, and even mental illness, religion has remained the last taboo.
Now more and more people are willing to talk about bringing faith to work, as the stories that follow attest. They are choosing their words carefully. To avoid tripping over dogma, they speak of spirituality†and meaning,†not of religion and God. And with reason: One survey of executives found that more than 60% had positive feelings about spirituality and a negative view of religion. We can’t and shouldn’t and don’t want to drive people to a particular religious belief,†says Bill Pollard, chairman of ServiceMaster, a FORTUNE 500 company committed explicitly to serving God. But we do want people to ask the fundamental questions. What’s driving them? What is this life all about?â€
ServiceMaster has been talking openly about God and business ever since the Depression, when its founder, having survived a flash fire, dedicated his business to serving the Lord. Outside its headquarters in Downers Grove, Ill., stands a statue of Christ washing the feet of his disciples. The company generates nearly $6 billion a year in revenues from such brands as Terminix, TruGreen, ChemLawn, and Merry Maids, but it’s best known for a spiritual culture that has won praise from the likes of management guru Peter Drucker. All employees get stock, promotional opportunities, and the chance to be heard, and no one earns more than 12 times the salary paid the lowest-level worker.
The thing is, ServiceMaster exemplifies how hard it is to live up to saintly standards. Profits are down at ServiceMaster, and its Terminix pest-control unit has run afoul of regulators in several states; it admitted ripping off customers in Kentucky and polluting a stream in Pennsylvania. Pollard regrets the lapses but argues that they are inevitable in a company with 75,000 employees and another 175,000 associates†who are supervised by ServiceMaster. There is no management-control system that can manage those people to always do the right thing,†he says.
As ServiceMaster’s woes make clear, spirituality in no way guarantees material success. It may not even correlate with wordly riches. I’ve seen a lot of not-very good human beings succeed in business,†observes investor Warren Buffett. I wish it were otherwise.â€
What, then, is driving the resurgence of interest in spirituality and work? It’s not the business cycle. Groups like Legatus, an organization of about 1,300 Catholic CEOs, have been growing steadily for more than a decade, since long before the market ballooned and then popped. Most likely, what’s happening now is generational.
Yes, the baby-boomers are at it againthe same cohort, if not the same people, who brought us the 1960s youth culture and the greedy 1980s now want their work to deliver more than a paycheck. As they turn 50, they’re anxious to know what really matters. As Greg Pierce says, We’ve always been a very introspective groupwhich is the polite way of putting it. Actually we think the world revolves around us. We’re reaching the top of our careers, we’re kind of where we’re going to be, and now we’re saying, What’s it all about, Alfie?†Or as one executive put it at a conference on spirituality at work, You get to the top of the ladder and find that maybe it’s leaning against the wrong building.â€
In a book called The Fourth Great Awakening & the Future of Egalitarianism, Robert William Fogel, a Nobel Prize-winning economist at the University of Chicago, argues that post-World War II prosperity has created enough wealth that many Americans’ primary desires are not for material goods but for spiritual and intellectual assets. In a world in which all but a small percentage are lacking in adequate nutrition and other necessities, self-realization may indeed seem like a mere ornament,†he writes, but not in a country where even the poor are rich by past or Third World standards. That is the case in America today.â€
Before proceeding further, let’s briefly stipulate what this story is not about. It’s not about deploying spirituality in your company to boost productivity or soothe workers’ psyches. Nor is this story about business ethics. Behaving ethically is a necessary but not sufficient component of integrating faith and work, says David Miller of the Avodah Institute. This is about who you are, your being, your character within the organization,†Miller says. It’s going beyond minimum obligation to being motivated by love of neighbor. Let’s say you’re in banking. What are you proactively doing to get involved in inner-city lending? How do we treat the migrant worker, the single mom, the illegal alien? These are the modern-day equivalents of the biblical poor.†Of course, none of this is intended to suggest that only spiritual people can lead exemplary lives.
No, the stories that follow are about people who struggle to resolve the tensions between business and God. Marketplace pressures frequently bump up against spiritual values, as business people tackle questions that reverberate beyond the bottom line: How to handle layoffs. How much to pay people. How to reach out to others in a loving way. How to react to unethical conduct. How to make moneyof courseand make meaning too.
Never on Sunday
Selling dishwashers and dinette sets has always come easily to Bill Child. Selling his chain of furniture stores to Warren Buffett was easy toothe best businessdecision he’s ever made, he says. But selling the Omaha billionaire on a risky plan for expanding the business well, that proved tougher, especially when Child’s religious practices collided head-on with Buffett’s business sense.
Child, 69, is the soft-spoken chairman of R.C. Willey Home Furnishings, a Utah-based retailer that he built up and sold to Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett’s holding company, for an estimated $150 million in 1995. Several years later Child had his heart set on opening a new store in Las Vegas, so he took Buffett for a rideliterally. Touring Vegas and its suburbs by helicopter, the two men marveled at the new subdivisions that sprawled in all directions. Child had his eye on a location in upscale Clark County, where an estimated 8,000 newcomers arrive every monthnearly all needing furniture.
There was just one problem. R.C. Willey stores have always closed on Sundays because Child, a devout Mormon, observes the Sabbath. So do many of his managers who are also members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. That was no handicap as long as Child stayed close to his roots in Salt Lake City: With nine stores, all in Utah, where most people are Mormon, R.C. Willey had become the biggest furniture retailer west of the Mississippi. Sales last year topped $400 million.
But Las Vegas? Without Sunday hours? Buffett wouldn’t go for it. Sunday is an enormously popular day for a great many people to shop for a lot of things, and certainly for furniture and appliances,†says Buffett, whose Berkshire Hathaway owns three other furniture companies, all of which are open on Sundays. Industry experts estimate that 20% to 30% of all furniture sales are transacted on Sundays. Buffett worried that customers who drove to the store to shop on Sundays would be frustrated and never come back.
To resolve the dispute, the two plainspoken Westerners struck an unorthodox compromise: They would hold off on Vegas and instead test R.C. Willey’s approach outside Utah by building a store in Boisenot Sin City but not a Mormon stronghold either. Buffett still had doubts, so to allay them, Child insisted on paying for the new store himself. He put up $9 million, with the proviso that if the Boise store took hold, he would sell it back to Berkshire Hathaway at cost; if it failed, he’d eat the losses. Of course, the store would be closed on Sundays.
For Child, Sundays have been set aside for church, family, and rest as long as he can remember. As a young man he intended to become a schoolteacher; he got into retailing almost by accident when, after college, he was handed the keys to a 600-square-foot R.C. Willey store by his ailing father-in-law, Rufus Willey.
Child didn’t know much about business, but he knew the store was in trouble. If I’d had a business education, I probably would have closed it,†he says. The one thing R.C. Willey had going for it was its reputation. Rufus knew his customers personally, having met them when he worked for the electric company, climbing utility poles and bringing electricity to rural farmers; evenings and weekends he sold them appliances on credit from his red pickup truck. He’d ask farm families to try a refrigerator or electric range for a week. Says Child: I don’t think he ever had to take one back.â€
Nearly 50 years later Child has built the business into a powerhouse retailer by combing the world for unusual products and offering a vast array of electronics and appliances as well as furniture. But he says the company’s reputation remains its most prized asset. He tells his 2,000 employees to be scrupulously honest, even when they could shade the truth about, say, when an outof-stock item will become available. His customer service people take returns with no questions asked. If we foul up, in any way, we go to all ends to satisfy people,†Child says. A while ago R.C. Willey decided to stand behind thousands of product warranties it had sold to an insurance company that went bankrupt. It cost us more than $1.5 million over the next five years,†Child says, but we just felt it was the morally right thing to do.†Other stores told customers they could no longer honor the warranties.
Child believes that Sunday closings have actually contributed to R.C. Willey’s success. In a tight labor market, he says, he can attract workers who want to spend the day with family. And everyone at R.C. Willeyeven the workaholic who might be tempted to check on sales figures or stop by an outletgets a true day of rest on Sunday because the entire business is shut down.
Whatever the reason, R.C. Willey proved to be a hit in Boise. Several months after the store opened in 1999, Berkshire Hathaway bought the property from Childwho refused to take any interest on the capital he had tied up. In Berkshire’s annual report, Buffett wrote, If a manager has behaved similarly at some other public corporation, I haven’t heard about it.â€
This September, R.C. Willey will open its 11th store, in Henderson, Nev., just outside Las Vegas. It will be open until very late at night, but it will be closed on Sundays. Buffett, a self-professed agnostic who plans to be there for the opening, recently told Child, You impressed me in Boise. Now, if you can do it in Vegas, you’ll make a real convert out of me.â€
God Is Her CEO
Can a management consultant whose expertise is mergers and acquisitions, with their attendant downsizing and sometimes nasty culture clashes, do God’swork? And on Wall Street, no less?
Absolutely, although it’s not always easy, says Jose Zeilstra. Zeilstra spent eight years as a globe-trotting consultant at Price Waterhouse, which became PricewaterhouseCoopers after she joined, before she was recruited last spring by J.P. Morgan, which was then acquired by Chase Manhattan. (You can see how she’s become a merger expert.) Zeilstra loves her job; she’s a vice president, part of an in-house consulting unit that deals with strategy, leadership, and productivity issues. And, yes, she says, she feels she has been able to live her faith at both Pricewaterhouse and J.P. Morgan Chaseby encouraging executives to look up from their spreadsheets to focus on people and values, by arguing for what’s right, and by trying to act with compassion. She’s guided as much by the Bible as by any corporate dictate or business school text.
Ultimately I’m working for God,†Zeilstra says matter-of-factly. There is no higher calling than to serve God, and that does not mean only within the church. Ultimately, your life, whether it’s work, family, or friends, is part of a larger plan.â€
Born in the Netherlands, the 34-year-old Zeilstra moved as a child to Calgary, where her father ran a real estate business. The churches she attended delivered the message that the best way to be a Christian was to work as a minister or missionary. You almost felt that going into business was anti-Christian because it was only about money and power and materialism,†she says. Even so, intrigued by business, she earned an MBA and went to work at Price Waterhouse. She worked on a merger of cement companies in Indonesia, spent a year in China consulting for the central bank, assisted with a failed telecom merger, and helped a major airline outsource its catering and cleaning operations.
Her Christian principles were tested in big ways and small. Working overseas, she had to contend with cultures in which bribes and kickbacks were the norm. On one occasion she argued against giving what she calls very expensive gifts†and saw a deal fall through. Another time she worked for an executive who berated subordinates, bad-mouthed the locals, and had an office affair. She urged him to change, after first praying for guidance. When you feel God is with you, you get a little bit bolder,†Zeilstra says. But you have to do it diplomatically. What’s the phrase? You love the sinner and you hate the sin.†But why step in at all? It was my role to help him see how he was impacting other people.â€
More typically she tries to lead by example. She seeks, for instance, to avoid office gossip or backbiting. God tells us, she says, to slander no one, to be peaceable and considerate, and to show humility to all.†Her goal is to treat everyone, whatever their rank, with dignity and respect.
That is the nub of both Zeilstra’s faith and her consulting practice: Leaders who are guided by spiritual principles should thrive in the new economy. Speaking at a conference on faith and work at New York City’s Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, where she worships, Zeilstra argued that business leaders no longer needed to flex muscles, drive loyalty, and institutionalize hierarchy.†Instead, they must be attuned to people and ideas†and able to articulate a vision and imbue others with purpose. She argued that Jesus Christ was history’s greatest leader: In less than 40 years on earth He began a global organization that today has more than a billion followers.
Now Zeilstra is in the thick of yet another mergerthe J.P. Morgan-Chase integration, which top executives have said will eliminate thousands of jobs. While she is not in a position to make policy (or speak for the firm), she tells those in charge of layoffs, Err a little bit on the generous side. You always want to do what you can to reduce the pain and be thought of as a fair and caring employer.†That may seem obvious, but as the recent waves of layoffs showed, some employers can be shockingly casual about the way they throw people out of work.
On the job, Zeilstra uses secular language and avoids the G†word. Aside from that, she feels few conflicts between her faith and her work. The biggest challenge, sometimes, is keeping her own perspective in a workplace in which twenty somethings can take home million-dollar pay packages. Zeilstra herself enjoys heli-skiing, horseback riding, and scuba diving, and she’s learning to fly a plane. Wealth, she confesses, can be seduclive: When you ask how you bring God into your work, it’s by not getting caught up in making money or achieving power so that they become your gods.â€
The Sounds of Silence
Not many courtroom lawyers can shut their mouths for an hour, let alone a day or a week. But Thomas Crisman, a patent attorney and litigator with Jenkens & Gilchrist, a big corporate-law firm in Dallas, leaves his business behind every winter to spend a month in silence at a meditation retreat in rural India. He does so to deepen his practice of an increasingly popular form of Buddhist meditation known as Vipassana.
Ordinarily a voluble man, the 59-year-old Crisman actually looks forward to his month of silence. The transition can be difficult,†he says. You’re coming out of a high-speed, high-energy, hard-driving world, and you’re moving to a much quieter, more peaceful place.†But the payoff is worth it, so much so that Crisman has taken a month-long retreat in India every year since 1980, when he met S.N. Goenka, a onetime Myanmar industrialist who is now among the world’s leading meditation teachers. Back home, Crisman and his wife, Tina, operate a Vipassana Wcbsite (www.dhamma.org) and oversee a meditation center in Kaufman, Texas, that puts between 500 and 1,000 people a year through a ten-day introductory silent Vipassana course.
Vipassana meditation has been described as a journey of discovery, taken with the eyes closed. As Crisman explains it, practitioners observe their breathing, thought patterns, and physical sensations during meditation and train themselves not to react negatively to life’s inevitable stresses. Instead, they strive to respond in a balanced way, without allowing events to whipsaw you.†Buddhists believe that practicing meditation helps restore people to a natural state, filled with love and compassion. I don’t know anybody who has been through the full ten days who doesn’t come out the other side of it, really, a different person,†Crisman says. It’s like scrubbing the paint off the outside of the light bulb and letting the light shine through.â€
Raised as a Baptist in West Texas, Crisman discovered meditation after experiencing a mix of career success and personal discontent. When a fellow patent lawyer named Jack Holder invited him to a retreat, Crisman figured he had nothing to lose. Holder, who recalls that Crisman cried for 45 minutes when the retreat ended, says, I knew then that something had happened.†Crisman was so taken with Vipassana that he arranged to spend several months in India and considered quitting the law.
Fighting people all the timethat didn’t seem like a very good way to make a living,†Crisman says. Goenka talked him out of it, saying that the law can be a tool to help people and that professionals like Crisman can spread the word about Vipassana among their peers.
As a partner at a big firm, Crisman now compresses his workload into about ten months a year. I’ll work 12-hour days, some seven-day weeks, pretty much from mid-January until December, and I’ll end up billing more hours than almost anybody else†he says. Then I go off to India, and my partners go off skiing.†Colleagues manage his cases when he’s gone.
He has made other adjustments too. He turned down legal work from a client who operated a Texas slaughterhouse. (Buddhism asks that its followers do no harm to sentient beings,†although Crisman himself eats meat.) Another client asked him to apply for patents for machine-