John Mackey: Whole Foods Leader
Leadership is often defined as having an inspirational function. "Leadership is the ability to influence a group toward the achievement of goals. A leader does not have to be someone who holds a formal position or title. They can emerge from a group and provide vision and motivation to those around them" (Schutte, Chapter 12, 2010: Slide 3). Leadership is said to be in stark contrast to management, which merely "deals with the complexity of the organization and works with planning, organizing, leading and controlling to bring about order and consistency in the organization. Even though the two roles have different areas of focus, both are necessary for organizational success" (Schutte, Chapter 12, 2010: Slide 3). Leadership defines the vision of the organization; management offers practical ways to embody that vision. Having charismatic and inspiring leadership is essential for an organization that 'breaks the mold' like Whole Foods. Whole Foods has done what was said to be impossible, organizationally speaking. It offers healthy food that is priced above the market minimum and has expanded rapidly since its beginnings in the 1970s. It has accomplished this largely due to the charismatic leadership style of its CEO.
Whole Foods CEO John Mackey is a political libertarian with a passion for organic foods that began while he was in college. He spurned 'big food' companies and wished to honor local, organic producers that offered products that were created with respect to the needs of the land. Long before organic, all-natural foods became commonplace on the shelves of Wal-Mart, back when health food stores were primarily patronized by 'hippies,' Mackey was determined to bring his vision of healthy, all-natural products to the people. His vision was not necessarily practical, but he believed passionately in the need that his company was fulfilling.
Mackey clearly sees himself as a charismatic leader, as a kind of benevolent 'father-figure' "to his fifty-four thousand employees, who are known as "team members" (Paumgarten 2010: 1). According to House's Path-Goal theory, leaders are generally categorized according to four types. "Directive: focuses on the work to be done; Supportive: focuses on the well-being of the worker; Participative: consults with employees in decision making; Achievement-Oriented: sets challenging goals" (Schutte, Chapter 12, 2010: Slide 10). Since the development of more humanistic theories of leadership like House's, organizations have been paying more and more lip service to the use of participative leadership as a way of generating new ideas and organizational growth. Whole Foods, with its directive CEO stands in sharp contrast to this approach.
Mackey is a vegan with his own home farm, he has been extremely directive and controlling in terms of how the organization has evolved. "A Whole Foods store, in some respects, is like Mackey's mind turned inside out. Certainly, the evolution of the corporation has often traced his own as a man; it has been an incarnation of his dreams and quirks, his contradictions and trespasses, and whatever he happened to be reading and eating, or not eating" (Paumgarten 2010: 1).
In an era where the majority of the public still eats meat (Whole Foods does offer its customers meat, but only very expensive, farm-raised meat), Mackey has been able to advance his business model to great success. Whole Foods began in Austin, Texas, a state that has been called the 'meat and potatoes' capital of the United States. "Mackey has been bewildered by the way some things that he has said or done have brought trouble on him and Whole Foods. Public opinion can be capricious and -- when you're a grocer, a retail brand, and a publicly traded company -- hard to ignore or override" (Paumgarten 2010: 1). From his right-wing, libertarian editorials, to his commend that even some of the 'healthy' junk food sold at Whole Foods does not meet his personal standards of health, Mackey has clearly not been carefully micro-managing his personal image for public consumption (no pun intended).
Organizational power
Mackey's leadership for many observers has been seen as paradoxical. He has insisted on high ethical standards for his suppliers, yet it was found that "for nearly eight years, he had been secretly logging onto an Internet message board devoted to Whole Foods stock" and praising his own company and disparaging competitors (Paumgarten 2010: 2). This might have been a public relations disaster for many CEOs, and caused them to be unseated, yet the loyalty to Mackey, despite his reputation as "a fruitcake" still continues (Paumgarten 2010: 2). Mackey has also been ruthless in acquiring new companies, such as Wild Oats,...
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