
Taking on the Pepsi Challenge: The Case of Indra Nooyi
Figure 12.1

She
is among the top 100 most influential people according to Time
magazine's 2008 list. She is also number 5 in Forbes's "Most Influential
Women in the World" (2007), number 1 in Fortune's "50 Most Powerful
Women" (2006), and number 22 in Fortune's "25 Most Powerful People in
Business" (2007). The lists go on and on. To those familiar with her
work and style, this should come as no surprise: Even before she became
the CEO of PepsiCo Inc. (NYSE: PEP) in 2006, she was one of the most
powerful executives at PepsiCo and one of the two candidates being
groomed for the coveted CEO position. Born in Chennai, India, Nooyi
graduated from Yale's School of Management and worked in companies such
as the Boston Consulting Group Inc., Motorola Inc., and ABB Inc. She
also led an all-girls rock band in high school, but that is a different
story.
What makes her one of the top leaders in the business world today? To start with, she has a clear vision for PepsiCo, which seems to be the right vision for the company at this point in time. Her vision is framed under the term "performance with purpose," which is based on two key ideas: tackling the obesity epidemic by improving the nutritional status of PepsiCo products and making PepsiCo an environmentally sustainable company. She is an inspirational speaker and rallies people around her vision for the company. She has the track record to show that she means what she says. She was instrumental in PepsiCo's acquisition of the food conglomerate Quaker Oats Company and the juice maker Tropicana Products Inc., both of which have healthy product lines. She is bent on reducing PepsiCo's reliance on high-sugar, high-calorie beverages, and she made sure that PepsiCo removed trans fats from all its products before its competitors. On the environmental side, she is striving for a net zero impact on the environment. Among her priorities are plans to reduce the plastic used in beverage bottles and find biodegradable packaging solutions for PepsiCo products. Her vision is long term and could be risky for short-term earnings, but it is also timely and important.
Those who work with her feel challenged by her high-performance standards and expectation of excellence. She is not afraid to give people negative feedback - and with humor, too. She pushes people until they come up with a solution to a problem and does not take "I don't know" for an answer. For example, she insisted that her team find an alternative to the expensive palm oil and did not stop urging them forward until the alternative arrived: rice bran oil.
Nooyi is well liked and respected because she
listens to those around her, even when they disagree with her. Her
background cuts across national boundaries, which gives her a true
appreciation for diversity, and she expects those around her to bring
their values to work. In fact, when she graduated from college, she wore
a sari to a job interview at Boston Consulting, where she got the job.
She is an unusually collaborative person in the top suite of a Fortune
500 company, and she seeks help and information when she needs it. She
has friendships with three ex-CEOs of PepsiCo who serve as her informal
advisors, and when she was selected to the top position at PepsiCo, she
made sure that her rival for the position got a pay raise and was given
influence in the company so she did not lose him. She says that the best
advice she received was from her father, who taught her to assume that
people have good intentions. Nooyi notes that expecting people to have
good intentions helps her prevent misunderstandings and show empathy for
them. It seems that she is a role model to other business leaders
around the world, and PepsiCo is well positioned to tackle the
challenges the future may bring.
Discussion Questions
- Indra
Nooyi is not a typical CEO. How does she differ from your idea of what a
typical CEO is like? How do you think your current image of CEOs was
created?
- Indra Nooyi is touted as being "unusually
collaborative" for someone in charge of a Fortune 500 company. Why do
you think her level of collaboration is so unusual for top executives?
- Do you think Nooyi's story represents a transition of American companies to a different type of leader or simply a unique case?
- Pepsi-Cola
dates back to 1898 and officially became PepsiCo after merging with
Frito-Lay in 1965. What are some challenges the CEO faces today that
were not an issue at that time? What are some aspects that make the
position easier in modern times?
- If you were in Indra Nooyi's shoes, what direction would you take the company, given the success you have had thus far? What are some challenges that could arise in the near future for PepsiCo?