Start with 1,435 good                  companies. Examine their performance over 40 years. Find the 11                  companies that became great. Now here's how you can do it too.                  Lessons on eggs, flywheels, hedgehogs, buses, and other essentials                  of business that can help you transform your company.                     
 I want to give you a lobotomy about change. I want you to forget                  everything you’ve ever learned about what it takes to create                  great results. I want you to realize that nearly all operating                  prescriptions for creating large-scale corporate change are nothing                  but myths.                
 The Myth of the Change Program: This approach comes with the launch event, the tag line, and the cascading activities.               
 The Myth of the Burning Platform: This one says that change                  starts only when there’s a crisis that persuades “unmotivated”                  employees to accept the need for change.                
 The Myth of Stock Options: Stock options, high salaries, and bonuses are incentives that grease the wheels of change.               
 The Myth of Fear-Driven Change: The fear of being left behind,                  the fear of watching others win, the fear of presiding over monumental                  failure—all are drivers of change, we’re told.                
 The Myth of Acquisitions: You can buy your way to growth, so it figures that you can buy your way to greatness.                
 The Myth of Technology-Driven Change: The breakthrough that you’re looking                  for can be achieved by using technology to leapfrog the competition.                              
 The Myth of Revolution: Big change has to be wrenching, extreme, painful—one                  big, discontinuous, shattering break.                
 Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Totally wrong.               
 Here are the facts of life about these and other change myths.                  Companies that make the change from good to great have no name                  for their transformation—and absolutely no program. They                  neither rant nor rave about a crisis—and they don't manufacture                  one where none exists. They don't “motivate” people—their                  people are self-motivated. There’s no evidence of a connection                  between money and change mastery. And fear doesn't drive change—but                  it does perpetuate mediocrity. Nor can acquisitions provide a                  stimulus for greatness: Two mediocrities never make one great                  company. Technology is certainly important—but it comes into                  play only after change has already begun. And as for the final                  myth, dramatic results do not come from dramatic process—not                  if you want them to last, anyway. A serious revolution, one that                  feels like a revolution to those going through it, is highly unlikely                  to bring about a sustainable leap from being good to being great.                
 These myths became clear as my research team and I completed                  a five-year project to determine what it takes to change a good                  company into a great one. We systematically scoured a list of                  1,435 established companies to find every extraordinary case that                  made a leap from no-better-than-average results to great results.                  How great? After the leap, a company had to generate cumulative                  stock returns that exceeded the general stock market by at least                  three times over 15 years—and it had to be a leap independent                  of its industry. In fact, the 11 good-to-great companies that                  we found averaged returns 6.9 times greater than the market’s—more                  than twice the performance rate of General Electric under the                  legendary Jack Welch.                
 The surprising good-to-great list included such unheralded companies                  as Abbott Laboratories (3.98 times the market), Fannie Mae (7.56                  times the market), Kimberly-Clark Corp.(3.42 times the market),                  Nucor Corp. (5.16 times the market), and Wells Fargo (3.99 times                  the market). One such surprise, the Kroger Co.—a grocery                  chain—bumped along as a totally average performer for 80                  years and then somehow broke free of its mediocrity to beat the                  stock market by 4.16 times over the next 15 years. And it didn't                  stop there. From 1973 to 1998, Kroger outperformed the market                  by 10 times.                
 In each of these dramatic, remarkable, good-to-great corporate                  transformations, we found the same thing: There was no miracle                  moment. Instead, a down-to-earth, pragmatic, committed-to-excellence                  process—a framework—kept each company, its leaders,                  and its people on track for the long haul. In each case, it was                  the triumph of the Flywheel Effect over the Doom Loop, the victory                  of steadfast discipline over the quick fix. And the real kicker:                  The comparison companies in our study—firms with virtually                  identical opportunities during the pivotal years—did buy                  into the change myths described above—and failed to make                  the leap from good to great.         
How                  change doesn't happen
Picture an egg. Day after day, it sits                  there. No one pays attention to it. No one notices it. Certainly                  no one takes a picture of it or puts it on the cover of a celebrity-focused                  business magazine. Then one day, the shell cracks and out jumps                  a chicken.          
 All of a sudden, the major magazines and newspapers jump on                  the story: “Stunning Turnaround at Egg!” and “The                  Chick Who Led the Breakthrough at Egg!” From the outside,                  the story always reads like an overnight sensation—as if                  the egg had suddenly and radically altered itself into a chicken.                
 Now picture the egg from the chicken's point of view.                
 While the outside world was ignoring this seemingly dormant                  egg, the chicken within was evolving, growing, developing—changing.                  From the chicken’s point of view, the moment of breakthrough,                  of cracking the egg, was simply one more step in a long chain                  of steps that had led to that moment. Granted, it was a big step—but                  it was hardly the radical transformation that it looked like from                  the outside.                
 It’s a silly analogy, but then our conventional way of                  looking at change is no less silly. Everyone looks for the “miracle                  moment” when “change happens.” But ask the good-to-great                  executives when change happened. They cannot pinpoint a single                  key event that exemplified their successful transition.                
 Take Walgreens. For more than 40 years, Walgreens was no more                  than an average company, tracking the general market. Then in                  1975 (out of the blue!) Walgreens began to climb. And climb. And                  climb. It just kept climbing. From December 31, 1975, to January                  1, 2000, $1 invested in Walgreens beat $1 invested in Intel by                  nearly two times, General Electric by nearly five times, and Coca-Cola                  by nearly eight times. It beat the general stock market by more                  than 15 times.                              
 I asked a key Walgreens executive to pinpoint when the good-to-great                  transformation happened. His answer: “Sometime between 1971                  and 1980.” (Well, that certainly narrows it down!)                
 Walgreens’s experience is the norm for good-to-great performers.                  Leaders at Abbott said, “It wasn't a blinding flash or sudden                  revelation from above.” From Kimberly-Clark: “These                  things don't happen overnight. They grow.” From Wells Fargo:                  “It wasn't a single switch that was thrown at one time.”               
 We keep looking for change in the wrong places, asking the wrong                  questions, and making the wrong assumptions. There’s even                  a tendency to blame Wall Street for the “instant results”                  approach to change. But the companies that made the jump from                  good to great did so using Wall Street's own tough metric of success:                  a sustained leap in their stock-market performance. Wall Street                  turns out to be just another myth—an excuse for not doing                  what really works. The data doesn’t lie.                                   
How change does happen
Now picture a huge, heavy flywheel. It’s a massive, metal disk mounted horizontally on an axle. It's about 100 feet in diameter, 10 feet thick, and it weighs about 25 tons. That flywheel is your company. Your job is to get that flywheel to move as fast as possible, because momentum—mass times velocity—is what will generate superior economic results over time.
 Right now, the flywheel is at a standstill. To get it moving,                  you make a tremendous effort. You push with all your might, and                  finally you get the flywheel to inch forward. After two or three                  days of sustained effort, you get the flywheel to complete one                  entire turn. You keep pushing, and the flywheel begins to move                  a bit faster. It takes a lot of work, but at last the flywheel                  makes a second rotation. You keep pushing steadily. It makes three                  turns, four turns, five, six. With each turn, it moves faster,                  and then—at some point, you can’'t say exactly when—you                  break through. The momentum of the heavy wheel kicks in your favor.                  It spins faster and faster, with its own weight propelling it.                  You aren't pushing any harder, but the flywheel is accelerating,                  its momentum building, its speed increasing.                
 This is the Flywheel Effect. It's what it feels like when you’re                  inside a company that makes the transition from good to great.                  Take Kroger, for example. How do you get a company with more than                  50,000 people to embrace a new strategy that will eventually change                  every aspect of every grocery store? You don’t. At least                  not with one big change program.                
 Instead, you put your shoulder to the flywheel. That’s                  what Jim Herring, the leader who initiated the transformation                  of Kroger, told us. He stayed away from change programs and motivational                  stunts. He and his team began turning the flywheel gradually,                  consistently—building tangible evidence that their plans                  made sense and would deliver results.                
 “We presented what we were doing in such a way that people                  saw our accomplishments,”Herring says. “We tried to                  bring our plans to successful conclusions step by step, so that                  the mass of people would gain confidence from the successes, not                  just the words.”               
 Think about it for one minute. Why do most overhyped change                  programs ultimately fail? Because they lack accountability, they                  fail to achieve credibility, and they have no authenticity. It’s                  the opposite of the Flywheel Effect; it's the Doom Loop.                                             
 Companies that fall into the Doom Loop genuinely want to effect                  change—but they lack the quiet discipline that produces the                  Flywheel Effect. Instead, they launch change programs with huge                  fanfare, hoping to “enlist the troops.” They start down                  one path, only to change direction. After years of lurching back                  and forth, these companies discover that they’ve failed to                  build any sustained momentum. Instead of turning the flywheel,                  they've fallen into a Doom Loop: Disappointing results lead to                  reaction without understanding, which leads to a new direction—a                  new leader, a new program—which leads to no momentum, which                  leads to disappointing results. It’s a steady, downward spiral.                  Those who have experienced a Doom Loop know how it drains the                  spirit right out of a company.                
 Consider the Warner-Lambert Co.—the company that we compared                  directly with Gillette—in the early 1980s. In 1979, Warner-Lambert                  told Business Week that it aimed to be a leading consumer-products                  company. One year later, it did an abrupt about-face and turned                  its sights on healthcare. In 1981, the company reversed course                  again and returned to diversification and consumer goods. Then                  in 1987, Warner-Lambert made another U-turn, away from consumer                  goods, and announced that it wanted to compete with Merck. Then                  in the early 1990s, the company responded to government announcements                  of pending healthcare reform and reembraced diversification and                  consumer brands.                
 Between 1979 and 1998, Warner-Lambert underwent three major                  restructurings—one per CEO. Each new CEO arrived with his                  own program; each CEO halted the momentum of his predecessor.                  With each turn of the Doom Loop, the company spiraled further                  downward, until it was swallowed by Pfizer in 2000.                
 In contrast, why does the Flywheel Effect work? Because more                  than anything else, real people in real companies want to be part                  of a winning team. They want to contribute to producing real results.                  They want to feel the excitement and the satisfaction of being                  part of something that just flat-out works. When people begin                  to feel the magic of momentum—when they begin to see tangible                  results and can feel the flywheel start to build speed—that’s                  when they line up, throw their shoulders to the wheel, and push.                
 And that’s how change really happens.                                   
Disciplined people: “Who” before “what”
You are a bus driver. The bus, your company, is at a standstill, and it’s your job to get it going. You have to decide where you're going, how you're going to get there, and who's going with you.
 Most people assume that great bus drivers (read: business leaders)                  immediately start the journey by announcing to the people on the                  bus where they're going—by setting a new direction or by                  articulating a fresh corporate vision.                
 In fact, leaders of companies that go from good to great start                  not with “where” but with “who.” They start                  by getting the right people on the bus, the wrong people off the                  bus, and the right people in the right seats. And they stick with                  that discipline—first the people, then the direction—no                  matter how dire the circumstances. Take David Maxwell’s bus                  ride. When he became CEO of Fannie Mae in 1981, the company was                  losing $1 million every business day, with $56 billion worth of                  mortgage loans underwater. The board desperately wanted to know                  what Maxwell was going to do to rescue the company.                
 Maxwell responded to the “what” question the same                  way that all good-to-great leaders do: He told them, That’s                  the wrong first question. To decide where to drive the bus before                  you have the right people on the bus, and the wrong people off                  the bus, is absolutely the wrong approach.                
 Maxwell told his management team that there would only be seats                  on the bus for A-level people who were willing to put out A-plus                  effort. He interviewed every member of the team. He told them                  all the same thing: It was going to be a tough ride, a very demanding                  trip. If they didn’t want to go, fine; just say so. Now’s                  the time to get off the bus, he said. No questions asked, no recriminations.                  In all, 14 of 26 executives got off the bus. They were replaced                  by some of the best, smartest, and hardest-working executives                  in the world of finance.                
 With the right people on the bus, in the right seats, Maxwell                  then turned his full attention to the “what” question.                  He and his team took Fannie Mae from losing $1 million a day at                  the start of his tenure to earning $4 million a day at the end.                  Even after Maxwell left in 1991, his great team continued to drive                  the flywheel—turn upon turn—and Fannie Mae generated                  cumulative stock returns nearly eight times better than the general                  market from 1984 to 1999.                
 When it comes to getting started, good-to-great leaders understand                  three simple truths. First, if you begin with “who,”                  you can more easily adapt to a fast-changing world. If people                  get on your bus because of where they think it’s going, you'll                  be in trouble when you get 10 miles down the road and discover                  that you need to change direction because the world has changed.                  But if people board the bus principally because of all the other                  great people on the bus, you’ll be much faster and smarter                  in responding to changing conditions. Second, if you have the                  right people on your bus, you don’t need to worry about motivating                  them. The right people are self-motivated: Nothing beats being                  part of a team that is expected to produce great results. And                  third, if you have the wrong people on the bus, nothing else matters.                  You may be headed in the right direction, but you still won’t                  achieve greatness. Great vision with mediocre people still produces                  mediocre results.                                   
Disciplined thought: Fox or hedgehog?
Picture two animals: a fox and a hedgehog. Which are you? An ancient Greek parable distinguishes between foxes, which know many small things, and hedgehogs, which know one big thing. All good-to-great leaders, it turns out, are hedgehogs. They know how to simplify a complex world into a single, organizing idea—the kind of basic principle that unifies, organizes, and guides all decisions. That’s not to say hedgehogs are simplistic. Like great thinkers, who take complexities and boil them down into simple, yet profound, ideas (Adam Smith and the invisible hand, Darwin and evolution), leaders of good-to-great companies develop a Hedgehog Concept that is simple but that reflects penetrating insight and deep understanding.
 What does it take to come up with a Hedgehog Concept for your                  company? Start by confronting the brutal facts. One good-to-great                  CEO began by asking, “Why have we sucked for 100 years?”                  That's brutal—and it's precisely the type of disciplined                  question necessary to ignite a transformation. The management                  climate during a leap from good to great is like a searing scientific                  debate—with smart, tough-minded people examining hard facts                  and debating what those facts mean. The point isn’t to win                  the debate, but rather to come up with the best answers—and,                  ultimately, to lock onto a Hedgehog Concept that works.                
 You’ll know that you’re getting closer to your Hedgehog                  Concept when you align three intersecting circles that represent                  three pivotal questions: What can we be the best in the world                  at? (And equally important—what can we not be the best at?)                  What is the economic denominator that best drives our economic                  engine (profit or cash flow per “x”)? And what are our                  core people deeply passionate about? Answer those three questions                  honestly, facing the brutal facts without blinking, and you’ll                  begin to see your Hedgehog Concept emerge.                
 For example, before Wells Fargo understood its Hedgehog Concept,                  its leaders had tried to make it a global bank: It operated like                  a mini-Citicorp—and a mediocre one at that.                
 Then the Wells Fargo team asked itself, “What can we potentially                  do better than any other company?” The brutal fact was that                  Wells Fargo would never be the best global bank in the world—and                  so the leadership team pulled the plug on the vast majority of                  the bank’s international operations. When the team asked                  the question about the bank’s economic engine, Wells Fargo’s                  leaders confronted a second brutal fact: In a deregulated world,                  commercial banking would be a commodity. The essential economic                  driver would no longer be profit per loan, but profit per employee.                  The bank switched its operations to become a pioneering leader                  in electronic banking and to open utilitarian branches run by                  small crews of superb people. Profit per employee skyrocketed.                  Finally, when it came to passion, members of the Wells Fargo team                  all agreed: The mindless waste and self-awarded perks of traditional                  banking culture were revolting. They proudly saw themselves as                  stoic Spartans in an industry that had been dominated by the wasteful,                  elitist culture of banking. The Wells Fargo team eventually translated                  the three circles into a simple, crystalline Hedgehog Concept:                  Run a bank like a business, with a focus on the western United                  States, and consistently increase profit per employee. “Run                  it like a business” and “run it like you own it”                  became mantras; simplicity and focus made all the difference.                  With fanatical adherence to that simple idea, Wells Fargo made                  the leap from good results to superior results.                
 In the journey from good to great, defining your Hedgehog Concept                  is an essential element. But insight and understanding don’t                  happen overnight—or after one off-site. On average, it took                  four years for the good-to-great companies to crystallize their                  Hedgehog Concepts. It was an inherently iterative process—consisting                  of piercing questions, vigorous debate, resolute action, and autopsies                  without blame—a cycle repeated over and over by the right                  people, infused with the brutal facts, and guided by the three                  circles. This is the chicken inside the egg.                                   
Disciplined action: The “stop doing” list
Take a look at your desk. If you’re like most hard-charging leaders, you’ve got a well-articulated to-do list. Now take another look: Where’s your stop-doing list? We've all been told that leaders make things happen—and that's true: Pushing that flywheel takes a lot of concerted effort. But it’s also true that good-to-great leaders distinguish themselves by their unyielding discipline to stop doing anything and everything that doesn't fit tightly within their Hedgehog Concept.
 When Darwin Smith and his management team crystallized the Hedgehog                  Concept for Kimberly-Clark, they faced a dilemma. On one hand,                  they understood that the best path to greatness lay in the consumer                  business, where the company had demonstrated a best-in-the-world                  capability in its building of the Kleenex brand. On the other                  hand, the vast majority of Kimberly-Clark’s revenue lay in                  traditional coated-paper mills, turning out paper for magazines                  and writing pads—which had been the core business of the                  company for 100 years. Even the company's namesake town—Kimberly,                  Wisconsin—was built around a Kimberly-Clark paper mill.                
 Yet the brutal truth remained: The consumer business was the                  one arena that best met the three-circle test. If Kimberly-Clark                  remained principally a paper-mill business, it would retain a                  secure position as a good company. But its only shot at becoming                  a great company was to become the best paper-based consumer company—if                  it could take on such companies as Procter & Gamble and Scott                  Paper Co. and beat them. That meant it would have to “stop                  doing” paper mills.                
 So, in what one director called “the gutsiest decision                  I've ever seen a CEO make,” Darwin Smith sold the mills.                  He even sold the mill in Kimberly, Wisconsin. Then he threw all                  the money into a war chest for an epic battle with Procter & Gamble                  and Scott Paper. Wall Street analysts derided the move, and the                  business press called it stupid. But Smith did not waver.                
 Twenty-five years later, Kimberly-Clark emerged from the fray as the  number-one paper-based consumer-products company in the world, beating  P&G in six of eight categories and owning its former archrival Scott  Paper outright. For the shareholder, Kimberly-Clark under Darwin Smith  beat the market by four times, easily outperforming such great companies  as Coca-Cola, General Electric, Hewlett-Packard, and 3M.                
 In deciding what not to do, Smith gave the flywheel a gigantic                  push—but it was only one push. After selling the mills, Kimberly-Clark’s                  full transformation required thousands of additional pushes, big                  and small, accumulated one after another. It took years to gain                  enough momentum for the press to herald Kimberly-Clark’s                  shift from good to great. One magazine wrote, “When ... Kimberly-Clark                  decided to go head to head against P&G ... this magazine predicted                  disaster. What a dumb idea. As it turns out, it wasn't a dumb                  idea. It was a smart idea.” The amount of time between the                  two articles: 21 years.                                   
Now it begins
Our study of what it takes to turn good into great required five years—and 10.5 person-years—and amounted to our own flywheel effort. Looking back on our research, what’s most striking to me about our findings is the absence of a magic moment in any of the good-to-great companies—or in our own journey to understanding. The real path to greatness, it turns out, requires simplicity and diligence. It requires clarity, not instant illumination. It demands each of us to focus on what is vital—and to eliminate all of the extraneous distractions.
 After five years of research, I’m absolutely convinced                  that if we just focus our attention on the right things—and                  stop doing the senseless things that consume so much time and                  energy—we can create a powerful Flywheel Effect without increasing                  the number of hours we work.                
 I’m also convinced that the good-to-great findings apply                  broadly—not just to CEOs but also to you and me in whatever                  work we’re engaged in, including the work of our own lives.                  For many people, the first question that occurs is, “But                  how do I persuade my CEO to get it?” My answer: Don't worry                  about that. Focus instead on results—on subverting mediocrity                  by creating a Flywheel Effect within your own span of responsibility.                  So long as we can choose the people we want to put on our own                  minibus, each of us can create a pocket of greatness. Each of                  us can take our own area of work and influence and can concentrate                  on moving it from good to great. It doesn’t really matter                  whether all the CEOs get it. It only matters that you and I do.                  Now, it’s time to get to work.                
 Jim Collins                   wrote the essay “Built                  to Flip” in the March 2000 issue of Fast Company.                  His new book, Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap                  ... And Others Don't, will be available in October.                           
Sidebar: Separating the good from the great
Can a good company become a great company? How? It took Jim Collins and his team of researchers five years to come up with the answers: 11 companies made the leap from good to great and then sustained those results for at least 15 years. How great was great? The good-to-great companies averaged cumulative stock returns 6.9 times the general market in the 15 years after their transition points. The actual screening-and-selection process was a rigorous one. The criteria were:
 1. The company had to show a pattern of good performance, punctuated                  by a transition point, after which it shifted to great performance.                  “Great performance” was defined as a cumulative total                  stock return of at least three times the general market for the                  period from the transition point through 15 years.                
 2. The transition from good to great had to be company specific, not an industrywide event.                
 3. The company had to be an established and ongoing enterprise—not a                  startup. It had to have been in business for at least 25 years                  prior to its transition, and it had to have been publicly traded                  with stock-return data available for at least 10 years prior to                  its transition.                
 4. The transition point had to occur before 1985 to give the team enough data to assess the sustainability of the transition. 
 5. Whatever the year of transition, the company had to be a significant, ongoing, stand-alone company. 
 6. At the time of its selection, the company still had to show an upward trend.  
 The study began with a field of 1,435 companies and emerged with a list  of 11 good-to-great companies: Abbott Laboratories, Circuit City, Fannie  Mae, Gillette Co., Kimberly-Clark Corp., the Kroger Co., Nucor Corp.,  Philip Morris Cos. Inc., Pitney Bowes Inc., Walgreens, and Wells Fargo.                
 The next step in the study was to isolate what it took to make                  the change. At this point, each of the 11 good-to-great companies                  was paired with a comparison company—a company with similar                  attributes that could have made the transition, but didn’t.                
 Then the research began. Collins and his team reviewed books,                  articles, case studies, and annual reports covering each company;                  examined financial analyses for each company, totaling 980 combined                  years of data; conducted 84 interviews with senior managers and                  board members of the companies; scrutinized the personal and professional                  records of 56 CEOs; analyzed compensation plans for the companies;                  and reviewed layoffs, corporate ownership, “media hype,”                  and the role of technology for the companies. The findings are                  contained in Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap                  ... And Others Don't (HarperBusiness, 2001).                                  
Sidebar: Great answers to good questions
Fast Company:
 The CEOs who took their companies from good                  to great were largely anonymous. Is that an accident?                
 Jim Collins: There is a direct relationship between the                  absence of celebrity and the presence of good-to-great results.                  Why? First, when you have a celebrity, the company turns into                  “the one genius with 1,000 helpers.” It creates a sense                  that the whole thing is really about the CEO. At a deeper level,                  we found that for leaders to make something great, their ambition                  has to be for the greatness of the work and the company, rather                  than for themselves. That doesn’t mean that they don’t                  have an ego. It means that at each decision point—at each                  of the critical junctures when Choice A would favor their ego                  and Choice B would favor the company and the work—time and                  again the good-to-great leaders pick Choice B. Celebrity CEOs,                  at those same decision points, are more likely to favor self and                  ego over company and work.                
 FC: Like the anonymous CEOs, most of the good-to-great companies are unheralded. What does that tell us?               
 JC: The truth is, few people are working on the most                  glamorous things in the world. Most of them are doing real work—which                  means that most of the time they’re doing a heck of a lot                  of drudgery with only a few moments of excitement. The real work                  of the economy gets done by people who make cars, who sell real                  estate, and who run grocery stores or banks. One of the great                  findings of this study is that you can be in a great company and                  be doing it in steel, in drug stores, or in grocery stores. No                  one has the right to whine about their company, their industry,                  or the kind of business that they're in—ever again.                
 FC: Let’s say that I’m not running a company.                  How do the good-to-great lessons apply to me?                
 JC: The basic message is this: Build your own flywheel. You can  do it. You can start to build momentum in something for which you've got  responsibility. You can build a great department. You can build a great  church community. You can take every one of these ideas and apply them  to your own work or your own life. 
 FC: What does your research suggest about the best way to respond to the current economic slowdown?               
 JC: If I were running a company today, I would have one                  priority above all others: to acquire as many of the best people                  as I could. I’d put off everything else to fill my bus. Because                  things are going to come back. My flywheel is going to start to                  turn. And the single biggest constraint on the success of my organization                  is the ability to get and to hang on to enough of the right people.
 
 

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