David Cheesewright is the former CEO of Walmart International.
In that role he led over one million people, across more than 50 different businesses, and over 30 countries.
A behemoth! Both the job and the company. How much of a behemoth? Well, Walmart is literally #1 overall on the Fortune 500 which means no company in the entire world made more money than they did.
How did a small town store from Bentonville, Arkansas rise to be the largest company in the world? Well, one big way they did it is through leadership. For over 20 years, one of the seniormost leaders at Walmart was Dave Cheesewright. Humble, down to earth, soft spoken, and lightning quick, Dave epitomized Level 5 Leadership, to borrow a phrase from Jim Collins. I was lucky to have a development role working for Dave when he was President and CEO of Walmart Canada. It was the most formative role of my career and I trace many stories and models in my books directly back to conversations and lessons I learned from Dave.
There was always something magical about Dave.
He was a former gym teacher who owned only one slightly crumpled suit and drove a beat-up van to work when he wasn’t showing up sweaty in the hallways after riding his bike. He had no fancy business degrees and was a true family man who was always home for dinner with his wife Clare and their three kids. He had a smaller office than his direct reports and ate two-dollar egg salad sandwiches at lunch amongst all the employees in the Home Office cafeteria. He would sometimes mention in the morning that he knocked on a Walmart in the middle of the night so he could help stock shelves on the overnight shift. He never used email, cancelled every meeting he could, personally phoned associates across the country to say thank you, and insisted every one-pager presented to him pass “The Grandma Test” (“Would my grandma who knows nothing about this business understand it?”).
Dave was promoted from CEO of Walmart Canada to CEO of Walmart EMEA (Europe, Middle East, and Africa) and later promoted again to CEO of Walmart International. What does a CEO overseeing over a million people actually … do? Well, that’s just one thing we’re going to talk about.
If you are a fan of the strategic thinking big time CEOs offer you’re going to love this conversation with a guy who thinks 500,000-feet above sea level.
What does a CEO do? What does a board of directors do? How do you make business simpler? What is the paradox of choice? How do we take an even more global view of things? How might we think about AI? What are the basic tenets of retail? Why shouldn’t you answer emails? How do you become a better delegator? What is the S-Curve in business? And much, much, much more…
I was thrilled to sit down with David Cheesewright, former CEO of Walmart International, in his living room to talk about his 3 most formative books.
I hope you love this conversation as much as I did.
Let’s flip the page into Chapter 96 now…
What You'll Learn:
What is the value of taking handwritten notes?
How should one manage the initial stages of retirement?
What is the value exchange?
What is the job of a Fortune 500 Company CEO?
What is the key to cultivating talent?
What is the S-Curve in business?
How does the CEO of a major company deal with imposter syndrome?
What does a Board of Directors for a public company actually do?
What is the moral obligation of a Board of Directors?
How can a company truly live by its values?
Why is what matters most invisible?
How can businesses become simpler?
What is the paradox of choice?
What are some of the greatest challenges the workforce faces?
Is outsourcing manufacturing to China a force for good in the world?
What are the limitations of governance in a globalized world?
How does AI stack up?
What book will help you flirt?
How can good habits serve us at different stages of life?
Why should you not answer emails?
Why should we delegate more?
What is the importance of perspective?
What does achieving a balance over life mean?
Notable quotes from dave cheesewright
“It’s not about the strategy; it’s about the people.” Dave Cheesewright #3bookspodcast
“There is no one best line-up” Dave Cheesewright #3bookspodcast
“Success is judged in many ways.” Dave Cheesewright #3bookspodcast
“Simplicity is about providing people with a route map.” Dave Cheesewright #3bookspodcast
“What AI misses is humanity.” Dave Cheesewright #3bookspodcast
“There aren’t many things that machines can do better than humans.” Dave Cheesewright #3bookspodcast
“The more you read the more you see similar concepts emerging.” Dave Cheesewright #3bookspodcast
“Different phases allow you to redress balances” Dave Cheesewright #3bookspodcast
word of the chapter:
Resources Mentioned:
Dave’s first book [49:01]
Dave’s second book [1:22:42]
Dave’s third book [1:32:57]
The Person and the Situation by Lee Ross
When More is Not Better by Roger Martin
The Paradox of Choice by Barry Schwartz
Team Human by Douglas Rushkoff
Into The Wild by Jon Krakauer
Outside magazine
The Climb by Anatoli Boukreev
Leena Gamalgorde book?
Left for Dead by Beck Weathers
Jason Robillard’s Challenge / Contract to teach kids about responsible smartphone (Thank you, Jason!)
Letter of the Chapter - Jason Robillard’s Young Adult Reading List & Pledge (Thank you, Jason!)