That said, we do focus on how we can create and capture soft and hard value and are constantly building and tracking specific measures for all activities. We constantly think about metrics and impact and what we are doing to bring our purpose to life and build an organization within and across all of our activities.Â
Let me give you a current example we are struggling with, and an important metric that we may never completely accomplish: ending pet homelessness. We think it is important because we donât just want to make a better world for the pets we serve, but for all pets. And the ambition is huge. Working with partners, for the first time ever, we are figuring out how to measure the number of homeless cats and dogs across 20 countries. As a result, we estimate there are about 225 million homeless pets â so weâre working together with external partners and NGOs on adoption programs, feeding programs, spay and neuter, and so forth. Itâs a huge purpose-focused program and one of our big stories and metrics. While we may never fully succeed here, we need to be part of addressing this important issue for pets globally.  Â
In general, I’m a big fan of measurements. But I’m not a fan of assuming measurement gives you answers. I am especially not a fan of being driven by short-term financial metrics and using them to run your business. I think you need a degree of pragmatism. You should obviously measure what you can measure and move well beyond being trapped in classic financial spreadsheets. When you measure things, it enables you to ask better questions, which allows you to shape how you move forward. This allows you to look forward, not just try to evaluate the past.Â
How did being part of a family-owned company impact this whole journey?Â
One of our strong objectives and key advantages is to remain private in a company that prides itself on its values. We know that Petcare is a source of immense pride for the family because who wouldnât want to create a better world for pets? I can talk to our owners for hours about combating loneliness, about how our pets are great companions, about being stressed at home and how pets reduce stress and anxiety. Our purpose deals with important issues of day-to-day life. The point is, if our owners feel that pride while we deliver results, thatâs a win-win. Â
Now, if I’m in a publicly listed company, many shares are owned for only very short periods of time and you can’t really talk with, or even identify, your owners. In these companies, several charismatic and well-intentioned CEOs can write great books and give great speeches, but what can they accomplish in the long term without the real support of owners?  Â
Letâs come back to purpose. What makes a good and effective purpose and what should companies avoid?  Â
The question for me is how you have an authentic purpose and how you have a purpose that is built on a relevant, human truth at its core, not just fancy words that justify or try to make attractive the business you are already in.Â
A strong purpose has as its foundation a significant impact touching the lives of different stakeholders, which means it is based on relevant external criteria, not protecting or promoting internal interests. Too often we only think about value through internal lenses of whether some action helps me, my business, and my financial performance. These are not the right lenses. Often, relevance suggests that you are creating true value and impact outside, where it is often more difficult to measure.Â
One way I have looked at this is my own LinkedIn account. When I put out a purpose story, I get 10 times more reactions than when I put out a story on a new product or service. I recently posted a picture from our vet business in Holland where two dogs are licking my face in the office, while we are sitting on the floor together. I went for a walk with our local leader with his dog and he said, “Why don’t we just put it on LinkedIn and see what happens?” I labeled it “Wonderful day in the Netherlands. My job is to create a better world for pets. Pippa and Diede create a better world for me today at my office!â I soon had over 140,000 views and over 850 reactions from people who could relate. Â
From my experience, a purpose must be built on a truth and must have meaning beyond the left brain. It should be grounded in making a difference in peopleâs lives, not just promoting your business. And it should shape your future, not just justify or enhance your past. Purpose should have true meaning for all your stakeholders.Â
Now that you have become CEO of Mars, Inc, can you briefly reflect on what purpose means at Mars as a whole, and give your view on how other organizations should put purpose at the center of their strategy? Â
 At a Mars, Incorporated level our challenge wasnât to invent a purpose, but how to take over 100âŻyears of our history and use it to articulate a purpose that could connect our diverse businesses and resonate with our people â but one that conveyed how we had always approached how we did business. The work that we had done in Petcare acted as inspiration and input into that work.Â
Our corporate purpose â âŻâThe world we want tomorrow starts with how we do business todayââŻâ is our way of articulating what weâve already been doing as a business.âŻUltimately, our purpose is the first question that will be asked on every business decision.âŻWe want to facilitate a culture that encourages people to think beyond today, and really think about tomorrow. Itâs a rallying cry for all our associates and itâs something that makes the owners of the business proud.Â
My advice to anyone looking to bring purpose into the heart of what they are doing is simple: it has to be authentic; it has to unify and speak to the mission you are already on and ultimately be grounded in the contribution you want to make to the people your business serves and your wider stakeholders. It isnât separate to your strategy: it is your strategy.Â
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This is an abridged and edited version of transcripts of two conversations Weihrauch conducted with Malnight â one before Weihrauch became Mars, Inc Chief Executive in the third quarter of 2022, and the other shortly after he assumed that role.Â
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