Fortune | FORTUNE 前天 23:56
Union Pacific’s CEO started as a teen track worker—now he’s leading an $130 billion empire and says Gen Z interns need curiosity to be like him
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

本文聚焦于Union Pacific CEO Jim Vena的职业生涯,他从一名铁路工人成长为行业巨头。Vena强调,取得成功并非依赖MBA或导师,而是依靠“grit”(坚韧)、好奇心和正确的态度。他认为,即便在收入丰厚的情况下,扎根铁路行业并铭记一线工人的重要性,是其领导力的基石。Vena主张扁平化管理,鼓励基层员工做出决策,这一理念也得到了亚马逊等公司高管的认同,展现了以人为本、赋能基层在现代企业管理中的价值。

🚂 **坚韧与经验驱动的领导力:** Union Pacific CEO Jim Vena的职业生涯跨越40年,他从铁路基层工人做起,逐步晋升为公司CEO。他认为,在艰苦的工作条件、不可预测的日程和恶劣天气中积累的实践经验,以及“grit”(坚韧)是他成功的根本,远比MBA学位或顶级导师更为重要。

💡 **态度决定职业高度:** Vena和亚马逊CEO Andy Jassy、思科英国CEO Sarah Walker等企业领袖都强调,积极的态度和敬业精神是职业成功的关键。Sarah Walker甚至表示,正面的态度和能量是无法被教授的,因此在招聘和晋升时,这是她最看重的特质,也反映了情商(EQ)的重要性不亚于智商(IQ)。

⬇️ **推崇基层决策与扁平化管理:** Vena致力于将Union Pacific打造成一个自下而上决策的组织,减少管理层级,让决策尽可能在接近实际操作的基层进行。他认为,减少CEO需要处理的决策数量,能显著提升组织的运转效率,这一理念与亚马逊创始人杰夫·贝索斯的管理哲学不谋而合。

🛤️ **不忘初心,关怀一线员工:** 尽管Vena的个人薪酬已达千万美元级别,但他始终铭记自己的铁路工人出身。他将关照一线员工作为领导优先事项,并相信最佳的见解往往来自于一线,而非董事会,这体现了他对企业根基的深刻理解和尊重。

America’s dream of having a transcontinental railroad is finally speedily heading down the tracks, with Union Pacific planning to acquire Norfolk Southern—two of the country’s largest railroad companies—in a $85 billion deal. For Jim Vena, the CEO of Union Pacific, this deal is just the latest part of a 40-year climb up the railroad ladder. 

Vena got his start in the late 1970s as a teenage laborer at Canadian National (CN) railway—likely earning just a few dollars an hour. Over time, he worked his way up in the field to brakeman, conductor, locomotive engineer, trainmaster, and superintendent.

And he’s consistently told the next generation of workers the secret to having success like his isn’t in an MBA or finding a brilliant mentor: It’s grit, curiosity and attitude.

Just yesterday, he shared his simple career advice for Gen Z: “Stay curious, embrace challenges and always lean in.”

Learning the power of hard work and perseverance traveling across North America is something that likely became invaluable to Vena once he jumped over to the corporate marketing and sales divisions of CN. By 2013, he had been promoted to chief operating officer before retiring in 2016. 

But after being called out of retirement to serve as Union Pacific’s COO in 2019 and being named CEO in 2023, he echoed:

“From a very young age, I learned the importance of grit. I know railroading firsthand… I spent many nights away from home, with an unpredictable schedule, in unrelenting weather and extreme conditions,” he wrote to his new colleagues.

“You can count on me to be frank, thoughtful, nimble and resilient. I won’t mince words when the truth must be spoken. I will ask a lot of you—and I will demand even more from myself.”

Fortune reached out to Union Pacific for comment.

Attitude over aptitude for success 

Vena’s view that having the right mindset can do wonders on one’s career is something that other top executives have harked on as invaluable advice for Gen Z.

That includes Amazon CEO Andy Jassy, who said that controlling one’s attitude can make a “big difference” on the path to success.

“An embarrassing amount of how well you do, particularly in your twenties, has to do with attitude,” Jassy told LinkedIn.

For Cisco’s chief executive in the U.K., Sarah Walker, having a good attitude is the No. 1 green-flag trait she looks out for when it comes to hiring and promotions: “You cannot teach positive attitudes and engagement and energy,” she told Fortune.

Even Walker’s predecessor, David Meads previously echoed to Fortune that “EQ is at least as important as IQ.” The now EMEA chief at Cisco stressed: “You need that EQ to be able to read the room and understand what’s being said by what’s not being said.”

Keeping the frontline worker in mind

Vena always had a railroad company at the top of his paystub—with a total compensation package reaching over $17 million last year alone, according to the AFL-CIO. However, sticking to the industry that he knows has played to his advantage as a leader. In fact, never forgetting his roots and making decisions with those on the front lines on the tracks has been one of his priority mindset.

Shortly after becoming CEO, he recognized that he wanted to turn Union Pacific into an organization focused on down-top decision making. 

“You can’t have nine levels—from the CEO to the people who actually do the work—and expect that the message is clear, the decisions are made clear and there isn’t some hiccup. … I want to drive it so that we have way less layers,” he said during Union Pacific’s third-quarter 2023 earnings call. 

“I want decisions to be made at the local level — and the lower the level, the better,” Vena added to Progressive Railroading in 2024.

It’s a mantra that is shared by many business leaders, including one that’s been learned from billionaire Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

In an interview earlier this year, Coursera CEO Greg Hart told Fortune that his time working with Bezos helped him understand the value of trusting employee decisions.

“Pushing decisions down as close to the customer as possible was certainly something that I learned from Jeff,” Hart said. “The fewer decisions that have to go to the CEO, the faster the organization will move.”

For Vena, the most decisions that come across his desk, the better. After all, in his experience the best insights don’t come from the boardroom, but rather the rails.

Introducing the 2025 Fortune 500

, the definitive ranking of the biggest companies in America. 

Explore this year's list.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

Jim Vena Union Pacific 领导力 职业发展 企业文化
相关文章