Pivot for Success. Amy S. Hilliard

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is that sometimes the gift of your Purpose may not always work as you expect. Even when you have Found Your Purpose, the timing and circumstances for using it needs to align.

      But here's the lesson. Even though I was using my Purpose of inspiring others, the job of recruiting women to sell cosmetics was just not for me. The lesson here is that you use your Purpose in endeavors that work for you. It's important that there are other aspects of your job, business, nonprofit, or wherever you invest your time mesh well with what you value, enjoy doing, or move you forward so that you can Hone Your Vision, Shift Your Energy, and Make Your Move. The three‐step Strategic Process is a powerful prism to use as you utilize each of the 10 Pivot Points to keep you focused on where you would like to pivot next at any given stage of your life.

      There I was, doing well in Mary Kay, but knowing that I needed to pivot to more fully mesh my Purpose and values. As a woman of faith, I was able to utilize another Pivot Point, and Have Patience, and wait for the right opportunity to surface. Granted, as a Type A person, I didn't just sit around and wait, I explored different ideas and dreams. Always a foodie and having a long‐standing dream of owning my own restaurant someday, I used the time to research starting a soul food restaurant in Minneapolis called “Porches.” There wasn't a good upscale soul food place in town, so I delved into that prospect as I also awaited the birth of my second child.

      I had the new job, new title, new office—and no budget. I was told to make the case to the three division VPs as to why they should fund a multicultural initiative. When I met with each of them, two of the three were willing to listen. However, the VP with the largest product portfolio, Refrigerated Dough and the Hungry Jack Biscuit Brand, promptly and politely told me that he didn't need my help. “Our sales are strong, and we already have lots of Black customers,” he said. I had some inspiring to do for sure.

      It's a lesson I had learned many times over: when your gift isn't working directly, look for another way to apply it. I knew I had to have his support. So, I asked him, “Since you are doing so well, may I shadow you on a few field trips to learn from you and find out why?” Those trips gave us a chance to get to know one another and for me to share some important knowledge about growing his core audience further as we went to different sales regions. I worked with the AC Nielsen research teams to uncover sales data to show that sales were higher in areas of concentrated ethnic demographics. The data was there, but the VP's team hadn't looked deeply into what the scanners were capturing. Inspiring the subject matter experts to be part of the initiative was helping to build the case. Yet I needed additional allies in the quest for budget dollars.

      Next, we still had to convince Pillsbury management, as well as our new UK management from the Grand Metropolitan company that had acquired Pillsbury in 1988, to support the multicultural initiative. I suggested to Sally that we develop a tasting seminar for the division called “Savor the Cultural Flavor,” with samples prepared from the recipes we had collected through our travels. In addition, we would bring in key speakers from the restaurants, communities, and culinary experts to educate the Pillsbury/Grand Met brand teams and executives. The seminar was a huge hit. At the next quarterly planning session, the multicultural initiative received a budget of $5 million to get started, and the biggest part of the budget came from the VP of Refrigerated Dough. From 1990 to 1992, we created the first Spanish‐speaking Pillsbury Doughboy commercials and targeted African American ads for the company. Pillsbury became active in events in cultural communities, and I even had the opportunity to meet the president of Mexico when he visited Los Angeles. At the other end of the spectrum, I was able to use my Purpose in the community of Minneapolis with a volunteer program Pillsbury sponsored called KAPOW—Kids And the Power Of Work. This was a mentorship program through which underserved youths of color from grade school to high school met executives of color who could show and tell them about career opportunities they otherwise might not have the chance to see up close. If they could see it, they could be it. It was another way to serve others that presented itself.

Schematic illustration of a rectangle which reads Pivot.

      

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