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      Brief

      Ravi Ahuja Is Working the Buzzer

      Ravi Ahuja Is Working the Buzzer

      The Sony Pictures CEO says leadership in disruption isn’t just about predicting what’s coming—it’s about preparing for its arrival.

      By James Allen

      • min read
      }

      Brief

      Ravi Ahuja Is Working the Buzzer
      en

      For Ravi Ahuja, Chairman and CEO of Sony Pictures Entertainment, an experience early in his career shaped his approach to leadership: seeing digital disruption hit the music business, warning that the old model was under threat, and then choosing—reluctantly—to jump into the turnaround of Virgin’s retail business when that threat became real.

      From that, Ahuja developed a broader strategic view of leadership in turbulent times—one centered on honesty about the future, differentiation, and timing. He believes clarity beats charisma, progress beats perfection, and no company can out-execute structural decline in a collapsing market.

      In this conversation with Bain & Company’s Jimmy Allen, Ahuja reflects on the experiences that shaped him, the lessons he took from crisis leadership, and the practical habits he now uses to stay ahead of disruption. Leaders often know, in broad terms, what is coming. The real challenge, he argues, is less about having all the answers than it is about the judgment to know when and how to act.

      A quiet calm and watchful eye

      Ravi Ahuja: We’re all part nature, part nurture. My nature is to be very analytical. I study things. I'm an avid reader. I have a resting smile pretty much all the time—I'm very calm. I'm introverted by nature, but really enjoy people. So that's the temperament.

      But my experience has almost always been around the chaos of media distribution disruption. That's changed my perspectives and made me more vigilant than my temperament would naturally lead me to be.

      I think that's what's made me that combination of things—very strategic, always trying to solve the right problem.

      Jimmy Allen: You said nature versus nurture—how much of that is nature? If I talked to 6-year-old Ravi, or 12-year-old Ravi, even though you might use different words, would you be that same person?

      Ravi Ahuja: My mother is probably the best judge of that. The temperament hasn't changed over time. But the experiences have led me to be much more action-oriented than I would've been as a young man.

      Young Ravi would've been a professor who would've taken his time really thinking things through. But the real world and experiences of my career have led me to have a much greater sense of urgency.

      The cost of being right

      Jimmy Allen: Is there a moment when Professor Ravi knew that he was no longer going to be Professor Ravi?

      Ravi Ahuja: Well, conveniently, it was probably very soon after I left the academic environment. Directly after my MBA I worked at a strategy consulting firm for a couple of years, in the mid to late nineties.

      While I was at that strategy consulting firm working with entertainment companies, the biggest focus was on this new thing—the internet. That's how old I am. And the question was: What do we do about this? Of course, the answer at the time was that it was both an opportunity and a threat, which turned out to be right. It’s just that opportunity and threat don’t necessarily happen simultaneously!

      But where that really came into focus is when I left that firm in 1999 and joined Virgin Entertainment Group, doing business development, expanding the brand into new areas, focusing a lot on internet businesses—digital music, e-commerce.

      I was that person in the company saying, Hey, we've got to take action. We shouldn't be opening stores—we should be closing them. And unfortunately, I was right.

      Just after 1999, I saw things like Napster, peer-to-peer music sharing, torrent sites, the rise of Amazon and e-commerce. And I was that person in the company saying, Hey, we've got to take action. We have large music businesses, particularly global record stores, that we need to address. We shouldn't be opening stores—we should be closing them and moving away from CDs. And unfortunately, I was right. I realized that “I told you so” may feel good for a minute or two, but it actually feels really bad. It felt like I hadn't done a good enough job of convincing people. As the strategy person inside a company, you do what you can analytically. But people actually need to begin to see it themselves. Your job is to help people see it.

      We were seeing a little bit of a decline happening right around 2001, 2002. The legitimate debate—it'll sound ridiculous now—but the legitimate debate was: What was causing the decline in music? There were studies that showed if you download under a hundred songs on Napster, it actually increases your purchases. An argument then was that the industry’s decline was because there just wasn't a lot of good music being made. But the real problem was, people were using these new platforms and they're not going to buy.

      I lived in the US but commuted to London in this job. And in the US, our Virgin Megastore chain ran into financial challenges in 2002, 2003, around the time the CD business started to decline. My reward for being right was being asked to jump in right away as CFO to deal with banks and vendors who were irate that they weren't getting paid.

      The work was both understanding the problem and stabilizing the company. It was a very operational role. My boss at the time was in the UK, so I was in Los Angeles working on this with a boss 6,000 miles away. I had gone from, at 32 years old, managing one or two highly motivated individuals to having hundreds of reports and a very chaotic situation.

      Maintaining clarity in a crisis

      Jimmy Allen: So now let's go to the wonderful news that you were now stuck with. The implications of being right? Is it shut down? Is it turnaround? What was the assignment?

      Ravi Ahuja: The first thing I had to do was to rebuild the finance team. The company had lost about 30 of its top finance people—the CFO, the controller, the FP&A—pretty much everyone in the last month or two as they saw this calamity coming.

      The second part of it was going beyond the numbers—rebuilding trust with external stakeholders: banks, vendors, and shareholders. We needed to help them understand what happened and how we're going to fix it. Bad news is better than no news in times like that.

      The third thing was the strategic piece: a short-term plan and a long-term plan. This wasn't fixing a business in a stable industry. The foundation was moving underneath us—CD sales were collapsing.

      Jimmy Allen: Okay. And how about keeping the team on side? When the first news hit, you lost everybody because they could see it coming. Now you're giving the unvarnished truth. How do you keep a team through that?

      Ravi Ahuja: You have to have clarity. It can't be an overly complex strategy. It has to be something very succinct. Our strategy at the time was: Get out of the loss-making stores; rationalize our overall cost structure, differentiate by selling other products, and quickly. And then you give people the evidence that it's working, which motivates people.

      Jimmy Allen: And at this point it's very clear: You're the turnaround guy.

      Ravi Ahuja: Yeah. This was not what I wanted. I saw myself as a strategy and deal executive, not a CFO, not a retailer, and definitely not a turnaround guy. But it ended up being the best “yes” of my career, absolutely the right thing to do—because I learned so much from it that I'm able to take into other environments.

      One thing that motivates me now is to never end up there again. The disruption that I've faced in different media businesses since then—I have a clear sense of how bad things can become if you don't pay attention. I’m not a wishful thinker!

      Jimmy Allen: What was the lesson that shaped how you went forward?

      Ravi Ahuja: First, clarity beats charisma. It's not that people need you to give them a vision statement loudly from a stage. They need to know what happens on Monday morning.

      And I firmly believe that progress beats perfection. You have to just continually make progress—not trying to perfect the answer before you implement it. You're dealing with a kind of fog of war, which is inherently what every business leader deals with. You don't have perfect clarity. You get 50% of the data and all of the accountability—and you've got to figure out what to do.

      Lastly, every business must be differentiated. There is no turnaround strategy that beats a collapsing industry. You can be the greatest manager of all time, but if your industry is falling apart, you can't out-execute that kind of structural decline. You've really got to be focused on how you're positioned in the marketplace and where the growth is.

      I firmly believe that progress beats perfection. You have to just continually make progress—not trying to perfect the answer before you implement it.

      Jimmy Allen: I think we usually associate clarity with relatively stable industries. And yet you talk about it in the context of turbulence.

      Ravi Ahuja: I think more businesses than ever face disruption. It's the nature of the modern economy. What does clarity mean in disruption? It means facing reality and being honest about the future. What that often looks like is being slightly pessimistic in building plans.

      Jimmy Allen: So give us a sense of how you focus on competitive differentiation, what that means, and the kind of decisions you take as a result.

      Ravi Ahuja: You have to stand out vis-à-vis competitors. And you have to stand out in the minds of your customers.

      Sony Pictures is the only large independent studio that doesn't have a general entertainment streaming platform, so we can design distribution strategies that are totally in service of our content. Every one of our buyers knows that about us, and we completely stand out. That's a differentiated strategy.

      Our only streaming business of scale is an anime streaming business called Crunchyroll. Nobody else is that big in anime. So again, it's differentiated. Anime is a growing category and differentiated area.

      Where CEOs add value

      Jimmy Allen: One thing I've been struck by in all these interviews is how much time CEOs are spending on their own learning journeys.

      Ravi Ahuja: Reading, writing, and talking are key. When you read, you develop your  mindset: What should I be thinking about? What am I missing? With writing, you formulate and tighten your thinking. Writing demands specificity in thought. Then talk to everyone. Ask them what they think. That's how you really learn who's doing what, who's good at it, and what the best tactics are. Make sure people aren't wasting time on things that don't matter. There are so many priorities, and the more you work to take away those distractions, the more you create space for the deeper work.

      Jimmy Allen: A lot of CEOs mention it, but I've never heard anybody really talk about in detail—what is the stop list? What are other things where you say, “no, I'm not going to do it”?

      Ravi Ahuja: It's focusing on where you can add value. As the CEO, I add a lot to long-term strategic issues and our biggest decisions but I'm not going to early screenings of movies and TV shows; I'm not going to table reads. I do occasionally read a script if a business unit asks me to and I’ll offer my perspective but fundamentally, I believe these are not the types of decisions I should be dedicating meaningful time to.

      Jimmy Allen: There was this one moment where you took the risk and it proved to be instrumental and it shaped the way you lead. But then you described another massive leadership moment: the self-awareness to “go where I think I can add the most value.” Implied in that is not letting your ego take the decision. A lot of executives are very good at five things and suddenly convince themselves they're good at everything—CEOs going into brand meetings, into commercials. But sometimes leadership is about choosing the moment to get out of the way.

      Ravi Ahuja: I agree. You have to have humility as an individual, alongside humility for your company. And on your point on ego—a lot of it is: go where you're needed. That's what I felt at Virgin. I initially said no, but what made me say yes was not some career calculation. It was: Oh, I need to help.

      You have to have humility as an individual, alongside humility for your company.

      Prediction is just the beginning

      Jimmy Allen: You don't have a crystal ball. But the big lesson from Virgin is you've got to anticipate. So what is the Ravi playbook?

      Ravi Ahuja: I actually do have a crystal ball that my assistant gave me. It's in my office not far from where I'm sitting now. The thing is, it doesn't work! But I think you've got to do the work and generally, in the context of commerce, you actually do know what's going to happen. What you don't know is when and how.

      Clive Davis—the great music mogul—wrote a book in the 1970s. There's a line in there: Fortunes are made and lost on the difference between what is coming and what is arriving.

      There's no debate that AI is going to profoundly affect all businesses, for example. The debate is about how, what exactly it will look like, and when it's going to happen.

      We make Jeopardy on this [studio] lot, and somebody who lost once asked me: “How do you win at Jeopardy?” The evidence shows it’s not enough to know the answer. You have to work the buzzer in the right way at the right moment. You have to be so practiced, so present.

      I think there's an analogy there for business managers. Your strategy gets you close to the answer. Your leadership is in working the buzzer—that’s the timing and execution. The when, and the how.

      The winning approach is: It's going to happen. The winners are going to figure out when and how, and invest in the right way.

      Authors
      • Headshot of James Allen
        James Allen
        Advisory Partner, London
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