What’s in it for me? The inside story of Disney’s revival.
Robert Iger The Ride of a Lifetime Lessons Learned from 15 Years as CEO of The Walt Disney Company Disney is an undisputed entertainment heavyweight. Its movies generate billions of dollars and capture the imaginations of millions of viewers.
Add in global merchandise sales and a theme park empire and you have the ingredients for one of the most profitable and influential media operations on the planet. The rise of Disney to its current position might seem inevitable in hindsight, but the company that introduced the world to Mickey Mouse was in serious trouble when current CEO Robert Iger took charge in 2005. After a string of successes in the 1990s, Disney's famous animation unit began churning out a slew of expensive failures. Internally, a drawn-out shareholder campaign to unseat Iger's predecessor had eaten away at morale. Worse, Disney's relationship with Pixar, the studio responsible for its most profitable productions, had soured. It was time for a change.
That's just what Iger offered. Under his leadership, the company transformed its fortunes and began to climb to the lofty position it occupies today. In these Blinks, we'll discover who Iger is, where he came from, and how he did it.
Chapter 1 of 10
Robert Iger owes much of his success in life to his father’s influence.
Blink number one. Robert Iger owes much of his success in life to his father's influence. All of us are molded by a combination of two factors, nature and nurture. This blend of inherited and learned traits can be tricky to disentangle, but while there's little accounting for biology's whims, we can trace what we learned as children back to its source, our parents.
Robert Iger grew as the elder of two children in a split-level house in Oceanside, a working-class town on Long Island, New York. His mother was a warm and loving stay-at-home mom. His father, an adman who had served in the U.S. Navy during the Second World War, was a more difficult person. Ultimately, though, it was the latter who had the greatest influence on Iger. A graduate of Wharton, a renowned business school in Pennsylvania, Iger's father was a clever and gifted man prone to brooding and self-doubt. Later, Iger learned that he had been diagnosed with manic depression.
His lasting legacy was to nurture his son's sense of curiosity. A keen reader, he had lined the family's bookshelves with the works of great American writers. When Iger wasn't reading Mark Twain, Faulkner, or Hemingway, he was discussing politics with his dad, a vocal liberal who had once quit a job to hear Martin Luther King Jr. give a speech. Iger quickly learned that his father didn't care what he did with his time as long as he was spending it productively and used it to better himself. And that's just what he did. Whether he was delivering papers to help bring in extra income, mending household appliances, or immersing himself in the New York Times, Iger was self-reliant and dedicated in everything he did.
There was a reason for that. There was nothing he feared more than ending up suffering from the sense of failure that haunted his father. Years later, after he had become the CEO of Disney, Iger took his dad out to lunch in New York. He told him how grateful he was for everything he and his mother had done for him. This, he hoped, might liberate his father from his belief that he had never achieved anything worthwhile. As Iger put it to him that day, so many of the traits that had served him well in his career came from him.
Chapter 2 of 10
A lucky break gave Iger his start in the TV business.
Blink number two. A lucky break gave Iger his start in the TV business. Iger's career began with a chance encounter. In 1974, his uncle Bob was recovering from surgery in a Manhattan hospital bed.
Bob was sharing his room with a low-level executive at the American Broadcasting Company, or ABC for short, one of the country's top TV networks. It's impossible to say whether it was boredom or vanity that motivated him, but this executive decided that he wanted to impress Bob. Over the following days, he talked up his reputation as a corporate hotshot. Bob fell for it and mentioned that his 23-year-old nephew was looking for a job. The executive gave him his number and told him to pass it on to Iger. When Iger called him, the embarrassed executive pulled some strings and landed him an interview at ABC's Small Production Services department.
Just like that, Iger was hired. The position paid $150 a week and was about as unglamorous as it gets in the TV industry. Iger's role was simple. Show up wherever he was needed and do whatever needed doing. That meant getting up at 4.30 a.m. to arrange sets, coordinate carpenters and electricians, and run small errands. In the fall of 1978, he was assigned to work on The Main Event, a televised Frank Sinatra concert in New York City.
One evening, Iger was tasked with buying Sinatra some mouthwash. When he returned with a bottle of Listerine, he met the great man himself. As suave as ever, Sinatra thanked him with a crisp $100 bill and a golden cigarette lighter. The job had other benefits, too. During filming, Iger met a studio operations supervisor at ABC Sports. Impressed by his can-do attitude, the supervisor hired Iger to work with him on a network's most profitable division.
ABC Sports was unlike other departments. Iger's new co-workers wore tailored suits and Gucci loafers, rubbed shoulders with athletes and celebrities, and enjoyed famously boozy lunches in New York's best restaurants. During his time with the division, Iger crossed the Atlantic on a Concorde, dined in Paris, and drove sports cars in Monaco. Iger also learned a great deal, especially from Rune Arlitsch, a pioneering sports journalist who was among the first in the industry to embrace new technologies like reverse-angle cameras and slow-motion replays.
Arlitsch taught Iger that the only way to survive in business is to stay one step ahead of the curve. Blink number three. Iger's decision to stay on at ABC Sports was a big one.
Chapter 3 of 10
Iger’s decision to stay on at ABC was the best call of his career.
Blink number three. Iger's decision to stay on at ABC was the best call of his career. In March 1985, Iger was 34 years old and had just been made vice president of ABC Sports. In a pattern that would repeat itself throughout his career, his promotion coincided with a major shakeup.
That year, a small media company called Capital Cities Communications, or Cap Cities for short, bought the network for $3.5 billion. The new owners immediately stripped away the perks previously enjoyed by the ABC Sports employees. Chauffeur limousines disappeared from parking lots, expense accounts shrunk, and first-class travel became a thing of the past. That didn't really concern Iger. What did bother him was that Cap Cities had hired an outsider, veteran executive Dennis Swanson, to head up his department. When he announced that he was quitting, however, President Dan Burke told him to hold his horses.
If he hung around, he would see to it that Iger was made senior vice president of programming. Every career has inflection points, or decisions that radically change the future. For Iger, this was one of them. Deciding to stay at ABC was the best call he ever made. His new boss, Swanson, was amiable, energetic, and infectiously optimistic. In short, a great boss.
Like Burke and Cap Cities chairman Tom Murphy, he was happy to delegate decisions to those around him. As long as budgetary restrictions were obeyed, senior staff like Iger were allowed to take the lead on projects. Iger thrived in this environment. The high point came in 1988, when he was put in charge of ABC Sports' coverage of the Calgary Winter Olympics. The first few days went off without a hitch, but then everything went wrong. Warm winds, known as Chinooks, blew in.
As the temperatures soared, the snow on the ski courses and the ice on the bobsleigh runs melted. It could have been a disaster, but Iger improvised. Each morning, ABC camera crews scoured Calgary for human interest stories to broadcast instead of the canceled Olympic events. Viewers across America learned about the Jamaican bobsleigh team and people like Eddie the Eagle Edwards, an eccentric British ski jumper who would finish last in every event he entered. Somehow it worked, and ratings were historically high. Iger's reward?
The presidency of ABC's entire entertainment division. Blink 182, the first time I've ever seen a TV show that was so popular. Blink 183, the first time I've ever seen a TV show that was so popular.
Chapter 4 of 10
Taking a chance on a cult filmmaker's TV show helped cement Iger’s reputation.
Blink 184, the first time I've ever seen a TV show that was so popular. Iger had his work cut out for him when he took up his new position in Los Angeles as president of ABC Entertainment. His first task was to decide on the lineup for the 1989-1990 season. ABC still had a couple of popular shows to its name, but it was rapidly losing ground to its closest rival, NBC.
What ABC needed was a hit. Picking one wouldn't have been easy at the best of times, but Iger was completely out of his depth. He didn't understand how things were done in Hollywood, and the creatives under his control regarded him as little more than a bothersome suit from New York. What he did have was conviction. As he saw it, leadership is all about humility. Few things, after all, are less confidence-inspiring than a leader faking knowledge.
The flip side to that is that you also have to actually lead. So how do you square that circle? Well, you ask the questions you need to ask, get yourself up to speed, and then find the courage to make tough calls. When Iger was presented with the pilot for a left-field murder mystery about the death of a prom queen in a town called Twin Peaks, he made one of those difficult decisions. He commissioned it. David Lynch, the show's creator, had made his name with surreal cult movies like Eraserhead and Blue Velvet.
ABC's creative directors admired his work, but they just couldn't see it doing well on primetime TV. Iger stood his ground. The media landscape was changing, and if ABC wanted to keep up with the competition from new cable channels, video games, and VCR, it needed to grab viewers' attention. Lynch's oddball drama fit the bill to do that. When the pilot episode of Twin Peaks aired on April 8, 1990, 35 million viewers tuned in to find out what all the fuss was about. It was one of ABC's most successful shows in years.
Unfortunately, that wouldn't last. As the season unfolded, the plot began to meander, and viewers gradually lost interest. In the long run, however, that didn't matter. By taking such a risky gamble, Iger had caught the attention of the media and Hollywood. He began receiving calls from filmmakers like Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, eager to talk about future projects. It was a career-defining moment that helped him cement his reputation.
Chapter 5 of 10
Despite his personal success, Iger’s first years with Disney were a low point in his career.
Blink number five. Despite his personal success, Iger's first years with Disney were a low point in his career. Iger's boldness didn't go unnoticed within ABC, and in September 1994, he was promoted to Chief Operating Officer, or COO. It was a great achievement, but there wouldn't be time to rest on his laurels.
Six months later, Disney CEO Michael Eisner began inquiring if the corporation was for sale. In January 1996, the two companies merged in a deal worth $19.5 billion. It was a timely decision for Disney. A string of box office hits like The Little Mermaid and The Lion King, as well as Eisner's expansion of Disney's theme parks and resorts, had given the company a boost in the late 80s. By the mid-90s, however, the entertainment giant was in trouble. Disney's famous animation unit had lost its creative spark, and its recent movies had been expensive flops.
Acquiring ABC assets like the cable sports channel ESPN gave Eisner breathing room as Disney tried to rediscover its mojo. That was a job with Iger's name on it. Eisner had insisted that ABC's COO be given a new five-year contract before the merger was concluded. When Iger agreed, he was put in charge of Disney's media division. Looking back, Iger regards the first years in his new position as the most dispiriting and unproductive of his career. That was largely due to Disney's corporate culture.
Tom Murphy and Dan Burke had created an open, decentralized structure at ABC. As long as you stuck to the budget and behaved ethically, you were given independence. Disney was different. There, every decision had to be run by strategic planning, a unit stuffed with Harvard and Stanford MBAs. Projects only got the go-ahead after the numbers had been crunched and Eisner had signed off. There were also personnel issues.
Eisner's old number two, Frank Wells, had died in a helicopter crash in 1994. The position had been left vacant until the merger, when Eisner hired Michael Ovitz, the founder of top Hollywood talent agency, CAA. Ovitz was a gifted agent, but he was a poor manager. He interrupted meetings to field calls, failed to read reports, and made little effort to hide his boredom.
It was an instructive, albeit negative, lesson in leadership for Iger. Leading, after all, means being attentive, sitting through meetings you wouldn't if you had the choice not to, and solving people's problems. When his time came to lead, Iger wouldn't make the same mistakes as Ovitz.
Chapter 6 of 10
Michael Eisner’s rift with Pixar and the shock of September 11 combined to end his stint as Disney’s CEO.
Blink number six. Michael Eisner's rift with Pixar and the shock of September 11th combined to end his stint as Disney CEO. In September 1999, Eisner arranged a meeting with Iger. Frustrated by Disney's corporate structure, Iger was considering quitting.
Now, he thought, he might be pushed before he got the chance to jump. Eisner had told Tom Murphy that he would never consider Iger as his successor. When he walked into the meeting, he was convinced he was about to be fired. But Eisner surprised him. He wasn't being axed. He was being promoted to COO and given a seat on Disney's board of directors.
Clearly, Iger's consistent work had changed Eisner's mind. He was now Disney's official number two, and next in line to take over from Eisner when he retired. That would happen sooner than anyone expected. Disney was struggling to keep up in a changing media environment. It had one lifeline, however, its relationship with Apple's Steve Jobs. Jobs was also the CEO of Pixar Animation Studios, Disney's most successful creative partner.
The two companies had agreed to co-produce, market, and distribute five movies in the mid-90s. Toy Story, its first full-length digitally animated feature film, was released in 1995. It was a hit and grossed over $400 million worldwide. 1998's A Bug's Life and 2001's Monsters, Inc. brought in an additional $600 million. Tensions between Disney and Pixar mounted during the development of Toy Story 2. The original idea had been to release it straight to video, but as costs spiraled, it was decided to show it in theaters first.
The sticking point? Jobs argued it should count towards Disney's five-movie commitment. Eisner claimed it shouldn't since it was a sequel. Things were bad enough, but they were about to get worse. In 2001, the September 11th attacks sent the stock market tumbling and forced Disney's largest shareholder, the Bass family, to dump 135 million shares worth $2 billion. The sharp downturn in global tourism, meanwhile, ate into Disney's theme park revenue.
Disney was in crisis, and Eisner started panicking. That led to bad calls. Desperate to squeeze as much as possible out of Disney's deal with Pixar, he refused to compromise with jobs. There was little the latter hated more than being bullied, and in early 2004, he publicly stated that he would never work with Disney again.
A few weeks later, Disney's shareholders revolted. When 43% of them withheld their support for Eisner, the writing was on the wall. His position had become untenable. The question now was, who was going to succeed him?
Chapter 7 of 10
Iger convinced Disney’s shareholders to make him CEO with a bold plan to revive the company.
Blink number seven. Iger convinced Disney's shareholders to make him CEO with a bold plan to revive the company. When corporations find themselves in crisis, their boards often look to change agents from outside the company to solve their problems. Disney was no different.
Handing the keys to Eisner's deputy didn't exactly signal a new day. If Iger wanted to become Disney's new CEO, he was going to have to convince a lot of skeptics. Luckily, he had an ace up his sleeve, Los Angeles-based political consultant and brand manager Scott Miller, an old contact from Iger's time at ABC. Miller didn't mince his words when they first met. This, he told Iger, would be a political campaign. To come out on top, he would have to win the battle for the soul of the brand.
But how was he supposed to do that? Miller's answer was simple. State your priorities. A CEO's role is to provide a roadmap. When you tell people where you are now, where you want to be, and how you're going to get there, you give them reference points that help them frame their decisions. Put differently, you take the guesswork out of their day-to-day lives.
After his meeting with Miller, Iger landed on three strategic priorities for Disney. This was his pitch to the board and shareholders. First off, Disney needed to devote more of its time and capital to creating memorable movies and characters. Anything less, Iger argued, just wasn't going to cut it. In today's market, consumers face a dizzying number of choices. Great branded content helps them decide how to spend their precious time and money.
Next, Disney needed to embrace cutting-edge technologies. This meant both leveraging technology to create new products and using it to distribute those products. The latter was vital. Unless consumers could access Disney's content in more user-friendly, mobile, and digital ways, the corporation would struggle to remain relevant. Finally, Disney needed to become a truly global company and tap into emerging markets like India and China. Catering to consumers in these markets, Iger claimed, wouldn't just help Disney expand, it would also force it to create new kinds of content.
Simply churning out the same things for the same customers, by contrast, was a recipe for stagnation. It was a persuasive case. In March 2005, Disney's board convened to make its decision. That afternoon, Iger received a call. The job of CEO was his.
Chapter 8 of 10
Buying out Pixar helped turn Disney’s fortunes around.
Blink number eight. Buying out Pixar helped turn Disney's fortunes around. Steve Jobs was one of the first people Iger called as Disney's CEO. Repairing relations with Pixar was essential to the corporation's future.
Jobs was frosty, and the deal he offered Iger was correspondingly one-sided. In return for relinquishing the sequel rights to all Disney-Pixar collaborations, Disney would receive a paltry 10% stake in Pixar. That was unacceptable, but Iger had another idea. Find Pixar outright. The board wasn't convinced. Pixar was valued at $6 billion, and Jobs, who loathed Disney, owned half its stock.
Even if Disney agreed to stump up that much cash, Jobs was never going to sell. Iger, however, was convinced this was the only way forward. When Hong Kong Disneyland opened in 2005, he had noticed the characters displayed on ceremonial floats. Movies like The Little Mermaid, The Lion King, and Beauty and the Beast from Eisner's early years were well-represented, as were characters from Disney-Pixar movies like Toy Story and Finding Nemo. Worryingly, there wasn't a single Disney character from the previous decade. In short, Disney's animation studio was a mess, and the numbers reflected that.
Over those 10 years, Disney had invested $1 billion in new movies and lost $400 million, while Pixar had racked up success after success. That was largely down to the pioneering work of its technological and creative heads, John Lasseter and Ed Catmull. If Disney was going to thrive, it needed their help. In the fall of 2005, Iger pulled into his driveway and called Jobs to ask for a meeting to discuss a crazy idea. Jobs, who loved radical pitches, didn't want to wait to hear Iger's proposal. Sure that Jobs was going to laugh him out, Iger told him right away.
Silence. After what seemed like an endless pause, Jobs gave his answer. You know, that's not the craziest idea in the world. By early 2006, a deal had been hashed out. Disney would buy Pixar for $6.4 billion and guarantee Lasseter and Catmull's creative freedom and independence. In return, it will receive the rights to Pixar's output, technology, and know-how.
This would be the base on which Disney's own animation studio would build as it reinvented itself. The results speak for themselves. From Toy Story 3 to Toy Story 4, Disney's animation studios have made some of the highest-grossing family movies of the last 15 years.
Chapter 9 of 10
Disney’s acquisition of Marvel was a financial and creative coup.
Blink number 9. Disney's acquisition of Marvel was a financial and creative coup. Iger was determined to grow Disney, and acquiring Pixar was the first step to achieving that goal. Now that the company had the creative know-how to produce top-quality content, there was just one question.
What was it going to make? Few companies own the rights to as many interesting stories as Marvel Entertainment. Marvel had struggled financially for years, but it was sitting on a treasure trove of comic book characters perfectly suited for Disney's movie, TV, theme park, and merchandise operations. There was just one problem. Marvel's controlling shareholder was a little too big for Disney's budget. It was a legendarily tough and reclusive ex-military man called Ike Perlmutter.
Convincing him to sell would be a tough ask. Luckily, Iger had Steve Jobs. If there was one thing Jobs loathed more than video games, it was comics, but he put his personal feelings aside and agreed to help Iger out. Perlmutter was a tough nut to crack, but even he couldn't help but be impressed when Jobs personally phoned him to vouch for Iger's integrity. On March 31, 2009, Disney announced it was buying Marvel for just over $4 billion. For many, it was a baffling decision.
As newspapers pointed out, the deal didn't even cover Marvel's best-known characters. The rights to Spider-Man, for example, had been sold to Columbia Pictures, while Fox owned X-Men and The Incredible Hulk. But Iger had done his homework. Disney, he argued, didn't need these household names. Marvel had more than enough compelling stories in its vaults to make great movies. He wasn't wrong.
In April 2019, Disney released its 20th Marvel movie, Avengers Endgame. It was an instant hit and eventually went on to take over $2 billion in box office receipts. While it did better than some of its predecessors, Avengers wasn't a fluke. In fact, Disney's Marvel productions have on average grossed around $1 billion each. More importantly, Disney is now a leading voice in cultural debates around the globe. Take Black Panther.
When it was released in 2018, critics doubted whether a superhero movie set in a fictional African country with Black leads would resonate with a mass audience. Not only did it take well over a billion dollars, it was also heralded as a landmark. As Oprah Winfrey put it, it makes me tear up to think that little Black children will grow up with that forever.
Chapter 10 of 10
Disney’s future rests on the success of its innovative streaming services.
Blink number 10. Disney's future rests on the success of its innovative streaming services. Iger's great ABC mentor, Rune Arledge, had taught him that if you don't innovate, you die. You die.
It was a lesson that guided his approach to running Disney. When he became CEO in 2006, it was already clear that consumers' relationship with entertainment and media content was changing. Platforms and streaming services were the future, and Disney needed to get in on the action. But how? There were two choices. Buy a platform or create one.
The second option was quickly discarded. Building a platform would have been a massive investment and taken years. Buying one, by contrast, was expensive but allowed Disney to pivot into new markets immediately. The best-known platforms, Google, Apple, Amazon, and Facebook, were clearly off the table. Even if Disney could have afforded them, they were just too big to swallow whole. That left a number of smaller alternatives.
In August 2016, Disney bought one of them, BAMTech Media, a baseball streaming service that it custom-designed a platform for HBO to host season 5 of Game of Thrones. Disney paid $1 billion for a 33% stake in BAMTech. Today, it's expanded that to a 75% stake. So, what's Iger's plan? In a word, innovation. In 2018, Disney used BAMTech to launch its own global sports streaming service, ESPN+.
At the end of 2019, this will be followed by Disney+, an on-demand streaming service that will host all Disney-owned content. In the short term, that's hugely disruptive. By pulling its TV shows and movies from alternative streaming services like Netflix, Disney is essentially forfeiting hundreds of millions of dollars in annual license fees. In the long run, however, this decision marks nothing less than the wholesale reinvention of Disney. Thanks to these platforms, the corporation will no longer be reliant on intermediaries like movie theaters and distributors. Instead, it will be able to deliver its content straight to customers.
And there's a lot of content to go around. In March 2019, Iger pulled off another deal, a merger with 21st Century Fox worth around $52 billion. That means Disney now owns the rights not only to Marvel and Pixar content, but to some of Fox's most lucrative franchises like X-Men and Fantastic Four, as well as the distribution rights to Star Wars. Disney's future profitability and cultural relevance has never looked more assured.
Conclusion
Final summary
Thanks for listening to our Blinks to The Ride of a Lifetime by Robert Iger. The Blinks' main takeaway is that Robert Iger got his start in the media industry after a chance encounter led to a job at ABC, one of America's top TV networks. He made a name for himself while working for ABC's sports division and was made president of ABC Entertainment. His decisions helped boost the company's ratings and attracted the attention of Hollywood.
After ABC was taken over by Disney, Iger became COO and in 2005, CEO of Disney. His leadership has been defined by a series of bold acquisitions and mergers that have helped secure Disney's place in the world of entertainment. Got feedback? Just drop an email to remember at Blinkist.com.