LEGO executive shares corporate lessons, advice for supercharging creativity
Skip Kodak, regional president of the LEGO Group’s Americas business, challenged the
audience of the 39th annual F. William Harder Lecture in Business Administration to
try something a little bit unexpected: think inside the box.
“Constraints aren’t limitations, they’re inspirations for your creativity,” Kodak
said during his March 6 presentation, “Supercharge Creativity with Constraints,” in
ϳԹ’s Gannett Auditorium. “By restraining the amount of options you have, you
push yourself toward new solutions. It sounds counterintuitive, but by removing options,
you can increase the speed at which you create.”
In business, it’s important to obey the limits of time and space, fiscal responsibility,
and environmental sustainability, Kodak noted. So to demonstrate that you don’t need
much of something to be creative — and in fact, boundaries are beneficial — he invited
the audience to take part in a few interactive exercises, one of which asked each
individual to build their own duck using the six LEGO bricks they received before
the start of the lecture. As neighbors compared and observed how differently each
of their ducks was assembled, Kodak proved his point — that there are myriad ways
to create with limited resources.
Unbounded innovation — from opening new amusement parks to developing video games
— at times put a financial strain on the LEGO Group, Kodak explained as he presented
a glimpse into the company’s evolution since its beginnings in 1932.
Skip Kodak, regional president of the LEGO Group’s Americas business, delivers the 39th annual F. William Harder Lecture in Gannett Auditorium.
“We had to focus on delivering a core business that we were really good at,” Kodak
said. “There’s a power in doing something you know well and doing that vertically,
and there’s a huge opportunity in partnering with other industries to get your product
into their spaces.”
Staying true to the LEGO Group’s four promises — play, people, partner, and planet
— has allowed the company to weather two major financial crises and a global health
crisis, Kodak noted. “Our product and our brand come through in how we think about
our people and our company.”
Among the personal lessons he has learned over the years, he has found that external
is greater than internal, the team is greater than ego, execution is greater than
strategy, and learning is greater than perfection.
It matters what you can execute more than what you can imagine sometimes. ... Don’t let perfect stand in the way of better.”Skip Kodakregional president, LEGO Group - Americas
Kodak joined the LEGO Group in 2002 in U.S. sales and led global retail, marketing,
and supply chain teams previously for the company. Before the LEGO Group, he spent
15 years in advancing roles at Heinz, Ocean Spray, and P&G.
The annual F. William Harder Lecture at ϳԹ was inaugurated in 1985 and
made possible by the generosity of F. William Harder, a ϳԹ parent and College
trustee from 1968 to 1980. The lecture invites industry leaders to explore the current
business environment and the challenges that lie ahead.
This year’s lecture was organized by Matt Lucas, ϳԹ’s 10th F. William Harder
Chair of Business Administration.
Johnny Mulcahy ’24, left, and Tyler Schoenecker ’24 won the ϳԹ Building Challenge, a “LEGO Masters”-style competition, with their Northwoods Garden build.
In addition to delivering his lecture, Kodak visited ϳԹ classes and participated
in other activities with students and faculty.
This year, the College also hosted a “LEGO Masters”-style competition, the ϳԹ
Building Challenge, where student groups were asked to build a ϳԹ-themed project
in a single day.
“It’s all about collaboration — about getting a team of people who work really well
together,” said Johnny Mulcahy ’24, a double major in music and health and human physiological
sciences, who was part of the winning team that depicted a Northwoods garden scene
with LEGO bricks. “It’s sort of what Creative Thought Matters is about at the end
of the day.”