John Pepper And The Quiet Power Of Other-Focused Leadership At P&G And Disney

Other-focused leadership has been the quiet superpower behind John Pepper’s impact at Procter & Gamble and Disney, and a model for every leader trying to build organizations that endure beyond their own tenure. His example shows that when leaders relentlessly focus on employees, customers, communities and partners, performance follows as a byproduct rather than the primary goal. 

 

What other-focused leadership is

Leadership is about inspiring, enabling, and empowering others to do their absolute best together to realize a meaningful and rewarding shared purpose.

When it comes to “other-focused leadership,” the core distinction is simple: self-focused leaders start with what they want; other-focused leaders start with whom they serve and what those people need from them. Other-focused leaders define success in terms of the impact they have on others, not the attention they receive themselves. 

In practice, that shows up in five dimensions: where they choose to engage, what they decide matters, how they achieve results, how they build relationships, and what legacy they are trying to create. Each of those choices either pulls attention back toward the leader or pushes it out toward employees, customers, and stakeholders. 

Pepper’s “votes with his feet”

At P&G, Pepper consistently “voted with his feet,” signaling priorities by how and where he spent his time. Rather than leading primarily through memos and speeches, he showed up with customers and frontline employees, reminding leaders that consumers “vote with their feet” and that executives should do the same. 

This is in line with Colin Powell’s principles of getting to the ground truth and being personally present at the point of decisions to concentrate decisive force at the decisive place and time.

Making everyone feel they matter

Pepper has described high performance cultures as places where “everybody feels they matter and that they’ve had a role in articulating the goals and the purpose they’re pursuing.” That stance does more than make people feel good; it unlocks discretionary effort. When leaders recognize people, involve them in shaping direction, and hold themselves to the same standards they set for others, they create the conditions for mutual accountability and shared success. 

Building capability, trust and inclusion

Pepper often emphasizes that the “magic glue” in any organization is a combination of capability and trust. At P&G he championed diversity not as a “nice to have,” but as a business necessity to attract the talent required to win, then pushed himself and others to articulate the commercial logic behind that commitment. 

Enabling teams to solve hard problems

Pepper’s approach to downturns at P&G illustrates how other-focused leaders enable others rather than trying to be the hero. He would pull the right cross-functional people together, share the unvarnished financial reality, and then trust them to generate and execute the ideas to turn businesses around. He created conditions for teams to excel, then got out of their way. 

Extending other-focus to Disney

Pepper carried the same philosophy into his role as Disney’s nonexecutive chairman, where he supported an environment that protected and empowered creative talent. He highlighted Disney’s Imagineering group as a “privileged space” designed so creative people could be different, do their best work, and be shielded from short-term pressures that might stifle innovation. 

In major moves like Disney’s acquisition of Pixar, he and other leaders focused first on retaining key people and preserving what made the acquired company special. That mindset of protecting the culture and strengths of others rather than imposing your own helped build one of the most successful creative partnerships in modern business. 

Lessons for today’s leaders

Pepper’s example reinforces several practical implications for any leader aspiring to be more other-focused. 

  • Start by asking “Whom is this for, and how will it help them?” rather than “What does this do for me or my P&L this quarter?”. 
  • Use time and presence as your most explicit signals; your feet should be where your stated priorities are, especially with customers and frontline teams. 
  • Design cultures in which every person sees how they matter and can contribute to clarifying purpose, not just executing orders. 
  • Protect and amplify the people and capabilities that make your organization or partners unique, especially in moments of change like mergers, restructurings or strategic pivots. 

The through line in John Pepper’s leadership is clear: when leaders focus on others first, results, innovation and legacy follow. In a world still full of self-focused leadership, that other-focused stance is both morally compelling and strategically smart.

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