1. From Crisis to Comeback: The Moment García Took the Helm
A decade ago, César García stepped into IRIS International and found a company teetering on the edge. Revenues had stagnated, debts loomed large, and the product line? Stale as yesterday’s coffee. But García didn’t flinch—he leaned in. By 2003, he was CEO and president, wasting no time assembling a fresh leadership team, renegotiating debt, and igniting a new era of product innovation.
Still, it wasn’t just the bottom line that needed saving—it was the soul of the company. García quickly identified the real villain: a suffocating workplace culture that trapped employees in isolated silos and crushed collaboration. Something radical had to change.
2. Smashing Silos and Stirring Cappuccinos: A New Culture is Born
Talk is cheap, but García believed action brewed real change. He dismantled the barriers between departments with gusto. Forget top-down memos—he hosted bagel breakfasts and spontaneous cappuccino chats. He pulled managers out of their corners and into open, informal dialogue.
When production complained about unbuildable designs, García didn’t delegate—he showed up in a lab coat, engineers in tow. For two days, they worked side by side on the assembly line. The result? Twenty design flaws uncovered and fixed on the spot. That once-impossible module? Now a flagship product.
3. Thinking Without Borders: Partnering with the Unlikely
García’s philosophy was as unconventional as it was effective: “Competition does not exist. Only opportunity.” With that mindset, he pursued partnerships others might call crazy—like teaming up with Arkray, a Japanese competitor. Their collaboration led to a revolutionary integrated urine analysis system, the first of its kind in the U.S.
By embracing what he called “boundaryless collaboration,” García skyrocketed IRIS’s international sales from 3% to 35%. And that’s no fluke—IRIS now boasts strategic alliances across France, India, and Japan, all rooted in mutual benefit over market share squabbles.
4. Small but Mighty: The Power of Being Nimble
IRIS’s size became its secret weapon. “Think big, act small,” García told his team. Agility wasn’t just a buzzword—it was the operating system. When something needed fixing, leaders didn’t wait for quarterly meetings. They responded in real time.
Rick O’Leary, VP of HR, emphasized learning at speed and executing with clarity. Whether it was a CEO rolling up his sleeves or feedback being funneled directly into action, the mantra was clear: move fast, solve smart, and stay light on your feet.
5. Obsessed with Excellence: Why Quality Was Non-Negotiable
For García, quality wasn’t a department—it was a religion. No deal, partnership, or product launch mattered if it wasn’t backed by top-tier performance. Rapid growth once strained customer service to the breaking point, but that meltdown became a catalyst for innovation.
Enter iCare—IRIS’s not-so-ordinary customer experience initiative. Rooted in deep feedback loops, it informed everything from product tweaks to strategic pivots. García’s north star was simple yet uncompromising: “If it’s not excellent, it’s not worth doing.”
You can find the original article published in Fast Company for further reading on the research.