Sep 22, 2025
James D. White, former CEO of Jamba Juice, current board chair, and coauthor of Culture Design, shares how culture becomes a management discipline rather than a slogan. Drawing on his eight-year turnaround of Jamba, service on more than 15 boards, and leadership toolkit, he explains how listening, rituals, and disciplined systems embed values into sustained performance.
Key takeaways:
Start with stakeholder
listening. White began his turnaround with nearly 200
“start, stop, continue” inputs across employees, suppliers, and
board members. “I always start by listening,” he says, because the
people inside the company “actually know what’s required to make
the company run better.”
Make culture
intentional. “Companies have culture by design or
default.” Define what matters, create rituals that reinforce it,
and remove practices that contradict stated values.
Reduce the say–do
gap. “The really important things from a leadership
perspective is what we say versus what we do, and minimizing the
say–do gap.” Simple rituals—forums, recognition, measurement—align
words with actions.
Invest in people
individually. “People don’t care how much you know until
they understand how much you care about them personally.”
One-on-ones and role design that lean into strengths unlock
discretionary effort.
Demand
transparency. White is direct: “I want bad news first.”
Candor allows leaders to respond before problems multiply.
Design mechanics, not just
rhetoric. From anonymous feedback channels to departmental
listening sessions, operating processes must “make it easier for
our stores to deliver great products in the most efficient
fashion.”
Balance preservation and
change. Protect what works—“fantastic products” and
passionate employees—while reallocating resources. One example was
adding steel-cut oatmeal for colder markets, paired with
smoothies.
Measure what
matters. “Anything that matters, you always measure it.”
White combines Gallup Q12 surveys, pulse checks, and qualitative
indicators like recognition letters to monitor engagement.
Clarify board vs. CEO
roles. “The CEO is responsible for running the company…
the board chair is a facilitator of the collective board.” A strong
chair–CEO relationship unburdens management while channeling board
expertise.
Exit with care. Not every
role fits every person: “You often… get to a place where
you free up people’s future to go do something else. You do it with
kindness and grace and thoughtfulness.”
For executives facing turnaround, scaling challenges, or governance decisions, this episode offers a tested blueprint: start with listening, design culture deliberately, align actions with words, and lead with humanity.
📚 Get James’s book, Culture Design, here: https://shorturl.at/NVrs1
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