Mario Harik: Playing to Win
4/14/20261 hr 39 min
How does one engineer run 40,000 people with 10 daily numbers, zero hobbies, and a $1 billion bet he made in his first year as CEO? Mario Harik is the CEO of XPO, one of the largest trucking companies in the world. He started as employee #3, learned from Brad Jacobs (who built eight multibillion-dollar companies from scratch), and now leads 40,000 people with a management style shaped by engineering discipline, frontline feedback, and a deep belief in human potential. Mario shares how he uses real-time data and second-derivative thinking to make decisions, how he hires and develops A players (and the gut test that tells you who isn’t one), how he runs meetings that surface the best thinking from the most junior person in the room, and why ego, complacency, and small goals quietly cap everything. Enjoy!
Timestamps: (00:00:00) Defining ego and the importance of continuous learning (00:00:19) How an engineering mindset translates to business leadership (00:01:58) Applying engineering frameworks to CEO-level strategy and execution (00:03:38) Letting go of perfection and understanding how people operate (00:05:14) Lessons from working with Brad Jacobs and thinking big (00:07:13) Building strong teams and the importance of feedback loops (00:08:18) Evaluating talent: skill, work ethic, and collegiality (00:10:51) Disagreement vs consensus and decision-making in teams (00:12:50) Service-first strategy and improving customer experience (00:16:21) Running the business through KPIs, data, and real-time systems (00:19:41) Learning from frontline employees and feedback loops (00:22:35) Using technology and AI to track performance and reduce errors (00:28:35) Coaching employees through data-driven performance insights (00:29:30) Structuring effective meetings with data and ranked input (00:32:36) Pre-meeting preparation and leveraging team intelligence (00:34:29) Identifying and developing talent within the organization (00:39:48) Hiring frameworks and assessing candidates deeply (00:47:30) Early life experiences and how they shape perspective (00:49:27) Analytical approach to risk and decision-making (00:50:56) Capital allocation and the Yellow bankruptcy acquisition (00:55:31) Turning strategy into execution through financial tracking (00:59:23) A/B/C player framework for evaluating talent (01:02:12) Creating a high-performance environment through belief and feedback (01:04:18) Evolving leadership style and giving effective feedback (01:07:33) Core levers of value creation: people, capital, and time
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Follow Shane Parrish: X: https://x.com/shaneparrish Insta: https://www.instagram.com/farnamstreet/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shane-parrish-050a2183/ Follow Mario Harik: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marioharik/ XPO: https://investors.xpo.com/board-member/mario-harik/
Thank you to the sponsors for this episode: +Granola AI, The AI notepad for people in back-to-back meetings: https://www.granola.ai/shane Check out the Granola Notes. +CoinShares: Delivering Reason to Digital Asset Investing. https://coinshares.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsMario Harik· Guest0:00
In my mind, what ego is, you think that you're so good at something that you stop learning.
Shane Parrish· Host0:06
[gentle music] How does a software engineer end up as the CEO of one of the largest trucking companies in the world?
Mario Harik· Guest0:18
Well, I think engineering gives you a very good roadmap and a very good framework of solving problems. I have young kids, and I, I always tell them, whenever we have a, something gets broken or something we wanna build, I always tell them, "What do engineers do?" We say they build things and they fix things. And I think in the world of business, you're dealing every day with, with either problems or goals you wanna accomplish, and a engineering mindset gives you a framework of how to solve for these problems. If you think of the engineering design process, it's based on, one, identifying a problem or a goal, then it's about collecting a lot of data around that particular problem or goal, then defining your requirements, then designing and building a solution, and then eventually testing it for what the outcome would look like. And that discipline and rational thinking and data-driven analysis actually helps you in being able to run a company. Now, the other side of that, though, is around people skills, because when you run a company, you're effectively... You have teams of people, and your goal is to make sure that they are the best versions of themselves, and applying engineering principles to that also helps a lot, so then your team becomes very data-driven.