Pat Gelsinger • Following Influencer • engineering expert with four+ decades of technology leadership and experience • 42 minutes ago •
Thirty years ago, I had the privilege of seeing one of humanity's greatest leaders up close. The moment left a lasting impression on so many levels, including a great lesson on leadership.
It was at the ITU Conference in Geneva in 1995. Andy Grove, then CEO of Intel and Time Magazine’s Man of the Year, had been invited to speak. I was with him, helping with his speech and demos and tagging along as his +1. It was a global event – world leaders, tech pioneers, diplomats from the United Nations. We were backstage in the green room with the other presenters.
One of them was Nelson Mandela.
I will never forget who he chose to spend his time with in that moment. Mandela was at the height of his global influence – President of South Africa, having just helped end apartheid. He was on every magazine cover, every newspaper, and all over TV news. But he wasn't making small talk with the power players and dignitaries in the room. He wasn't checking his notes or preparing for his speech. Instead, he was having a conversation with the elderly Black waiter in white gloves who was quietly serving coffee.
He leaned into this man and said:
Tell me about your children.
Where is your home?
Do you have grandchildren?
How did you survive all this?
What is your story? What are your dreams?
It was an amazing moment of leadership and grace. In that moment, I learned that greatness isn’t about who notices you.