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  • Thank you so much.

  • Just close your eyes for a minute.

  • Just go ahead.

  • Close your eyes for a minute.

  • And imagine,

  • that you're standing on the ledge of a building,

  • which is 3 stories high,

  • and imagine that the building is on fire,

  • and if you knew that the right answer for you is to jump

  • in the next 30 seconds.

  • How many of you would jump?

  • I guess everybody.

  • Imagine you are on that ledge of a building, with your entire team,

  • ten, hundred, thousand,

  • and the building is on fire,

  • and you are the only one who knows the right answer

  • is to jump in the next 30 seconds

  • for all of you to be saved,

  • and you turn to your team, and you say: "Jump!"

  • What do they do?

  • They jump, because you said so.

  • Or they don't jump, because you said so.

  • Think about it.

  • I was standing on the ledge of a building in 2005,

  • with 25,000 of my colleagues,

  • as the new leader, and they looked up to me

  • as to what to do next.

  • I knew that the right answer is to jump

  • but somewhere in my heart

  • I knew that we as leaders have done nothing

  • to win the trust of our employees,

  • and therefore, even if I say: "Jump!",

  • would they jump?

  • Did they jump?

  • I will come to that story in a bit, but let's rewind a bit,

  • and tell you a story about how did I get on the ledge of that building,

  • in the first instance.

  • In India, as is true with many parts of the world,

  • when a child is born, it is considered auspicious

  • for the grandmother -- I call her "Amma" --

  • to walk up to the child -- she is the first to pick up the child

  • and she picks up this child, in her hands,

  • and defines a vision for that child.

  • That vision has no data. That vision has no logic.

  • And she says: "Your fingers are so long, you'll be an artist."

  • "Your forehead is so wide, you'll be a NASA scientist."

  • Everybody in the family believes in that vision.

  • When the girl grows up that vision becomes her ambition.

  • Becomes her pursuit, and then becomes her reality.

  • I was fortunate to be born in my Amma's house.

  • Those days children were born in homes, not in hospitals,

  • on this huge bed, which could sleep 9 people,

  • My Amma picked me up,

  • and I guess I was waiting for this vision,

  • and she picked me up, and defined this vision, and said:

  • "Vineet,

  • this boy is going to do good,

  • and he's going to have a steady job."

  • What?

  • I guess my grandmother didn't see anything,

  • (Laughter)

  • to say something more profound.

  • But not true.

  • Twenty three years later, armed with this MBA degree

  • I walked through the corridors of my first job at HCL.

  • Four weeks later, I was called into the room

  • with these 4 grim looking people

  • who had this single sheet of paper in front of them.

  • They sat me down, and said:

  • "Vineet,

  • we don't think you fit into our organization."

  • I don't know what I was most disappointed about,

  • The fact that I was rejected,

  • or the fact that even that vision that my grandmother thought of me

  • has collapsed.

  • (Laughter)

  • I still remember that night.

  • It was very long, very painful, very frustrating.

  • But by that time the morning came, my life had changed.

  • With the sun rays I made 2 commitments to myself.

  • The first, that I will do everything in my power

  • to outsmart these self-proclaimed gods,

  • who believe in leading by rejecting,

  • rather than accepting.

  • And second,

  • that one day, I will be the CEO of this company,

  • and show them the way.

  • Somebody has rightly said:

  • "You need to be a bit careful about what you wish."

  • Two decades later, time had turned a full circle,

  • The chairman of HCL, who's a brilliant man,

  • with uncanny intuition and foresight,

  • invited me to be the CEO of HCL.

  • I was afraid, not that I was not happy to be a CEO,

  • but I was afraid, not because my first commitment was turning right,

  • but my second commitment, that did I know how to lead by accepting,

  • rather than rejecting.

  • And I said: "How would I know, unless I try?"

  • And that is the reason I was on that ledge of the building

  • with 25,000 other employees,

  • who were waiting for my direction to jump.

  • Because we wanted to transform HCL to be the best company in the world.

  • Transform is a very interesting word.

  • Changing the form of something permanently.

  • In my mind, you can transform the company in 2 ways.

  • First, by innovating in what you do, which is the obsession of the world.

  • To be a Google, to be a Facebook, to be a Tesla.

  • But it is a more interesting, human way of transforming yourself

  • using innovation about how you treat your employees,

  • about how you run your company.

  • By increasing the clock speed of your organization,

  • you can actually outperform all your competition,

  • with the same product, the same customer, the same market.

  • Why don't people get it?

  • Our journey of thinking about innovation on the how-axis

  • rather than what-axis started with 3 fundamental questions.

  • The first: what is the business we are in?

  • And our answer, we are in the business of creating unique experiences,

  • unique value for our customers, and the more unique we are,

  • the higher market share we will create.

  • Second question.

  • Where does this unique experience, unique value get created,

  • and who creates this unique experience, and unique value?

  • Answer, it gets created where our customers and our employees meet.

  • In that interface, we call the value zone,

  • and our employees in that value zone create that unique experience.

  • Thus, the third question.

  • If our employees are the unique value,

  • are creating the unique value, which helps us grow faster,

  • then what should the role of managers and management in any company be?

  • And the obvious answer for us was nothing

  • but enthusing, encouraging, enabling those employees

  • to create the unique experience

  • so that we can grow faster.

  • What is not obvious about that?

  • And that is how employees first, customer second was born,

  • where the management is in the business

  • of enthusing, encouraging, enabling people,

  • and employees are in the business of customers first.

  • Ideas are great, but they are --

  • many, many of them fail under pedestal of execution.

  • Our study of revolutions, our study of Indian revolutions with Mahatma Gandhi

  • came to the shores of India in 1915

  • with this inspirational idea of non-violence.

  • He came to the shores --

  • In 1915 we had this inspirational leader, with the inspirational idea,

  • and yet it took 32 years for India to gain independence.

  • So we started revolutions, we started transformations on sports teams,

  • we started organization transformations, and came down with what we call

  • "three steps for successful execution."

  • The first was, create unhappiness with today.

  • There were so many of my colleagues on that ledge, who didn't want to jump

  • because they did not think anything was wrong with the company.

  • I'm sure that is not happening in your company,

  • that people are slicing and dicing the data to look good.

  • I don't think this is happening.

  • But if you're slicing and dicing the data to look good,

  • then how would that change happen?

  • It is important to say:

  • "Mirror, mirror on the wall, I am the ugliest of all."

  • A diamond cutter gets excited with rough diamond, not polished diamond.

  • A potter gets excited with rough clay.

  • What you need in your organizations to transform,

  • are those diamond cutters, the plumbers, and the potters,

  • who believe in challenges.

  • Then show them the challenge, and they will fix it for you.

  • So we throw all our dirty linen in public for everybody to see,

  • so that it was not about whether we are performing or not,

  • it was what can we do with this -- the word I can't say --

  • (Laughter)

  • The second, is defining a vision for tomorrow, which is so compelling

  • that people with jump out their bed, and go work for you.

  • Freedom.

  • Where is that vision in our organization?

  • Why does an employee,

  • on a Sunday, spend his money, time, energy,

  • drive to a mosque, a mandir, and a church,

  • and feel good about it?

  • And why does the same employee

  • get paid to come to our organizations on Monday,

  • and feel bad about it?

  • Because organizations have a vision, and a purpose for themselves,

  • they don't have a vision, and purpose for that employee.

  • Employee first was and experiment to invert the organization pyramid,

  • by inspiring people to do what they wanted to do,

  • better than what we wanted them to do.

  • The question we ask ourselves:

  • If we could inspired these people to pursue a vision which is their vision,

  • and that vision is aligned with our vision, magic will happen.

  • And it did.

  • The third step was: How do we move from here to there?

  • We have created dissatisfaction with today, a vision for tomorrow.

  • How do we move?

  • And the answer was,

  • high performance teams attempt to do what others consider impossible.

  • So unless in your life and your teams you are attempting to do the impossible,

  • how can you ever think of high performance?

  • So 1 idea which worked at HCL

  • was the fact that we opened a 360-degree survey

  • of all our managers, including the CEO.

  • So all our employees did confidential surveys,

  • 360-degree survey, anonymously of everybody including their CEOs

  • from 32 countries, and the results were published on the web for all to see.

  • With one stroke, we had democratized the organization,

  • we had inverted the pyramid,

  • and now the employees were owning the change they wanted to see.

  • So many asked me this question in terms of:

  • "Vineet, did this succeed?"

  • Honestly, I don't know.

  • But I do know for a fact

  • that 25,000 brilliant individuals

  • jumped that summer of 2005,

  • and when they landed, they were 100,000.

  • They grew the company six fold, in the peak of recession, in 7 years.

  • They were number 1 in customer satisfaction,

  • employee satisfaction, and did everything which others considered impossible.

  • The second question I'm asked is:

  • "Vineet, would this initiative outlast a leader?"

  • Remember my grandmother had defined a second vision,

  • that you would do good.

  • Me and my wife started a foundation,

  • and today we are reaching out to 2.8 million poor children,

  • in rural schools across India,

  • by innovating on how education is delivered to them.

  • And for these last 2 years,

  • HCL has outperformed whatever they did in my tenure.

  • So this story is not about me.

  • This story is not about those brilliant 25,000 or 100,000 employees,

  • but this story is about our grandmother's wish,

  • our grandmother's sense of leadership.

  • So can we hold this employee in our hands?

  • Can we define a vision for her?

  • Can everybody believe, and trust us in that vision,

  • and go work for that vision?

  • Can that employee trust us, and make that vision her ambition,

  • her pursuit, and then her reality?

  • Employee first is that leap of faith every single employee deserves

  • from every single manager in the world.

  • Please stand up, all of you, please stand up.

  • Please join me in making this commitment,

  • that we are going to make employee first a reality

  • for millions of people who walk through our organizations,

  • not just to get paid,

  • but to be inspired by the vision

  • you have for them.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

Thank you so much.

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TEDx】員工第一,客戶第二|Vineet Nayar|TEDx Aix (【TEDx】Employees first, customers second | Vineet Nayar | TEDxAix)

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    Max Lin 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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