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  • Hello.

  • You know, it's amazing how fast time flies.

  • I can't believe I've been working in companies and organizations

  • for over 30 years.

  • In all of that time, I've met a lot of amazing people

  • from whom I've learned a tremendous amount.

  • And right now, I want to spend a few minutes talking about

  • what I've learned in terms of success,

  • what it's built on, and what we can do to better maintain our success.

  • I'm going to start with this bottle of water.

  • I like to drink cold water. This water is warm.

  • So what should I do with it?

  • I could stick it in a refrigerator,

  • or I could pour it in a glass with some ice,

  • and after a few moments, the water will be cold.

  • But what just happened?

  • Did the ice cool the water?

  • Or what we know from the work

  • of the classical physicists in thermodynamics

  • is that, in fact, the heat which is energy, travels

  • from the warm water to the cold ice,

  • thereby cooling the water and warming the ice.

  • What this second law of thermodynamics tells us is the energy always moves

  • from warm to cold, from being more organized and dense to being random.

  • Energy dissipates, it disintegrates. This is the basis for entropy.

  • Entropy is the idea that a system, a closed system, left to itself

  • will decay, will break down because the energy disintegrates.

  • Now, this basic law of nature has implications way beyond cooling my water.

  • I've learned from Dr. Ichak Adizes

  • that it even has implications for the levels of success

  • that we experience individually, in our families, and in our businesses.

  • All of us in here together, we could start a big business,

  • granted it would be kind of a large startup,

  • so if you, guys, don't mind,

  • maybe we will start with the people in the front row right here,

  • start our company, and as it grows, we can bring other people in.

  • But we could build a business based on whatever product or idea we have.

  • And what we would, in fact, be doing is we would be creating a system,

  • in which we create value;

  • we transfer that value to customers in the form of sales,

  • who then pay us for it, and hopefully, we make some money.

  • That's the idea.

  • But as we just heard, a system by nature breaks down, the energy disintegrates.

  • In a system like a company or an organization,

  • this disintegration happens even faster.

  • Why?

  • Because the system is made of people.

  • We have got our group here that's going to have a startup company,

  • and in this group, we have very different people

  • with diverse needs and diverse wants,

  • different interests, different styles of working and making decisions.

  • All of that diversity makes us go in different directions,

  • so we're stretching the organization, or the company, this way and that way,

  • and so we've got entropy with energy disintegrating,

  • plus diversity.

  • And now we've got diversity and disintegration on steroids:

  • things can break down like that before you know it.

  • So what do we learn in management education

  • to try to overcome this disintegration of energy?

  • What we learn is we need leadership,

  • we need strong leaders who can keep people focused

  • and their energies going in the right direction, right?

  • And these leaders have management tools.

  • They have vision statements, corporate missions, and corporate values

  • that they use to keep people focused,

  • going in the same direction, channeling their energy.

  • They've got studies in team dynamics and more leadership with more tools

  • with which we can build a strong and alined group of people.

  • All of these are valid tools, they all work.

  • But how well they work, and how sustainable they are

  • is based on one underlying factor, one thing that has to exist in our group

  • for these tools to work well and to work for the long term.

  • That one underlying factor is that we have an environment in our company

  • in which the people trust and respect each other.

  • That has to exist.

  • Because if it doesn't, what happens when we have problems,

  • when we have serious challenges?

  • How likely are the people, if they they don't trust and respect each other,

  • to seek each other out,

  • to work collaboratively to try to deal with these problems?

  • But that's what companies need, that's what organizations need;

  • they need people to work together, to collaborate, to produce innovation,

  • to move the organization forward, to make it more successful.

  • The key to getting these people to work together,

  • to make the organization successful is to have trust and respect.

  • Now, you know this is true within yourself.

  • If you think about whatever level of success you currently have,

  • what is it built on?

  • It's built on, at the core, your self-respect and your self-trust.

  • These things give you self-confidence

  • because you trust in your decisions, you trust in your ideas,

  • you have respect for who you are as a person and who you are not.

  • And with these things, you have self-confidence.

  • Think about the person you know who has no self-respect and no self-trust.

  • This person will struggle.

  • And why?

  • Because they're filled with self-doubt, they're filled with fears,

  • they have a constant dialogue going on in their head:

  • "Oh, should I take this decision? I don't know what to do, I'm scared.

  • What do people think of me? Why doesn't anybody like me?"

  • And their energy is disintegrating through these different directions.

  • When will this person start to function?

  • When they develop some self-confidence.

  • When they develop trust in themselves, and respect in themselves,

  • then the self-doubts, then the fears start to subside,

  • and this conversation, this negative dialogue going on their head,

  • the voices of dissension calm down, and now what?

  • The energy is all available to be channeled and focused,

  • they can go out and become a more productive member of their community,

  • and have a much better chance of reaching some level of success.

  • It's no different between groups of people.

  • If we want a group of people to be successful, to be productive,

  • to be high-performing,

  • they have to have trust and respect between each other.

  • The most basic group in our society is the family.

  • What happens in a family if the parents lose trust in their kids?

  • Or if the kids, the children, no longer respect their parents?

  • This can create a huge problem,

  • as the family members are now all working to protect themselves from one another.

  • Now, if in an individual, we build trust and respect in ourselves,

  • in groups we do it between people.

  • But how do we do that?

  • We have our company here.

  • I can't just go to the founders of the company here and say:

  • "You, guys, trust and respect each other,"

  • and expect that will do it, right?

  • It won't. Why not?

  • Because trust and respect are not actions, they're feelings,

  • they're emotions, they're beliefs we have about people.

  • And for trust, the belief I have about somebody I trust,

  • is that this person won't do anything to hurt me,

  • won't do anything to undermine my interests,

  • and the most trust comes about when I see

  • that this person's actions which are good for him, are also good for me.

  • We're mostly likely to get this type of trust

  • when we have shared interests,

  • when we're both working towards the same outcome

  • which is big enough for both of us.

  • That's a basis for trust.

  • Think about the person you know who is always working in their own self-interest,

  • while disregarding your own interests.

  • Quickly you'll lose trust for this person.

  • We trust people who take our interest to heart.

  • What about respect?

  • To paraphrase the philosopher Immanuel Kant,

  • who said, in so many words, that respect means fully-recognizing

  • the right of another individual to think differently from you.

  • That's respect. How do you show disrespect to somebody?

  • When you say: "How can you think that? That's crazy! Nobody thinks that way."

  • What you're really saying is:

  • "I don't respect your thoughts. I have no respect for your words."

  • Respecting somebody's words and thoughts doesn't mean you have to agree with them.

  • What it means is that you listen to them,

  • you take them seriously, you consider them.

  • This is treating people fairly, this is treating people with respect,

  • and this is the basis for learning.

  • I seek out and learn from people I respect.

  • I trust people who share my interests.

  • This is a basis for healthy relationships.

  • And for healthy organizations, for more successful organizations,

  • we need healthy relationships within them.

  • Yet, we you look into organizations, in the companies, what do you find?

  • You find management against employees,

  • groups of employees against other groups of employees,

  • sales against marketing, marketing against production, and on and on.

  • You find senior management teams that when times get tough

  • will sacrifice their lower people to protect their own interests.

  • You get systems and policies in place that breed distrust.

  • I was talking with the CEO of a manufacturing company, he said:

  • "Greg, I need my sales people to be more assertive, to take more initiative.

  • Now they sit and wait for the phone to ring.

  • They don't go out and build business. I need them to take more risks."

  • I said: "Yeah, that sounds really important."

  • So I went and talked to one of his sales people.

  • He said: "I'm not going to take any risks for this company."

  • I said: "Why not?"

  • He said: "Because when I started working here, the first thing I had to do

  • was sign this piece of paper that says,

  • if I lose the company any money, I have to pay it back."

  • The first message from management is

  • that we have to protect ourselves from you.

  • I can tell you about an HR director of a local company with 300 people.

  • She was asked to organize an employee event.

  • In so doing, she wanted to spend 70 euros to buy T-shirts.

  • Before she could spend that money, she had to go and get not one, not two,

  • but three signatures from three different managers

  • to spend 70 euros.

  • It's a company that makes millions and millions of euros every year in sales!

  • And they can't trust a group of managers to make a 70-euro decision.

  • Compare that to Lars Kolind

  • who took over as CEO at the Danish hearing aid manufacturer, called Oticon.

  • When he took over,

  • he completely dismantled the system of preapprovals for company travel.

  • Just do it out. And it was worth a little more than 70 euros.

  • When he introduced his new system, this is what he said, now, pay attention.

  • He said: "I trust that you know when you need to travel.

  • So from now on, if you need to travel, just go.

  • Don't go get approvals from anybody. Just get on the plane and fly.

  • But keep in mind two things.

  • One, the travel should and must be related to our mission

  • to give hearing-impaired people a normal quality of life.

  • And two, the travel has to be justifiable enough

  • that you would pay for it yourself, if you had to."

  • So what happened?

  • As people started policing their own behaviour,

  • the company saw its travel expenses drop by nearly 30% almost immediately.

  • Why?

  • Because people acknowledged

  • that they could no longer justify always flying business class.

  • He went on to turn this 25-million-dollar business

  • into a half-billion-dollar business over 10 years

  • by focusing on building trust and respect in the organization.

  • This is what companies need. This is what we need to build.

  • We need to integrate people, we need to get people to work together,

  • so that they will solve problems

  • rather than look for who's to blame for the problems.

  • And this is the job of leadership - to get very different people to work together,

  • so their differences work synergistically,

  • so that we enrich each other with our differences and learn from them

  • rather than just fight over our differences.

  • How does the leader do this?

  • By creating a culture in which people trust and respect each other.

  • This is how raise our kids, isn't it?

  • How do you make a family out of all these different peoples?

  • You're different from your spouse, you both are different from the kids,

  • the kids are all different from each other, this can be a mess!

  • How do you make a family out of it?

  • There must be trust and respect.

  • We must respect each other's differences as individuals,

  • and we must share the mutual interest as a family.

  • Remember -

  • the energy in this warm water by the laws of nature disintegrates.

  • And it's the same in a company.

  • And I would like to suggest that it's the same in a country.

  • If you are a CEO, or a prime minister,

  • the most important job you have to do

  • is how to build a culture in your company, in your country

  • where mutual trust and respect dominate,

  • because when the trust is gone, when the respect is gone,

  • the company, the country won't be more successful,

  • but they will struggle, and they may even disappear.

  • Thank you very much.

  • (Applause)

Hello.

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TEDx】成功的源泉|Greg Mathers|TEDxRiga (【TEDx】The source of success | Greg Mathers | TEDxRiga)

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    Max Lin 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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