Fearless

i’d like to start today by saying a huge

thank you

for inviting me to participate in this

very special tedx event

alongside such amazing speakers such as

sarah adder

and wendy it’s a true honour

and delighted to be part of such a great

team of inspiring

and fearless women and you know it’s a

shame it’s not live

but i will certainly be following the

whole conversation afterwards even

though

this is recorded from here in stockholm

sweden

so my talk today is all about how

failure can make you fearless

and uh you know it’s not obvious

that failure helps one be fearless but

bear with me

because i as i reflected on my own life

story

i’ve realized a lot of it’s actually

through the failures that i’ve probably

learned the most

and learnt to be the fearless version of

myself that i now am

so first of all i should probably start

with helping you understand who i

am and and my background as you can hear

probably i’m from glasgow uh i was

um you know a clever kid that went to

what would nowadays be called an inner

city school

i was bullied for being clever and i was

bullied

because i didn’t live in social housing

my parents who were both factory workers

had you know stretched themselves to

their financial limits to buy a house

but that was unacceptable at the school

that i was at so

i was bullied my parents um

were very hard working but factory

workers as i said

they had a tough life uh my grandparents

lives were even tougher and both

both grandfathers were alcoholics and in

that context

um you know i i escaped a lot through

reading books

i escaped a lot through working really

hard at school but

by keeping my head down and the books

and uh and the the you know the the

aspiration

i i had from from some role models in

other parts of my family

made me want to move beyond that tough

experience and so i had aspirations to

go to university

to get a profession to get a

qualification but but sadly

my father was diagnosed with terminal

cancer in the summer before i was due to

go to university

we decided not to tell him that he was

going to die

so it wasn’t the right time for me to go

to university whilst we were trying to

pretend

that everything was okay so um

so all of those experiences whilst tough

uh

really made me who i am today

um you know first of all the bullying

helped me become tough but they all

also taught me to have empathy

the fact that we had limited financial

resources

taught me to have my own financial

independence

as quickly as i possibly could i

actually started working at 12 and had

two jobs by the age of 14.

the fact that i didn’t go to university

um taught me that i had to learn a

number of

other skills beyond just straight

academic skills

to be able uh to move on

and achieve in life and be able to to

move up the ladder and achieve so much

more than my parents ever could

and finally losing a parent at a young

age makes you realize that life can be

very short

and if life is too short you should

never stick anything too long

if it makes you unhappy as a result of

that

my motto in life is have a dream and

bravely make it happen

and uh and certainly uh there have been

uh many experiences in my life that

probably

this this starting point in my life has

made me

have the confidence or be brave enough

to take them on and so just let me take

you through

some of those most monumental uh

experiences

in my life as i said at the age of 12 i

was selling fresh cream around the doors

of glasgow

kept very many old men that lived in

their own happy on a saturday morning as

i was

delivering fresh curtains of cream to

them that was the equivalent of

a caddo uh or online amazon in these

days actually i was ahead of my time

clearly at 14 i was an avon lady

and after knocking on doors i finally

realized that actually

all my family members could sell so much

more for me

if if i outsourced it to them because

they worked in factories

i guess that was amazon again reselling

um at the age of 17 after

not going to university i joined the

scottish whiskey industry

and became their west of scotland

trainee accountant

of the year and spent five years with

them one day a week going to college but

learning to be in finance

in 1990 i then joined procter gamble and

that was the star of 20 years

um a great 20 years where there were

many

experiences but some of my bravest

movements um

was probably going to romania in the mid

90s

uh it was just after the fall of

ceausescu

we were trying to open up markets like

bulgaria and serbia

i had to fire the bulgarian distributor

for paying off the mafia

i had to find serbian distributors to

sell detergents and that was between the

bosnian and kosovan wars so the people

who were

meeting kind of dressed like warlords

after that probably one of the the more

braver moves was after 16 years very

successful in approaching gamble finance

i made a move into general management to

run protruding gamble’s newly acquired

well a hairdressing business

and so i got to know all of the

hairdressers and there’s lots of

celebrity hairdressers

across the uk and ireland so having been

an accountant

i was then in the hairdressing industry

which was

totally different but a great grounding

for becoming the ceo that i am today

after 20 years i then moved into to the

tmt sector so i was brave enough to

leave procter gamble after 20 years

and you know first virgin media ending

up here now in scandinavia

um during that time though um i started

to realize that you can

always pick your own bosses uh and i had

a couple of failures uh during that time

as well

one of them was because i just couldn’t

cope with an undermining boss

another one was when i didn’t get the

job that i really wanted which was to

become the cfo of manchester united

football team

and then another time was when you know

i had to walk away from my when i

realized i didn’t have the backing of my

major shareholder

but these were all life-forming

experiences for me

and as i look back if i hadn’t walked

away from the undermining boss

if i hadn’t failed to get the manchester

uh united role then i probably wouldn’t

be here in sweden today

having spent now almost seven years in a

variety

of some of the biggest telecoms

companies in the world

and in fact you know you know a lot of

people said

why are you going to sweden when you can

get a great role in the uk

but having thought about weekly

commuting between

windsor and manchester uh you know

stockholm became an even

easier uh and and more delightful weekly

commute

uh especially during covert times

because stockholm has actually been a

great place to be

so what are the insights and lessons we

can take away from my fearlessness but

also my failures

i think you know looking at

the concept of levelling up the need for

social mobility

the need to reduce the divides and the

inequality that now exists in society

we absolutely need to be role models to

the kids at the pure ends of society

we absolutely need to invest in

education

and teachers that not just give them

academic but actually teach them life

skills

give them hope give them aspiration and

we absolutely need to get the service

and hospitality sector back

up and running again because a lot of

those kids that’s the only place

that will learn financial independence

but they’ll also learn life skills

beyond school

and then finally from from a career

point of view

um what are the what are the insights

and lessons well i think first

you know pick your boss pick the

companies you choose if you can

so that you’re in an environment where

you can grow and develop and be

challenged and

and get some brave moves along the way

also make sure that you don’t put all of

your eggs in one basket

you know after 20 years at procter

gamble i

also started to put myself on on boards

i first of all started on a charity

board

then i ended up on the board of greg’s

the bakers

and now i’m on the board of british

telecom i’ve also taken up mad sport

things over the years like running the

london marathon or

or or doing some crazy bike rides

through vietnam and cambodia

they were all great distractions away

from when things were tough and when

i had moments of failure because then i

could focus on achieving something else

and then finally pick your partner

i have a great husband and we have a

great home environment that i go home to

every weekend and and i focus on during

weekends and holidays very much

um so finally i just want to say what’s

the lessons to be learned from all of

this

and what do i give to you um don’t view

failure

as failure view failure as an

opportunity for you to learn

and make yourself a more confident

braver version

of yourself and finally don’t always

pick the obvious candidates

because if if companies like procter

gamble and the scottish whiskey industry

had picked the most obvious candidates

they wouldn’t have chosen me

and maybe they would have missed out on

a lot so

be fearless and learn from failure

今天开始,我要非常

感谢

您邀请我

与 sarah adder 和 wendy 等出色的演讲

者一起参加这个非常特别的 tedx 活动

和无所畏惧的女性,你知道很

遗憾它没有现场直播,

但我肯定会在之后关注

整个对话,即使

这是在瑞典斯德哥尔摩的这里录制的,

所以我今天的演讲是关于

失败如何让你

无所畏惧,你知道这是

失败有助于一个人无所畏惧并不明显,但请

耐心等待,

因为当我反思自己的人生

故事时,

我意识到很多实际上是

通过失败,我可能

学到的最多,

并学会了成为无所畏惧的版本

我自己,我现在是

如此首先我可能应该

首先帮助你了解我

是谁以及我的背景,因为你可以听到

我可能来自格拉斯哥,嗯,我是,

你知道一个聪明的孩子 我去

了现在被称为

市中心的学校,

我因为聪明而被欺负,我被

欺负

是因为我没有住在社会保障房里

我的父母都是工厂

工人,你知道吗?

但是这在我所在的学校是不可接受的

,所以

我被欺负了我的父母,嗯,

他们工作很努力,但是工厂

工人,正如我所说,

他们的生活很

艰难 背景

嗯,你知道,我通过

阅读

书籍逃脱了很多,我通过

在学校非常努力地工作,但

通过保持低头和书籍

以及呃和你知道我

从其他部分的一些榜样那里获得的愿望

我的家人

让我想摆脱那段艰难的

经历,所以我渴望

上大学

,获得一份职业

资格,但遗憾的是

我父亲被诊断出

在我上大学之前的那个夏天,我患上了晚期癌症,

我们决定不告诉他他

会死,

所以现在不是我上大学的合适时间,

而我们试图

假装一切都好 所以,嗯

,所有这些经历虽然艰难,但

真的让我成为了今天的我,

嗯,首先,欺凌

帮助我变得坚强,但它们

也教会了我要有同理心

,我们有限的财政

资源

教会了我要有同理心

我尽可能快地实现自己的经济独立我

实际上是在 12 岁时开始工作,

到 14 岁时有两份工作。

我没有上大学的

事实告诉我,我必须学习

许多

其他技能 只是直接的

学术技能

,能够继续前进

并在生活中取得成就,并且能够

提升阶梯并取得

比我父母所能做到的更多

,最后在年轻时失去父母

让你意识到生活可以

版本 你很短

,如果生命太短,你

永远不应该坚持太久,

如果它让你不快乐,因为

我的人生座右铭是有一个梦想,

勇敢地实现它

,嗯,当然,嗯,有

很多经历 我的生活,这

可能

是我生命中的这个起点

让我

有信心或有足够的勇气

接受它们,所以让我带

你经历

一些我生命中最具有纪念意义的

经历,就像我在 12 我

在格拉斯哥的门口卖新鲜奶油

让很多住在

自己家里的老人在星期六早上很开心,因为

给他们送新鲜的奶油窗帘,

这相当于

这些天的 caddo uh 或在线亚马逊

实际上,我在 14 岁时显然领先于我的时代

,我是一位雅芳女士

,敲门后我终于

意识到,如果我将其外包给他们,实际上

我所有的家人都可

以为我卖出更多,

因为

他们在 工厂

我猜那是亚马逊

在 17 岁时再次转售 嗯 在

没有上大学后我加入了

苏格兰威士忌行业

并成为他们在苏格兰西部

的年度实习会计师并与他们一起度过了五年的时间

每周一天上大学但是

1990 年学习金融业,然后我加入了宝洁,

那是 20 年的明星

齐奥塞斯库沦陷后,

我们试图打开

保加利亚和塞尔维亚等市场,但

我不得不解雇保加利亚经销商,

因为它还清了

黑手党的钱。

之后

遇到了像军阀一样打扮的人

,可能更

勇敢的举动之一是在 16 年后非常

成功地接近赌博金融

我采取了行动 nto 一般管理层来

经营 protruding gamble 新

收购的美发业务

,所以我认识了所有的

美发师,并且在英国和爱尔兰有很多

名人美发师

,所以作为

一名会计师,

我当时在美发行业

,这是

完全不同的 但成为 CEO 的良好

基础,我

在 20 年后进入今天的

tmt 部门,所以我有足够的

勇气在 20 年后离开宝洁

,你知道第一个处女媒体

现在在斯堪的纳维亚半岛结束了,

嗯 虽然我

开始意识到你

总是可以选择自己的老板,嗯,我

在那段时间里有过几次失败,

其中一个是因为我无法

应付一个破坏性的老板,

另一个是当我没有 没有得到

我真正想要的工作,那就是

成为曼联足球队的首席财务官

,然后又一次是当你知道

我不得不离开我

真正的时候 我没有得到大股东的支持,

但这些

对我来说都是

塑造

人生的经历 角色那么我

今天可能不会在瑞典

了,在世界

上一些最大的电信

公司工作了将近七年

,事实上你知道你知道很多

人说

你为什么要去瑞典什么时候 你可以

在英国获得一个很好的角色,

但是考虑到

温莎和曼彻斯特之间的每周通勤,你知道

斯德哥尔摩变得更

容易,更愉快的每周

通勤,

尤其是在隐蔽时期,

因为斯德哥尔摩实际上是一个

很棒的

地方 我们

可以从我的无所畏惧

以及我的失败中吸取哪些见解和教训

现在社会中存在的不平等

我们绝对需要

成为孩子们的榜样

我们绝对需要投资于

教育

和教师,不仅要给他们

学术知识,还要教他们生活

技能

给他们希望给他们抱负

我们绝对需要让服务业

和酒店业重新

振作起来,因为

很多孩子是唯一

可以学习经济独立的地方,

但他们还将学习

学校以外的生活技能

,然后最终从职业

角度 看看

嗯,什么是见解

和教训,我认为首先

你知道选择你的老板,

如果可以的话,选择你选择的公司,

这样你就可以在一个

可以成长和发展,接受

挑战,

并变得勇敢的环境中 一路走来

还要确保你不要把所有

的鸡蛋都放在一个篮子里

你知道在宝洁公司工作了 20 年后

也开始把自己放在董事会上

首先是在一个慈善委员会开始,

然后我最终加入了 greg’s the bakers 的董事会

,现在我成为了英国电信的董事会成员

在越南和柬埔寨进行一些疯狂的自行车骑行

,当事情艰难和

失败的时候,它们都是很好的消遣,因为那时我

可以专注于实现其他事情

,然后最终选择你的伴侣

我有一个伟大的丈夫,我们有 一个

很棒的家庭环境,我

每个周末都回家,我在

周末和假期非常关注,

所以最后我只想说

从这一切中可以学到

什么,我会给你什么,嗯,不要' 不要把

失败

看作失败 把失败看作是一个

让你学习的机会

,让自己成为一个更自信、更

勇敢

的自己,最后不要总是

选择明显的候选人,

因为如果像宝洁这样的公司

ble 和苏格兰威士忌

行业挑选了最明显的候选人,

他们不会选择我

,也许他们会

错过很多,所以

要无所畏惧,从失败中吸取教训