Measuring what makes life worthwhile Chip Conley

[Music]

I’m going to talk about the simple truth

in leadership in the 21st century in the

21st century we need to actually look at

and what I’m going to actually encourage

you to consider today is to go back to

our school days when we learned how to

count but I actually think it’s time for

us to think about what we count

youko because what we actually count

truly counts let me start by telling you

a little story this is van quash she

came to this country in 1986 from

Vietnam she changed her name to Vivian

because she wanted to fit in here in

America her first job was in an

inner-city motel in San Francisco as a

maid I actually happened to buy that

motel about three months after Vivian

started working there so Vivian and I

have actually been working together for

23 years with the youthful idealism of a

26 year old in 1987 I started my company

and I called it a Giada vivre a very

impractical name and because I actually

was looking to create joy of life and

this first hotel that I bought motel was

a pay-by-the-hour no-tell motel in the

inner city of San Francisco as I spent

time with Vivian I saw that she had sort

of a Jawad aviv in how she did her work

made me question and curious how could

someone actually find joy in actually

cleaning toilets for a living so I had

spent time with Vivian and I saw that

she didn’t find joy in cleaning toilets

her job her goal and her calling was not

to become the world’s greatest toilet

scrubber what counts for Vivian was the

emotional connection

she created with her fellow employees

and our guests and what gave her

inspiration and meaning was the fact

that actually she was taking care of

people who were far away from home

because Vivian knew what it was like to

be far away from home that very human

lesson more than 20 years ago served me

well during the last economic downturn

we had in the wake of the dot-com crash

and 9/11 San Francisco Bay area hotels

went through the largest percentage

revenue drop in the history of American

hotels we were the largest operator of

hotels in the Bay Area so we were

particularly vulnerable but also back

then

we stopped eating french fries in this

country well not exactly

of course not we actually started eating

freedom fries and we actually started

boycotting anything that was French

well my name my company Sharada vivre so

I started getting these letters from

places like Alabama and Orange County

saying saying to me that they’re going

to boycott my company because they

thought we were a French company and I’d

write them back and I’d say wait a

minute we’re not French we’re an

American company were based in San

Francisco and I’d get a terse response

oh that’s worse so one particular day

out when I was feeling a little

depressed and not a lot of joie de vivre

I ended up in the local bookstore around

the corner from our offices and I

initially ended up in the business

section the books are looking for a

business solution but given my befuddled

state of mind I ended up in the

self-help section very quickly and

that’s where I got reacquainted with

Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs

I took one psychology class in college

and I learned about this guy Abraham

Maslow as many of us are familiar with

his hierarchy of needs but as I sat

there for four hours the full afternoon

reading Maslow I actually recognized

something that is true of most leaders

and when the simplest facts in business

is something that we often neglect and

that is that we’re all human and each of

us no matter what our role is in

business actually has some hierarchy of

needs in the workplace so as I started

reading more Maslow what I actually

started to realize is that actually

Maslow later in his life wanted to take

this hierarchy for the individual and

apply it to the collective to

organizations and specifically to

business but unfortunately he died

prematurely in 1970 and so he wasn’t

really able to live that dream

completely so I realized in that dot-com

crash that my role in life was to

channel Abe Maslow and that’s what I did

a few years ago when I actually took

that five level hierarchy of needs

pyramid and turned it into what I call

the transformation pyramid which is

survival success and transformation it’s

not just fundamental in business it’s

fundamental in life and we start

actually asking ourselves the questions

about how we were actually addressing

the higher needs these transformational

needs for our key employees in the

company these three levels of the

hierarchy needs actually relate

to the five levels of Maslow’s hierarchy

of needs but as we started asking

ourselves about how we were addressing

the higher needs of our employees and

our customers I realized we had no

metrics we had nothing that actually

could tell us whether we were actually

getting it right so we actually started

asking ourselves what kind of less

obvious metrics could we use to actually

evaluate our employees sense of meaning

or our customers sense of emotional

connection with us

for example we actually started asking

our employees do they understand the

mission of our company and do they feel

like they believe in it can they

actually influence it and do they feel

that their work actually has an impact

on it we start asking our customers did

they feel an emotional connection with

us in one of seven different kinds of

ways miraculously as we ask these

questions and start giving attention

higher up the pyramid what we found is

we created more loyalty our customer

loyalty skyrocket our our employee

turnover dropped to one third of the

industry average and during that five

year dot-com bust we tripled in size now

as I went out and started spending time

with other leaders out there and asking

them how they were getting through that

time what they told me over and over

again was that they just manage what

they can measure and what we can measure

is that tangible stuff at the bottom of

the pyramid they didn’t actually even

see the intangible stuff higher up the

pyramid so I started asking myself the

question how can we get leaders to start

valuing the intangible if we’re taught

as leaders to just manage what we can

measure and all we can measure is the

tangible in life we’re missing a whole

lot of things at the top of the pyramid

so I actually went out and studied a

bunch of things and I found a survey

that showed that 94% of business leaders

worldwide believe that the intangible

ZAR important in their business things

like intellectual property their

corporate culture their brand loyalty

and yet only 5% of those same leaders

actually had a means of measuring the

intangible in their business so as

leaders we understand that intangibles

are important but we don’t have a clue

actually how to measure them so here’s

another Einstein quote not everything

that can be counted counts and not

everything that counts can be counted I

hate to argue with Einstein but if that

which is most valuable in our life

in our business actually can’t be

counted or valued are we going to spend

our lives just mired in measuring the

mundane it was that sort of heady

question about what counts that led me

to take my CEO hat off for a week and

fly off to the Himalayan peaks flied off

to a place that’s been shrouded in the

mystery for centuries place some folks

called shangri-la it’s actually moved

from the survival base of the pyramid to

becoming a transformation role role

model for the world I went to Bhutan the

teenage King of Bhutan was also a

curious man but this was back in 1972

when he ascended to the throne two days

after his father passed away at age 17

he started asking the kind of questions

that you’d expect of someone with a

beginner’s mind on a trip through India

early in his reign as king he actually

was asked by an Indian journalist about

the Bhutanese GDP the size of the

Bhutanese GDP and the king responded in

the fashion that actually has

transformed us four decades later he

said the following he said why are we so

obsessed and focused with gross domestic

product

why don’t we care most about more about

gross national happiness now in essence

the king was asking us to consider an

alternative definition of success was

what has become to be known as GNH or

gross national happiness most world

leaders didn’t take notice and those

that did thought this was just Buddhist

economics

but the king was serious and this was a

notable moment because this is the first

time a world leader in almost two

hundred years had suggested that that

intangible of happiness again that that

leader 200 years ago Thomas Jefferson

with the Declaration of Independence 200

years later this King was suggesting

that intangible of happiness is

something we should measure and

something that we should actually value

as government officials for the next

three decades next three three thousand

years as king this King actually started

measuring and managing around happiness

in Bhutan and including just recently

taking this country from being an

absolute monarchy to a constitutional

monarchy with no bloodshed no coup in

Bhutan for those who don’t know

is the newest democracy in the world

just 2 day 2 years ago so as I spend

time with leaders in the GNH movement I

got to actually really understand what

they were doing and get to spend some

time with the Prime Minister over dinner

I asked him an impertinent question I

asked him how can you how can you create

and measure something which evaporates

in other words happiness and he’s a very

wise man and he said listen boot ons

goal is not to create happiness we

create the conditions for happiness to

occur in other words we create a habitat

of happiness well that’s interesting and

he said that they have a science behind

that art and they’ve actually created

four essential pillars nine key

indicators and 72 different metrics that

actually helped them to actually measure

their GNH in fact one of those one of

those key indicators is how do the

Bhutanese feel about how they spend

their time each day it’s a good question

how do you feel about how you spend your

time each day time is one of the

scarcest resources in the modern world

and yet of course that little intangible

piece of data doesn’t factor into our

GDP calculations so as I spent my week

up in the Himalayas actually started to

imagine what I call an emotional

equation and it focuses on something I

read long ago from a guy named rabbi

hyman Schacht oh how many know him

anybody 1954 he wrote a book called the

real enjoyment of living and he

suggested that happiness is not about

having what you want instead it’s about

wanting what you have or in other words

I think the Bhutanese believe happiness

equals wanting what you have

imagine gratitude / having what you want

gratification the Bhutanese aren’t on

some aspirational treadmill constantly

focused on what they don’t have their

religion their isolation their deep

respect for their culture and now the

principles of their GNH movement all

have actually fostered a sense of

gratitude gratitude about what they do

have how many of us here is tedsters in

the audience spend more of our time in

the bottom half of this equation in the

denominator where we are a bottom-heavy

culture in more ways than one

the reality is in western western

countries quite often we do focus on the

pursuit of happiness as if happiness is

something that we have to go out an

object we’re supposed to get or maybe

many objects actually in fact if you

look in the dictionary many dictionaries

define happy a defined pursuit as to

chase with hostility do we pursue

happiness with hostility good question

but back to Bhutan Bhutan is actually

bordered on its north and south by 38%

of the world’s population could this

little country like a start-up in a

mature industry be the spark plug that

actually influences a 21st century of

middle class in China and India Bhutan

is actually created the ultimate export

a new global currency of well-being and

there are 40 countries around the world

today that are actually setting their

own GNH you may have heard this last

fall Nicolas Sarkozy in France

announcing the results of an 18-month

study by two Nobel economist focusing on

happiness and wellness in France Sarkozy

suggested that world leaders should stop

myopically focusing on GDP and consider

a new index what some of French are

calling a ja de vivre index I like it co

branding opportunities and just three

days ago three days ago here at Ted we

actually at a simulcast of David Cameron

potentially the next prime minister of

the UK actually quoting one of my

favorite speeches of all time Robert

Kennedy’s poetic speech from 1968 when

he suggested that we’re myopically

focused on the wrong thing and that GDP

is a misplaced metric so it suggests

that the momentum is shifting I’ve taken

that Robert Kennedy quote and actually

turn it into a new balance sheet for

just a moment here this is actually a

collection of things that Robert Kennedy

said in that quote GDP counts everything

from air pollution to the destruction of

our redwoods but it actually doesn’t

count the health of our children or the

integrity of our public officials as you

look at these two columns here doesn’t

it make you feel like it’s time for us

to actually start figuring out a new way

to count a new way to actually imagine

what’s important SM I certainly Robert

Kennedy’s suggesting at the end of his

speech exactly that he said GDP measures

everything in short except that which

makes life worthwhile Wow so how do we

do that well let me say one thing we

could just start doing 10 years from now

at least in this country why in the heck

in America are we doing a census in 2010

we’re spending 10 billion dollars in the

census and we’re asking 10 simple

question it is simplicity but all of

those questions are tangible they’re

about demographics they’re about where

you live how many people you live with

and whether you own your home or not

that’s about it

we’re not asking meaningful metrics

we’re not asking important questions

we’re not asking anything that’s

intangible Abe Maslow said long ago

something you’ve heard before but you

didn’t realize it was him he said if the

only tool you have is a hammer

everything starts to look like a nail

we’ve been fooled by our tool I excuse

that expression we’ve been fooled by our

tool GDP has been our hammer and our

nail has been a 19th and 20th century

industrial era model of success and yet

64% of the world’s GDP today is in that

intangible industry we call service the

service industry the industry I’m in and

only 36 percent is in the tangible

industries of manufacturing and

agriculture so maybe it’s time that we

get a bigger toolbox right maybe it’s

time we actually get a toolbox it

doesn’t just count what’s easily counted

the tangible in life but actually counts

what we most value the things that are

intangible I guess I’m sort of a curious

CEO I was also a curious economics major

as an undergrad and I learned that

economists measure everything in

tangible units of production and

consumption as if each of those tangible

units is exactly the same they aren’t

the same in fact as leaders what we need

to learn is that we can actually

influence the quality of that unit of

production by actually creating the

conditions for our employees to live

their calling and in fact in Vivian’s

case her unit of

production isn’t the tangible our she

works is the intangible difference she

makes during that one hour of work this

is Dave arendale who’s actually been a

longtime guest at Vivian’s motel he

stayed there a hundred times in the last

20 years and he’s loyal to the property

because of the relationship that Vivian

and her fellow employees have created

with him they’ve created a habitat of

happiness for Dave and he tells me that

he can always count on Vivian and his

staff and the staff there to make him

feel at home why is it that business

leaders and investors quite often don’t

see the connection between creating the

intangible of employee happiness with

creating the tangible of financial

profits in their business we don’t have

to choose between inspired employees and

sizable profits we can have both and in

fact inspired employees quite often help

make sizable profits right so what the

world needs now in my opinion is

business leaders and political leaders

who know what to count we count numbers

we count on people what really counts is

when we actually use our numbers to

truly take into account our people I

learned that from a maid in the motel

and a king of a country what can you

start counting today what one thing can

you start counting today that actually

would be meaningful in your life whether

it’s your work life or your business

life thank you very much

[Applause]

[音乐]

我要谈谈

21 世纪领导力的简单真理

21 世纪我们需要真正看待

,我今天要真正鼓励

你考虑的是回到

我们的学生时代 当我们学会如何

数数时,但我实际上认为是时候让

我们考虑一下我们算数的时候了,

因为我们真正算数的东西

才真正重要让我先告诉你

一个小故事,这是 van quash,她

于 1986 年从越南来到这个国家

她改名为薇薇安,

因为她想适应

美国这里她的第一份工作是

在旧金山市中心的一家汽车旅馆当

女佣,事实上,在薇薇安开始在那里工作大约三个月后,我碰巧买下了那家

汽车旅馆

,所以薇薇安和我

实际上已经

与 26 岁的年轻理想主义一起工作了 23

年 1987 年我创办了我的公司

,我称它为 Giada vivre 一个非常

不切实际的名字,因为我实际上

是在寻找生活的乐趣,而

这 我买的第一家

汽车旅馆是旧金山市中心的按小时付费的不收费汽车旅馆,

因为我和 Vivian 一起度过了

一段时间,我看到她在工作的方式上

有点像 Jawad aviv

问题和好奇,

一个人怎么能真正以

打扫厕所为生,所以我

和 Vivian 一起度过了一段时间,我看到

她并没有在打扫厕所中找到快乐

她的工作她的目标和使命

不是成为世界上最伟大的人

对 Vivian 而言,重要的是

她与同事

和我们的客人建立的情感联系,而给予她

灵感和意义的事实

是,她实际上正在照顾

远离家乡的人,

因为 Vivian 知道那是什么样的

远离家乡,在 20 多年前的那次非常人性化的

教训

中,

我们在互联网泡沫破灭

和 9/11 旧金山湾区酒店

经历了最严重的经济衰退期间对我很有帮助

美国酒店历史上的收入下降

我们是湾区最大的酒店运营商,

所以我们

特别容易受到伤害,但

当时

我们在这个国家停止吃炸薯条

当然不是我们实际上开始吃

自由薯条和 我们实际上开始

抵制任何法国的东西,

我的名字是我的公司 Sharada vivre 所以

我开始收到来自

阿拉巴马州和奥兰治县等地的这些信件,

告诉我他们

将抵制我的公司,因为他们

认为我们是一家法国公司并且 我

会给他们回信,我会说等一下,

我们不是法国人,我们是一家

总部位于旧金山的美国公司

,我会得到一个简短的回应,

哦,那更糟,所以有

一天我感觉 有点

沮丧,没有太多的生活乐趣

我最后去了

我们办公室拐角处的当地书店,我

最初最终进入

了书籍正在寻找的商业区

usiness 解决方案,但考虑到我困惑

的心态,我很快就进入了

自助部分,

这就是我重新认识

亚伯拉罕马斯洛的需求层次的地方。

我在大学上了一门心理学课

,我了解了亚伯拉罕

马斯洛这个人 我们熟悉

他的需求层次,但是当我坐在

那里整整四个小时

阅读马斯洛时,我实际上认识到

了大多数领导者的真实情况,

而当商业中最简单的事实

是我们经常忽略的事情时,

那就是我们' 都是人,我们每个人,

无论我们在商业中的角色是什么,

实际上

在工作场所都有一些需求层次,所以当我开始

阅读更多马斯洛时,我真正

开始意识到的是,实际上

马斯洛在他生命的后期想要采用

这种层次结构 对于个人,

并将其应用于集体,

组织,特别是

企业,但不幸的是他

在 1970 年过早地去世了,所以他并不是

真正的 ab

让我完全实现那个梦想,所以我在那场互联网泡沫破灭中

意识到,我在生活中的角色是

引导安倍马斯洛,而这就是我

几年前所做的,当时我实际上采用

了五层需求

金字塔并将其转变为 我

将转型金字塔称为

生存成功和转型,它

不仅是商业的

基础,也是生活的基础,我们

实际上开始问自己一些问题

,即我们如何真正满足

公司关键员工的更高需求这些转型需求这三个

层次需求的层次实际上

与马斯洛需求层次的五个层次相关

,但是当我们开始问

自己如何解决

员工和客户的更高需求时,

我意识到我们没有

衡量标准,我们实际上没有任何东西

可以告诉我们 我们是否真的

做对了所以我们实际上开始

问自己什么样的不太

明显的指标可以 d 我们用来实际

评估员工的意义

感或客户

与我们

的情感联系感例如,我们实际上开始

询问员工他们是否了解

我们公司的使命,他们是否

觉得自己相信它,他们是否

真的能影响它 他们是否

觉得他们的工作确实对其产生了影响?

我们开始询问我们的客户

当我们提出这些

问题并开始关注

金字塔更高的地方时,他们是否奇迹般地以七种不同的方式之一与我们产生了情感联系 发现是

我们创造了更多的忠诚度 我们的客户

忠诚度飙升 我们的员工

流动率下降到

行业平均水平的三分之一 在这

五年的互联网泡沫破灭期间,

当我出去并开始

与其他领导者共度时光时,我们的规模现在翻了三倍 问

他们是如何度过那段

时间的,他们一遍又一遍地告诉我

,他们只是管理

他们可以衡量的东西,并且 我们可以衡量

的是金字塔底部有形的东西

他们实际上甚至没有

看到金字塔更高的无形的东西

所以我开始问自己一个

问题如果我们被教导我们如何让领导者开始

重视无形的东西

作为领导者,我们只管理我们可以

衡量的东西,而我们所能衡量的只是

生活中的有形,我们

在金字塔的顶端错过了很多东西,

所以我实际上出去研究了

很多东西,我找到了一份调查

这表明,全球 94% 的企业领导

者认为无形的

ZAR 在他们的业务中很重要,

例如知识产权、

企业文化、品牌忠诚度

,但只有 5% 的领导者

实际上拥有衡量

其业务中无形资产的方法,以便

领导者,我们知道无形资产

很重要,但我们实际上不知道

如何衡量它们,所以这是

爱因斯坦的另一句名言,不是

所有可以计算的东西都很重要,而不是

一切重要的东西都可以计算我

不想和爱因斯坦争论,但如果

我们生活中最有价值的东西

实际上不能被

计算或重视,我们是否将把

我们的生命浪费在衡量

平凡的事物上呢? 一个令人头疼的

问题是什么让

我摘下我的 CEO 帽子一个星期

飞到喜马拉雅山峰

飞到一个

几个世纪以来一直被神秘笼罩的地方有些人

称之为香格里拉它实际上是

从 金字塔的生存基地

成为世界变革的

榜样 我去了不丹

十几岁的不丹国王也是一个

好奇的人,但这要追溯到 1972

年,

他在父亲去世两天后登上王位 17

他开始问一些问题,在他作为国王的早期,他开始问

一个有

初学者头脑的人在印度旅行时所期望的那种问题,

实际上一位印度记者问他

关于不丹 GD P

不丹国内生产总值的规模和国王以

实际上

改变了我们的方式回应了四年后他

说以下他说为什么我们如此

痴迷和关注国内

生产总值

为什么我们不最关心更多

国民幸福现在本质

上,国王要求我们考虑

另一种成功的

定义,即所谓的国民幸福指数或

国民幸福总值,大多数世界

领导人没有注意到,

那些确实认为这只是佛教

经济学,

但 国王是认真的,这是一个

值得注意的时刻,因为这

是近 200 年来第一次世界领导人

再次提出

无形的幸福,即

200 年前那个领导人托马斯·

杰斐逊发表独立宣言 200

年后这位国王是

暗示幸福的无形是

我们应该衡量的

东西,也是我们作为政府官员应该真正重视的东西

在接下来的

三年里,在接下来的三三

千年里,这位国王实际上开始

衡量和管理

不丹的幸福感,包括最近

将这个国家从一个

绝对君主制国家转变为一个

没有流血的君主立宪制国家,

不丹没有政变。 不知道

是世界上最新的民主制度,就在

2 年前的 2 天,所以当我

与 GNH 运动的领导人共度时光时,

我真正

了解了他们在做什么,并

与总理共进晚餐,

我问 我问他一个无礼的问题,我

问他你怎么能创造

和衡量一些蒸发的东西,

换句话说,幸福,他是一个非常

聪明的人,他说听着,

目标不是创造幸福,我们

创造幸福

发生的条件 换句话说,我们创造了

一个有趣的幸福栖息地,

他说他们在艺术背后有科学

,他们实际上创造

了 您的基本支柱 九个关键

指标和 72 个不同的指标

实际上帮助他们实际衡量了

他们的 GNH 实际上其中

一个关键指标是

不丹人如何看待他们每天如何度过

他们的时间 这是一个很好的问题

感觉你每天如何度过你的

时间时间是

现代世界中最稀缺的资源之一

,当然,那一点

无形的数据并没有考虑到我们的

GDP 计算中,所以当我在喜马拉雅山度过我的一周

时,实际上开始了

想象一下我所说的情感

方程式,它集中在我

很久以前从一个名叫拉比海曼沙赫特的人那里读到的东西上,

哦,有多少人认识他,

1954 年他写了一本书,叫做

真正的生活享受,他

建议幸福不在于

拥有 你想要什么,而不是

想要你所拥有的,或者换句话说,

我认为不丹人相信幸福

等于想要你所拥有的,

感谢/拥有你想要的 t

满足感 不丹人并没有在

一些有抱负的跑步机上不断地

专注于他们没有自己的

宗教 他们的孤立 他们

对自己的文化的深切尊重 现在

他们的 GNH 运动的原则

实际上都培养了一种

感激之情

我们这里有多少人是

观众中的测试者,我们将更多的时间花在

这个等式的下半部分,在这个

分母中,我们

在更多方面是一种自重文化,而

不是西方西方国家的现实情况,

我们经常 一定要专注于

追求幸福,就好像幸福是

我们必须走出去的东西,

我们应该得到的东西,或者实际上可能有

很多东西,如果

你在字典中查找,许多字典

将快乐定义为追逐的明确追求

敌意 我们是否

怀着敌意追求幸福 好问题,

但回到不丹 不丹实际上

与它的南北接壤,

占世界人口的 38% d 这个

小国家就像一个

成熟行业的初创企业 成为

真正影响 21 世纪

中国和印度中产阶级的火花塞

不丹实际上创造了终极出口

一种新的全球福利货币,

有 40 个国家 当今世界各地

实际上正在设置

自己的国民幸福指数的人,您可能已经在去年

秋天听到了法国的尼古拉斯·萨科齐

宣布了两位诺贝尔经济学家在法国进行的一项为期 18 个月的研究结果,该

研究专注

于法国的幸福和健康。

关注 GDP 并考虑

一个新的指数,一些法国人

称之为 ja de vivre 指数,我喜欢它联合

品牌的机会,就在

三天前,三天前在 Ted,我们

实际上在联播大卫卡梅伦,

可能是下一任首相

英国实际上引用了我

最喜欢的演讲之一罗伯特·

肯尼迪 1968 年的诗意演讲,当时

他建议我们近视

n 错误的事情,GDP

是一个放错位置的指标,所以它

表明势头正在转变

肯尼迪在这句话中说,

从空气污染到

红杉树的破坏,GDP 都计算在内,但它实际上并没有

计算我们孩子的健康或

我们公职人员的正直,因为你

看这里的这两列,它不是

让你 感觉是时候让

我们真正开始找出一种新的方法

来计算一种新的方法来实际想象

什么是重要的 SM 我当然罗伯特

肯尼迪在他的演讲结束时

暗示他说 GDP 衡量

一切,除了那些

使生活变得重要的东西 值得哇,那么我们如何

做到这一点让我说一件事,至少在这个国家,我们

可以从现在开始做 10 年,

为什么

在美国,我们要在 201 年进行人口普查 0

我们在人口普查中花费了 100 亿美元

,我们问了 10 个简单的

问题,这很简单,但所有

这些问题都是切实存在

的 是否拥有自己的房子

,仅此而已

我们没有提出有意义的指标

我们没有提出重要的问题

我们没有提出任何

无形的东西 安倍马斯洛很久以前

说过一些你以前听过但你

没有意识到是他的话 他说,如果

你唯一的工具是锤子,

一切都开始看起来像钉子,

我们已经被我们的工具愚弄了,我原谅

我们被我们的工具愚弄的表达

GDP 是我们的锤子,我们的

钉子是 19 和 20 世纪

工业时代的成功模式 然而

,今天世界 GDP 的 64% 属于

我们称之为服务业的无形

产业 我所在的行业

只有 36% 属于

制造业和

农业等有形产业,所以可能 是时候我们

得到一个更大的工具箱了也许是

时候我们真正得到一个工具箱它

不仅计算生活中容易计算

的有形的东西,而且实际上计算

我们最看重的无形的东西

我想我有点 一位好奇的

CEO 我在本科时也是一名好奇的经济学

专业的学生,我了解到

经济学家以

有形的生产和消费单位来衡量一切,

就好像这些有形

单位中的每一个

都是完全相同的,实际上它们与领导者不同的是我们

需要学习的是,我们实际上可以

通过

为我们的员工创造条件来实现

他们的使命来影响该生产单元的质量,事实上,在 Vivian 的

情况下,她的

生产单元不是有形的,我们的

工作是无形的差异

在那一小时的工作中,这

是戴夫·阿伦代尔,他实际上是

维维安汽车旅馆的长期客人,

在过去的 20 年里,他在那里住过一百次,

而且他很忠诚 o

由于 Vivian

和她的同事

与他建立的关系,他们为 Dave 创造了一个幸福的栖息地

,他告诉我

他总是可以指望 Vivian 和他的

员工以及那里的员工让他

感到 为什么商业

领袖和投资者常常看

不到创造

员工幸福的无形资产与

在他们的业务中创造有形的财务利润

之间的联系我们不必在受鼓舞的员工和

我们可以获得的可观利润之间做出选择 两者,

事实上,受激励的员工经常帮助

获得可观的利润,所以

在我看来,世界现在需要的是

商业领袖和政治领袖

,他们知道如何计算我们计算数字

我们依赖人真正重要的是

当我们实际使用我们的数字时 为了

真正考虑到我们的人民,我

从汽车旅馆的女仆

和一个国家的国王那里了解到,您今天可以

开始数什么一件事 能

不能从今天开始数数,

不管是工作还是事业,对你的生活真的有意义

吗 非常感谢

[鼓掌]