Here the presentation.
http://www.ted.com/talks/simon_sinek_why_good_leaders_make_you_feel_safe#
And following is transcript you if interested.
http://www.ted.com/talks/simon_sinek_why_good_leaders_make_you_feel_safe/transcript
0:11 There's a
man by the name of Captain William Swenson who recently was awarded
the congressional Medal of Honor for his actions on September 8, 2009.
0:24 On that day,
a column of American and Afghan troops were making their
way through a part of Afghanistan to help protect a group of
government officials, a group of Afghan government officials,who would be
meeting with some local village elders. The column came under
ambush, and was surrounded on three sides, and amongst many other
things, Captain Swenson was recognized for running into live
fire to rescue the wounded and pull out the dead. One of the
people he rescued was a sergeant, and he and a comrade were making their
way to a medevac helicopter.
1:07 And what was
remarkable about this day is, by sheer coincidence, one of the
medevac medicshappened to have a GoPro camera on his helmet and captured
the whole scene on camera. It shows Captain Swenson and his
comrade bringing this wounded soldier who had received a gunshot to
the neck. They put him in the helicopter, and then you see Captain
Swenson bend over and give him a kissbefore he turns around to rescue
more.
1:43 I saw this,
and I thought to myself, where do people like that come from? What is
that? That is some deep, deep emotion, when you would want to do
that. There's a love there, and I wanted to know why is it
that I don't have people that I work with like that? You know, in the
military, they give medals to people who are willing to sacrifice
themselves so that others may gain. In business, we give bonuses to
people who are willing to sacrifice others so that we may gain. We
have it backwards. Right? So I asked myself, where do people like this
come from? And my initial conclusion was that they're just better
people. That's why they're attracted to the military. These better
people are attracted to this concept of service. But that's
completely wrong. What I learned was that it's the environment, and
if you get the environment right, every single one of us has the
capacity to do these remarkable things,and more importantly, others have
that capacity too. I've had the great honor of getting to meet some
of these, who we would call heroes, who have put themselves and put their
lives at risk to save others,and I asked them, "Why would you do
it? Why did you do it?" And they all say the same thing:"Because
they would have done it for me." It's this deep sense of trust and
cooperation. So trust and cooperation are really important here. The
problem with concepts of trust and cooperation is that they are feelings,
they are not instructions. I can't simply say to you, "Trust
me," and you will. I can't simply instruct two people to cooperate,
and they will. It's not how it works. It's a feeling.
3:17 So where
does that feeling come from? If you go back 50,000 years to the
Paleolithic era, to the early days of Homo sapiens, what we find is
that the world was filled with danger, all of these forces working
very, very hard to kill us. Nothing personal. Whether it was the
weather, lack of resources, maybe a saber-toothed tiger, all of
these things working to reduce our lifespan. And so we evolved into
social animals, where we lived together and worked together in what I
call a circle of safety, inside the tribe,where we felt like we
belonged. And when we felt safe amongst our own, the natural reaction
was trust and cooperation. There are inherent benefits to this. It
means I can fall asleep at night and trust that someone from within my
tribe will watch for danger. If we don't trust each other, if I don't
trust you, that means you won't watch for danger. Bad system of
survival.
4:12 The modern
day is exactly the same thing. The world is filled with
danger, things that are trying to frustrate our lives or reduce our
success, reduce our opportunity for success. It could be the ups and
downs in the economy, the uncertainty of the stock market. It could
be a new technology that rendersyour business model obsolete overnight. Or
it could be your competition that is sometimes trying to kill
you. It's sometimes trying to put you out of business, but at the
very minimum is working hard to frustrate your growth and steal your
business from you. We have no control over these forces. These are a
constant, and they're not going away.
4:46 The only
variable are the conditions inside the organization, and that's where
leadership matters,because it's the leader that sets the tone. When a
leader makes the choice to put the safety and lives of the people
inside the organization first, to sacrifice their comforts and
sacrifice the tangible results, so that the people remain and feel
safe and feel like they belong, remarkable things happen.
5:12 I was flying
on a trip, and I was witness to an incident where a passenger
attempted to board before their number was called, and I watched the
gate agent treat this man like he had broken the law, like a
criminal. He was yelled at for attempting to board one group too
soon. So I said something. I said, "Why do you have treat us
like cattle? Why can't you treat us like human beings?" And this
is exactly what she said to me. She said, "Sir, if I don't follow the
rules, I could get in trouble or lose my job." All she was
telling me is that she doesn't feel safe. All she was telling me is
that she doesn't trust her leaders.The reason we like flying Southwest
Airlines is not because they necessarily hire better people. It's
because they don't fear their leaders.
6:06 You see, if
the conditions are wrong, we are forced to expend our own time and
energy to protect ourselves from each other, and that inherently
weakens the organization. When we feel safe inside the
organization, we will naturally combine our talents and our strengths
and work tirelessly to face the dangers outside and seize the
opportunities.
6:27 The closest
analogy I can give to what a great leader is, is like being a
parent. If you think about what being a great parent is, what do you
want? What makes a great parent? We want to give our child
opportunities, education, discipline them when necessary, all so that
they can grow up and achieve more than we could for ourselves. Great
leaders want exactly the same thing. They want to provide their people
opportunity, education, discipline when necessary, build their
self-confidence, give them the opportunity to try and fail, all so that
they could achieve more than we could ever imagine for ourselves.
6:58 Charlie Kim,
who's the CEO of a company called Next Jump in New York City, a tech
company, he makes the point that if you had hard times in your
family, would you ever consider laying off one of your children? We
would never do it. Then why do we consider laying off people inside
our organization?Charlie implemented a policy of lifetime
employment. If you get a job at Next Jump, you cannot get fired for
performance issues. In fact, if you have issues, they will coach you
and they will give you support,just like we would with one of our
children who happens to come home with a C from school. It's the
complete opposite.
7:36 This is the
reason so many people have such a visceral hatred, anger, at some of
these banking CEOswith their disproportionate salaries and bonus
structures. It's not the numbers. It's that they have violated the
very definition of leadership. They have violated this deep-seated social
contract. We know that they allowed their people to be sacrificed so
they could protect their own interests, or worse, they sacrificed their
people to protect their own interests. This is what so offends us,
not the numbers. Would anybody be offended if we gave a $150 million
bonus to Gandhi? How about a $250 million bonus to Mother Teresa? Do
we have an issue with that? None at all. None at all. Great leaders
would never sacrifice the people to save the numbers. They would
sooner sacrifice the numbers to save the people.
8:25 Bob Chapman,
who runs a large manufacturing company in the Midwest called Barry-Wehmiller, in
2008 was hit very hard by the recession, and they lost 30 percent of their
orders overnight. Now in a large manufacturing company, this is a big
deal, and they could no longer afford their labor pool. They needed
to save 10 million dollars, so, like so many companies today, the
board got together and discussed layoffs. And Bob refused. You see,
Bob doesn't believe in head counts. Bob believes in heart counts, and
it's much more difficult to simply reduce the heart count. And so
they came up with a furlough program. Every employee, from secretary to
CEO, was required to take four weeks of unpaid vacation. They could
take it any time they wanted, and they did not have to take it
consecutively. But it was how Bob announced the program that mattered
so much. He said, it's better that we should all suffer a little than
any of us should have to suffer a lot, and morale went up. They saved
20 million dollars, and most importantly, as would be expected, when
the people feel safe and protected by the leadership in the
organization, the natural reaction is to trust and cooperate. And
quite spontaneously, nobody expected, people started trading with each
other. Those who could afford it more would trade with those who
could afford it less. People would take five weeks so that somebody
else only had to take three.
9:58 Leadership
is a choice. It is not a rank. I know many people at the
seniormost levels of organizationswho are absolutely not
leaders. They are authorities, and we do what they say because they
have authority over us, but we would not follow them. And I know many
people who are at the bottoms of organizations who have no
authority and they are absolutely leaders, and this is because they
have chosen to look after the person to the left of them, and they
have chosen to look after the person to the right of them. This is
what a leader is.
10:30 I heard a
story of some Marines who were out in theater, and as is the
Marine custom, the officer ate last, and he let his men eat
first, and when they were done, there was no food left for
him. And when they went back out in the field, his men brought him
some of their food so that he may eat, because that's what
happens. We call them leaders because they go first. We call them
leaders because they take the risk before anybody else does. We call
them leaders because they will choose to sacrifice so that their
people may be safe and protected and so their people may
gain, and when we do, the natural response is that our people will
sacrifice for us. They will give us their blood and sweat and
tears to see that their leader's vision comes to life, and when we
ask them, "Why would you do that? Why would you give your blood and
sweat and tears for that person?" they all say the same
thing: "Because they would have done it for me." And isn't
that the organization we would all like to work in?
11:44 Thank you
very much.
11:47 Thank you.
(Applause)
11:50 Thank you.
(Applause)
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