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Six keys to leading positive change | Rosabeth Moss Kanter | TEDxBeaconStreet

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    A few years ago,
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    I ran into a colleague
    I hadn't seen for a long time,
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    who said, "What are you working on now?"
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    And I said - I was in that kind of mood -
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    I said, "Oh, making the world
    a better place."
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    And he said, "Could you
    pin that down just a little bit?"
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    Well, I realized that what I actually do
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    is I try to provide other people tools
    for making the world a better place
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    by giving them leadership skills.
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    So what's your goal?
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    Do you simply want to get things done
    and maybe improve them a little?
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    Do you want to start something,
    maybe a social venture?
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    You can be any age to do that.
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    I was amazed when Katie of Katie's Krops
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    got an award from President Bill Clinton
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    for a venture she started
    to feed the homeless
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    when she was nine years old.
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    So anybody can start something.
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    Do you want to start something?
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    Do you want to grow something?
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    Do you want to start a business?
    Do you want to lead a big business?
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    Or do you just want
    to make the world a better place?
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    The leadership lessons
    for being effective at doing that
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    are things that I have learned
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    from working with tens
    of thousands of leaders
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    in dozens and dozens
    of countries all over the world,
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    and I'd like to boil them down
    to six positive things
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    that help us keep things moving up
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    or in a positive direction of progress.
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    The first is the universal lesson of life,
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    which is show up.
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    If you don't show up,
    nothing really happens.
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    I remember a Peter Sellers' movie
    of a number of years ago
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    called "Being There."
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    And it was a very instructive story
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    because Peter Sellers
    played a fairly ignorant man,
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    Chance, the gardener.
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    And he was just hanging around
    the place where he did gardening
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    when a very important meeting
    was about to take place.
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    As people arrived for the meeting,
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    they didn't know that he
    was only helping at the house,
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    so they said, "Who are you?"
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    and he said, "Chance the gardener."
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    And immediately, people misunderstood
    and called him Chauncey Gardiner,
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    invited him into the meeting,
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    and he ended up solving their problems.
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    Well, it was a comedy,
    but I thought how real that is.
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    The very fact of showing up,
    of making oneself available,
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    of deciding that your presence
    makes a difference,
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    is the first key to leadership.
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    And I think about President
    Barack Obama of the United States.
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    He's been reelected,
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    but he started out,
    basically, by showing up.
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    He was a fairly obscure state senator
    from the State of Illinois
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    when asked to give the keynote speech
    at the Democratic National Convention.
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    He showed up, he gave the speech,
    and the rest is history.
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    Being there makes a difference,
    but that's only the starting point,
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    that you're in the situation.
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    The second lesson that I've learned
    is that it's important to speak up,
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    to use the power of voice.
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    No one knows what we're thinking
    if we don't express it.
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    I say this to my students
    at Harvard Business School all the time
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    because people get graded
    on class participation,
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    and you know, there are some people
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    who think they're entitled
    to have all the air time,
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    and so they often just talk
    and continue to talk
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    until finally they hit upon
    something they really have to say.
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    (Laughter)
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    But there are others in the class,
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    and sometimes it's the women
    that I have to encourage,
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    that they can own that air space too.
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    Sometimes I'll say,
    "Why aren't you speaking?"
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    And they said, "I want to make sure
    that I really have something to say."
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    And I point out to them
    that the men didn't feel that way -
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    just do it, just talk.
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    However, the power of voice
    is not simply words.
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    The power of voice is shaping the agenda,
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    framing issues for other people,
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    helping them think about it
    in a different way.
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    This is why thought leaders
    can be leaders,
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    because they influence
    the thinking of other people.
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    Have you gone to meetings
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    where you've noticed
    that whoever is running the meeting,
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    the person who ends up
    as the most influential,
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    is the one who names the problem
    and gives people an idea for action,
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    and that gets things moving,
    that gets things started.
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    I think about a Brazilian I know
    whom I think the world of.
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    He's a journalist,
    and yet as a journalist,
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    he has managed -
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    through his columns
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    but also through suggesting
    to other people
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    actions that they could take -
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    he has managed to transform
    an entire neighborhood in Brazil
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    into what he calls
    "the learning neighborhood,"
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    where kids now not only learn in school,
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    the entire neighborhood
    is mobilized to help them learn.
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    And that learning neighborhood
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    has helped make this section of São Paulo
    considered an upscale section.
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    I just saw it in an airline magazine,
    so it must be true.
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    (Laughter)
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    But my journalist friend
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    did this entirely through encouraging
    many separate people.
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    He didn't have power;
    he was just a writer.
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    He is just a writer.
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    What he did was encourage
    many different people
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    through the power of his voice:
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    "Why don't you do this?
    Why don't you do that?
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    We have a problem. Let's fix education."
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    The power of voice is big,
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    and I'm thinking about
    another journalist I know,
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    using the power of voice
    in a very powerful way.
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    It's Ellen Goodman,
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    whom many people know,
    in the United States in particular,
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    as a former syndicated columnist,
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    who went through some things
    with her own family
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    and decided that it's time
    to have end-of-life conversations.
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    And as an individual
    using her power of voice,
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    she has created something
    called the Conversation Project,
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    which now has as a media partner ABC,
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    and they are spreading the idea
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    that one should just talk
    about preferences for end of life
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    so that people can have
    a humane ending of the kind they want.
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    But it's entirely the power of voice.
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    So speaking up is the second
    attribute of leadership.
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    The third is to look up.
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    Look up at some higher principle,
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    bigger issue, bigger vision,
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    values.
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    Without vision and values,
    leadership is hollow.
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    No matter what it is
    that you want to achieve,
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    it's always important
    to remember the principles.
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    And when I say "higher principles"
    and "looking up,"
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    I'm not thinking about spiritual matters,
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    but for some people,
    they would take it that way.
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    I'm simply thinking
    about how important it is
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    for any leader to know
    what they stand for
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    and to be able to elevate people's eyes
    from everyday problems,
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    which bog us down,
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    in the weeds,
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    difficult to deal with.
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    And we're in troubled times
    now, in the world,
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    and what we need is leaders
    who help us get above that,
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    to gain a sense of hope
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    but also to remember
    what's truly fundamental in our values,
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    and the best leaders do that.
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    In fact, one of my most recent books
    is about great companies.
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    I realize I say that advisedly,
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    that many people wonder
    if there are any great companies.
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    But there are some truly great companies:
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    IBM, for example, Procter & Gamble,
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    a bank in Brazil, a bank in Korea -
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    amazing that there can be good banks -
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    companies that I've seen
    all over the world
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    that stand for vision and values.
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    When their leaders lead,
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    they're constantly reminding people
    of a nobler purpose.
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    It isn't just making money;
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    we're trying to achieve
    something for the world.
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    That's what we get from looking up.
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    I've learned this in my own work
    in a project I manage at Harvard.
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    We can get bogged down in the details -
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    believe me, academic politics aren't fun.
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    There are always things
    that we have to work on.
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    It can really drag you down.
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    And a wise person,
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    who was one of the first people
    to work on this project with me,
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    said, "You know, we should remember
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    to start every meeting
    by reminding ourselves of our mission,
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    reminding ourselves of what we stand for."
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    And you know, that lifts the spirits
    like nothing else.
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    There's a purpose; there's a reason
    that we're doing this,
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    and that's going to stand us in good stead
    when I get a few skills down.
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    But the fourth skill -
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    and why vision
    and values matter, in part -
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    the fourth skill is team up.
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    Team up.
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    Everything goes better with partners.
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    Nearly anything worth doing
    is very difficult to do alone,
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    and the best enterprises,
    the best projects, the best ventures
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    are one where there's a sense
    of partnership from the beginning.
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    I did a study with a colleague
    about technology start-ups,
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    some of them very famous,
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    and in recent years, which ones
    came to dominant the industry?
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    Like Google in search, not AltaVista.
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    Like Facebook rather than Myspace.
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    And one of the things we discovered,
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    besides having a good value proposition,
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    was that they had
    more and better partners faster.
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    Partners matter.
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    For the best social enterprises
    that I see around the world
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    including one I'm very proud of -
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    I happen to be on the national
    board of this forever.
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    It's an international
    national service organization
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    called City Year.
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    And City Year was founded
    by four partners.
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    Two of the co-founders
    continue to build it and grow it,
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    and there was a sense of teaming
    from the beginning.
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    Finding partners who believe is essential.
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    And when you find partners,
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    then you can do
    incredible things in the world.
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    Here's something
    that many people may not know
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    about Secretary of State
    Hillary Rodham Clinton.
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    Hillary Clinton is very interested
    in solving problems of the world
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    from her position at the State Department,
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    which has development,
    social progress on its agenda
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    and not only international diplomacy.
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    But she sees development
    as a part of diplomacy,
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    and she also wants to solve problems
    that disproportionately affect women.
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    And there's been a problem in the world,
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    known for a long time.
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    It's the problem of women
    cooking on open fires.
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    In fact, more women die
    from cooking on open fires
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    than from major diseases
    in the developing world.
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    That was something I didn't know
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    until I learned about
    the Clean Cookstove Project.
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    So Secretary Clinton
    and her office of global partnerships
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    picked this up and created
    a massive teaming up
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    of governments and businesses
    and NGOs all over the world,
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    and finally,
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    the Alliance for Clean Cookstoves
    is beginning to make progress
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    in building an industry
    in which households, women,
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    can have affordable access
    to clean cookstoves,
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    which means, by the way, no air pollution.
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    It means they can cook in their home
    without worrying about it burning up.
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    Otherwise, they had the cookstoves
    at a distance from the home.
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    A massive example of teaming up,
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    and that's how we're going to solve
    the problems of the world in the future,
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    by the way - make
    the world a better place -
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    is because we take
    lots of separate efforts
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    and we bring them together,
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    aligned in one big team.
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    So now I've had four skills,
    and I want to get to the fifth,
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    which is never give up -
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    because of something
    that I coined a while ago,
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    I call it Kanter's Law;
    I hope you do too.
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    Kanter's Law is that everything
    can look like a failure in the middle.
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    There's almost nothing we start
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    that doesn't hit
    an obstacle, a road block.
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    It takes longer than we imagined
    because we'd never done it before.
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    It may take longer
    just to convene the first meeting.
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    I sometimes have my MBA students
    do an action plan,
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    and they say, "Week One -
    change the strategy.
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    Week Two - implement."
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    Well, you know, that's not realistic.
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    I mean, middles are very, very difficult.
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    You hit a bump in the road
    you didn't know was there,
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    because you've never gone
    down the path before.
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    The critics surface; they start attacking.
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    It doesn't work
    the way it was envisioned -
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    true of all kinds of technology -
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    you have to go back to the drawing board.
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    And so never give up.
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    Because if you give up,
    by definition, it's a failure.
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    You've stopped prematurely.
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    If you keep going, persist and persevere,
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    find a way around the obstacles,
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    flexibly redesign,
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    often you can produce a success.
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    Sometimes it's not the success
    you first imagined.
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    A lot of technology
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    turns out to be applied in ways
    we had never thought of in the beginning.
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    But that ability to hang in there
    and not give up is a hallmark of leaders.
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    I mean, I think about a friend
    and colleague in my own area,
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    Dr. Donald Berwick, who was recently
    the chief administrator for Medicare,
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    the biggest health program
    in the United States.
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    Well, for 20 or more years,
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    he has been pursuing the idea
    of quality in healthcare,
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    he's been pursuing the idea
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    of innovation to raise quality
    and reduce costs.
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    And do you know
    that it sometimes takes 17 years
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    to get an innovation in healthcare
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    from the mind of those
    who dream it up into use?
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    That's an amazingly long time,
    but he never gave up.
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    And my iconic example of a leader
    that we should all aspire to emulate
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    is Nelson Mandela,
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    the first democratically elected
    president of South Africa.
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    He was in prison for 27 years
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    and didn't give up.
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    Finally, emerged from prison
    to be elected president,
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    first democratically elected president.
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    You know, sometimes my students
    say, "27 years in prison."
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    And he emerged
    without a feeling of revenge.
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    He emerged ready to get on with it,
    just interrupted in the middle -
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    get on with it and build a country.
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    They say, "I could never do that.
    I could never feel that much forgiveness."
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    Well, I think, we hope,
    that you're not in prison for 27 years,
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    we hope that your middles
    are shorter and sweeter,
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    but find your inner Mandela.
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    Find the strength to persist
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    even against the naysayers,
    the critics and the obstacles
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    because that's what makes a difference
    between success and failure.
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    And then when you get to the point
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    where it looks like
    what you're doing is working,
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    it's taking hold,
    you have the first pilot,
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    you have a little more support,
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    you do the sixth thing,
    which is lift others up.
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    Share success,
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    the credit, the recognition,
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    the idea of giving back
    once you have a success
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    because that's what creates an environment
    in which you can do it again,
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    you can do it the next time.
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    You build support
    rather than lose support.
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    You must feel positively
    about the achievement
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    but make sure other people
    feel elevated by what you do as well.
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    So that, quickly,
    are six secrets of success
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    if you want things to continue to be up:
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    Show up.
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    Speak up.
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    Look up.
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    Team up.
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    Never give up.
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    And lift others up.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Six keys to leading positive change | Rosabeth Moss Kanter | TEDxBeaconStreet
Description:

From the power of presence to the power of voice, leadership expert and professor Rosabeth Moss Kanter discusses the process of making a difference in the world. Kanter uses the stories of great leaders and ordinary people to reveal the six success factors that are the keys to positive change, including lining up partnerships, managing the miserable middles of change and sharing success with others. This uplifting talk will inspire you to lead and take action.

Leadership expert Rosabeth Moss Kanter is a professor at the Harvard Business School, Chair and Director of the Harvard University Advanced Leadership Initiative, and author of "Confidence: How Winning Streaks and Losing Streaks Begin and End" and "SuperCorp: How Vanguard Companies Create Innovation, Profits, Growth, and Social Good."

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
17:36

English subtitles

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