It's Not About You - It's About Everyone Else
From an email I sent to some Walmart employees this past week:
As you may know, I came to Walmart through the acquisition of Bonobos in 2017. At first, I had no clue know how to operate in a larger environment. I loved the company - but I didn't know how to get things done. I felt I wasn't delivering. It was confusing. Sometimes frustrating. Occasionally maddening.
So I went to Doug, our CEO, and asked him for advice. He said this:
"You've gotta ask a lot of questions."
From that conversation, I began to take an intense interest in how people who are really successful here are doing it. I began to take an intense interest in the problems they were having, the opportunities they saw, even the dreams they had about what they saw for this company, and for themselves.
What I've discovered is this place is entrepreneurial, scrappy and customer obsessed. It's full of benevolent and passionate people who all want to win.
The trick is how do we learn from each other and how do we do it together.
Take some time this week to learn more about your peers and colleagues.
You’ll be surprised by how taking an interest in other people, not you, is the best thing you can do... for you.
--
5 年Interesting
--
5 年Nice and simple great message
Public Health and Nutrition Consultant
5 年Take a half tab. of Lexotanil and enjoy life? Ha Ha ha Ha ....... Never accept responsibility which you can't....... Never side track from your PROFESSIONALISM .......Right person right job.....?
CHRO | Executive and Leadership Coach | Business Strategist | Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Champion | Faith and Work Integrator | Possibilitarian
5 年Great message - short and sweet. Understanding different POV’s improves your ability to empathize, make decisions and lead with confidence.
Business Coach/Addictions Coach
5 年Dale Carnegie wrote in his book " How to Win Friends and Influence People" in Part 2, if you want people to like you, you need to become genuinely interested in other people (Principle Number 1). Those same principles that Dale Carnegie talked about in his classic book published more than 80 years ago in 1936, as just as important today, if not more so.