- UID
- 937816
- 在线时间
- 小时
- 注册时间
- 2013-9-16
- 最后登录
- 1970-1-1
- 主题
- 帖子
- 性别
- 保密
|
谢谢美人~
Speaker
great leaders think, act, and communicate in the exact same way.
the golden circle: everyone knows what they do, some know how they do it, very few people in the organization know why they do it
inspired leaders think inside out: why --> how --> what (talking directly to the part of the brain that controls behavior and allows people to rationalize it)
people buy why you do it, not what you do. what you do simply proves what you believe.
the goal is to sell to people who believe what you believe and hire people who believe what you believe.
great leaders are driven by what they believe.
Speed
Time2: 2:15:22 314
Foshan has the world's largest furniture market and it represents China's emerging economic frontier. Some of China's most successful private firms were produced in Foshan.
Time3: 2:07:95 297
Foshan shares many of the country's growing pains, such as the lack of oil and coal, heavy pollution and debt.
Foshan grew twice as fast as the reaming state-owned companies in 2012.
Plenum called for private capital to play a big role in public infrastructure.
Time4: 2:33:89 362
Foshan had created a shadow market in communal land. By 2010, the average Foshan resident owned property worth about $50,000.
Decentralized decision-making is allowed.
Time5: 2:57:65
Foshan's success is hard to replicate.
Pollution is a barrier to Foshan's development. Bad environment does not attract talented people.
Foshan is building a new cluster dedicated to the services that high-end manufacturing requires.
Foshan assimilates foreign technology by import.
Obstacle: 8:29:13 1031
The growth of China's economy is controversial.
It's helpful to think in supply, demand, and credit to understand China's economy.
The growth in credit is a lot faster than the growth in GDP. One credit product sold through ICBC is poised to default. However, China's credit is not all this bad. Lending sometimes adds to both demand and supply and thus results in higher economic growth without higher inflation. Some other kinds of lending increase demand but add nothing to the economy's productive capacity, and thus result in higher inflation but not real GDP. The lack of inflation suggests that much of China's credit is spent on existing assists.
China's dependence on investment remains a worry.
China's fastest growing sector last year was wholesaling and retailing.
|
|