https://www.ted.com/talks/tanya_menon_the_secret_to_great_opportunities_the_person_you_haven_t_met_yet/transcript

00:00
I started teaching MBA students 17 years ago. Sometimes I run into my students years later. And when I run into them, a funny thing happens. I don't remember just their faces; I also remember where exactly in the classroom they were sitting. And I remember who they were sitting with as well. This is not because I have any special superpowers of memory. The reason I can remember them is because they are creatures of habit. They are sitting with their favorite people in their favorite seats. They find their twins, they stay with them for the whole year.

00:39
Now, the danger of this for my students is they're at risk of leaving the university with just a few people who are exactly like them. They're going to squander[ˈskwɑ:ndə(r)]浪费 their chance for an international, diverse network. How could this happen to them? My students are open-minded. They come to business school precisely so that they can get great networks.

01:02
Now, all of us socially narrow in our lives, in our school, in work, and so I want you to think about this one. How many of you here brought a friend along for this talk? I want you to look at your friend a little bit. Are they of the same nationality as you? Are they of the same gender as you? Are they of the same race? Really look at them closely. Don't they kind of look like you as well?

01:31
(Laughter)

01:32
The muscle people are together, and the people with the same hairstyles and the checked shirts.

01:38
We all do this in life. We all do it in life, and in fact, there's nothing wrong with this. It makes us comfortable to be around people who are similar. The problem is when we're on a precipice, right? When we're in trouble, when we need new ideas, when we need new jobs, when we need new resources -- this is when we really pay a price for living in a clique.

02:01
Mark Granovetter, the sociologist, had a famous paper "The Strength of Weak Ties," and what he did in this paper is he asked people how they got their jobs. And what he learned was that most people don't get their jobs through their strong ties -- their father, their mother, their significant other. They instead get jobs through weak ties, people who they just met. So if you think about what the problem is with your strong ties, think about your significant other, for example. The network is redundant. Everybody that they know, you know. Or I hope you know them. Right? Your weak ties -- people you just met today -- they are your ticket to a whole new social world.

02:43
The thing is that we have this amazing ticket to travel our social worlds, but we don't use it very well. Sometimes we stay awfully close to home. And today, what I want to talk about is: What are those habits that keep human beings so close to home, and how can we be a little bit more intentional about traveling our social universe?

03:03
So let's look at the first strategy. The first strategy is to use a more imperfect social search engine. What I mean by a social search engine is how you are finding and filtering your friends. And so people always tell me, "I want to get lucky through the network. I want to get a new job. I want to get a great opportunity." And I say, "Well, that's really hard, because your networks are so fundamentally predictable." Map out your habitual daily footpath, and what you'll probably discover is that you start at home, you go to your school or your workplace, you maybe go up the same staircase or elevator, you go to the bathroom -- the same bathroom -- and the same stall in that bathroom, you end up in the gym, then you come right back home. It's like stops on a train schedule. It's that predictable. It's efficient, but the problem is, you're seeing exactly the same people. Make your network slightly more inefficient. Go to a bathroom on a different floor. You encounter a whole new network of people.

04:09
The other side of it is how we are actually filtering. And we do this automatically. The minute we meet someone, we are looking at them, we meet them, we are initially seeing, "You're interesting." "You're not interesting." "You're relevant." We do this automatically. We can't even help it. And what I want to encourage you to do instead is to fight your filters. I want you to take a look around this room, and I want you to identify the least interesting person that you see, and I want you to connect with them over the next coffee break. And I want you to go even further than that. What I want you to do is find the most irritating person you see as well and connect with them.

04:49
What you are doing with this exercise is you are forcing yourself to see what you don't want to see, to connect with who you don't want to connect with, to widen your social world. To truly widen, what we have to do is, we've got to fight our sense of choice. We've got to fight our choices. And my students hate this, but you know what I do? I won't let them sit in their favorite seats. I move them around from seat to seat. I force them to work with different people so there are more accidental bumps in the network where people get a chance to connect with each other. And we studied exactly this kind of an intervention at Harvard University. At Harvard, when you look at the rooming groups, there's freshman rooming groups, people are not choosing those roommates. They're of all different races, all different ethnicities. Maybe people are initially uncomfortable with those roommates, but the amazing thing is, at the end of a year with those students, they're able to overcome that initial discomfort. They're able to find deep-level commonalities with people.

05:52
So the takeaway here is not just "take someone out to coffee." It's a little more subtle. It's "go to the coffee room." When researchers talk about social hubs, what makes a social hub so special is you can't choose; you can't predict who you're going to meet in that place. And so with these social hubs, the paradox is, interestingly enough, to get randomness, it requires, actually, some planning. In one university that I worked at, there was a mail room on every single floor. What that meant is that the only people who would bump into each other are those who are actually on that floor and who are bumping into each other anyway. At another university I worked at, there was only one mail room, so all the faculty from all over that building would run into each other in that social hub. A simple change in planning, a huge difference in the traffic of people and the accidental bumps in the network.

06:52
Here's my question for you: What are you doing that breaks you from your social habits? Where do you find yourself in places where you get injections of unpredictable diversity? And my students give me some wonderful examples. They tell me when they're doing pickup basketball games, or my favorite example is when they go to a dog park. They tell me it's even better than online dating when they're there.

07:17
So the real thing that I want you to think about is we've got to fight our filters. We've got to make ourselves a little more inefficient, and by doing so, we are creating a more imprecise social search engine. And you're creating that randomness, that luck that is going to cause you to widen your travels, through your social universe.

07:38
But in fact, there's more to it than that. Sometimes we actually buy ourselves a second-class ticket to travel our social universe. We are not courageous when we reach out to people. Let me give you an example of that. A few years ago, I had a very eventful year. That year, I managed to lose a job, I managed to get a dream job overseas and accept it, I had a baby the next month, I got very sick, I was unable to take the dream job. And so in a few weeks, what ended up happening was, I lost my identity as a faculty member, and I got a very stressful new identity as a mother. What I also got was tons of advice from people. And the advice I despised more than any other advice was, "You've got to go network with everybody." When your psychological world is breaking down, the hardest thing to do is to try and reach out and build up your social world.

08:34
And so we studied exactly this idea on a much larger scale. What we did was we looked at high and low socioeconomic status people, and we looked at them in two situations. We looked at them first in a baseline condition, when they were quite comfortable. And what we found was that our lower socioeconomic status people, when they were comfortable, were actually reaching out to more people. They thought of more people. They were also less constrained in how they were networking. They were thinking of more diverse people than the higher-status people. Then we asked them to think about maybe losing a job. We threatened them. And once they thought about that, the networks they generated completely differed. The lower socioeconomic status people reached inwards. They thought of fewer people. They thought of less-diverse people. The higher socioeconomic status people thought of more people, they thought of a broader network, they were positioning themselves to bounce back from that setback.

09:34
Let's consider what this actually means. Imagine that you were being spontaneously unfriended by everyone in your network other than your mom, your dad and your dog.

09:48
(Laughter)

09:49
This is essentially what we are doing at these moments when we need our networks the most. Imagine -- this is what we're doing. We're doing it to ourselves. We are mentally compressing our networks when we are being harassed, when we are being bullied, when we are threatened about losing a job, when we feel down and weak. We are closing ourselves off, isolating ourselves, creating a blind spot where we actually don't see our resources. We don't see our allies, we don't see our opportunities.

10:18
How can we overcome this? Two simple strategies. One strategy is simply to look at your list of Facebook friends and LinkedIn friends just so you remind yourself of people who are there beyond those that automatically come to mind. And in our own research, one of the things we did was, we considered Claude Steele's research on self-affirmation: simply thinking about your own values, networking from a place of strength. What Leigh Thompson, Hoon-Seok Choi and I were able to do is, we found that people who had affirmed themselves first were able to take advice from people who would otherwise be threatening to them.

10:54
Here's a last exercise. I want you to look in your email in-box, and I want you to look at the last time you asked somebody for a favor. And I want you to look at the language that you used. Did you say things like, "Oh, you're a great resource," or "I owe you one," "I'm obligated to you." All of this language represents a metaphor. It's a metaphor of economics, of a balance sheet, of accounting, of transactions. And when we think about human relations in a transactional way, it is fundamentally uncomfortable to us as human beings. We must think about human relations and reaching out to people in more humane ways.

11:35
Here's an idea as to how to do so. Look at words like "please," "thank you," "you're welcome" in other languages. Look at the literal translation of these words. Each of these words is a word that helps us impose upon other people in our social networks. And so, the word "thank you," if you look at it in Spanish, Italian, French, "gracias," "grazie," "merci" in French. Each of them are "grace" and "mercy." They are godly words. There's nothing economic or transactional about those words. The word "you're welcome" is interesting. The great persuasion theorist Robert Cialdini says we've got to get our favors back. So we need to emphasize the transaction a little bit more. He says, "Let's not say 'You're welcome.' Instead say, 'I know you'd do the same for me.'" But sometimes it may be helpful to not think in transactional ways, to eliminate the transaction, to make it a little bit more invisible. And in fact, if you look in Chinese, the word "bú kè qì" in Chinese, "You're welcome," means, "Don't be formal; we're family. We don't need to go through those formalities[fɔ:rˈmæləti]礼节." And "kembali" in Indonesian is "Come back to me." When you say "You're welcome" next time, think about how you can maybe eliminate the transaction and instead strengthen that social tie. Maybe "It's great to collaborate," or "That's what friends are for."

12:54
I want you to think about how you think about this ticket that you have to travel your social universe. Here's one metaphor. It's a common metaphor[ˈmɛtəˌfɔr, -fɚ]隐喻: "Life is a journey." Right? It's a train ride, and you're a passenger on the train, and there are certain people with you. Certain people get on this train, and some stay with you, some leave at different stops, new ones may enter. I love this metaphor, it's a beautiful one. But I want you to consider a different metaphor. This one is passive, being a passenger on that train, and it's quite linear[ˈlɪniər]线形的. You're off to some particular destination. Why not instead think of yourself as an atom, bumping up against other atoms, maybe transferring energy with them, bonding with them a little and maybe creating something new on your travels through the social universe.

13:44
Thank you so much. And I hope we bump into each other again.

13:47
(Applause)

(10)The secret to great opportunities? The person you haven't met yet的更多相关文章

  1. linux运维中的命令梳理(四)

    ----------管理命令---------- ps命令:查看进程 要对系统中进程进行监测控制,查看状态,内存,CPU的使用情况,使用命令:/bin/ps (1) ps :是显示瞬间进程的状态,并不 ...

  2. kubernetes容器编排系统介绍

    版权声明:本文由turboxu原创文章,转载请注明出处: 文章原文链接:https://www.qcloud.com/community/article/152 来源:腾云阁 https://www. ...

  3. 理解PHP 依赖注入|Laravel IoC容器

    看Laravel的IoC容器文档只是介绍实例,但是没有说原理,之前用MVC框架都没有在意这个概念,无意中在phalcon的文档中看到这个详细的介绍,感觉豁然开朗,复制粘贴过来,主要是好久没有写东西了, ...

  4. OpenLDAP安装与配置

    系统:ubuntu 14.04 安装: 1. sudo apt-get install slapd ldap-utils 2. 在1的过程中会让你输了admin密码 配置: 如果安装过,只是想配置Op ...

  5. 一文带你看透kubernetes 容器编排系统

    本文由云+社区发表 作者:turboxu Kubernetes作为容器编排生态圈中重要一员,是Google大规模容器管理系统borg的开源版本实现,吸收借鉴了google过去十年间在生产环境上所学到的 ...

  6. python基础:条件循环字符串

    一. 完成完整的温度转换程序 使用while True 循环,摄氏度转换为华氏度按1,华氏度转换成摄氏度按2,按其他数字退出循环. while True: a = int(input('摄氏度转换为华 ...

  7. 理解 PHP 依赖注入

    Laravel框架的依赖注入确实很强大,并且通过容器实现依赖注入可以有选择性的加载需要的服务,减少初始化框架的开销,下面是我在网上看到的一个帖子,写的很好拿来与大家分享,文章从开始按照传统的类设计数据 ...

  8. 20162314 Experiment 2 - Tree

    Experiment report of Besti course:<Program Design & Data Structures> Class: 1623 Student N ...

  9. SpookyOTP

    https://pypi.python.org/pypi/SpookyOTP/1.1.1 SpookyOTP 1.1.1 Downloads ↓ A lightweight Python 2/3 pa ...

随机推荐

  1. 【svn】服务器搭建和迁移

    导语 svn客户端大部分开发都会用到,但是为什么我们仍然需要svn服务端呢? 理由可能有: 1,我们想存放一些属于自己的文档,而不像被其他人发现(在自己的网络环境中,安全性更高,更易用,不依赖于公司, ...

  2. win10装回win7。PE下把原来的系统盘格掉,再安装hdd,重启就好了

    win10装回win7.安装文件解压到某盘根目录,然后 PE下把原来的系统盘格掉,再安装hdd,重启就好了

  3. JDK1.5 Excutor 与ThreadFactory

    Excutor 源码解读: /** * An object that executes submitted {@link Runnable} tasks. This * interface provi ...

  4. Python 列表推导实例

    #!/usr/bin/python # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- with open('e:/123.txt') as fp:row = fp.readlines() #打开并读取所 ...

  5. js函数定义和调用

    由于JavaScript的函数也是一个对象,上述定义的abs()函数实际上是一个函数对象,而函数名abs可以视为指向该函数的变量. var abs = function (x) { if (x > ...

  6. mybatis入门--单表的增删改操作

    单表的增加操作 前面我们看了如何搭建mybatis框架以及查询操作,这里我们说下如何使用mybatis进行增加用户的操作.首先是在user.xml文件中添加insert的方法.代码如下 <!-- ...

  7. Spring Boot 2.0(三):使用 Docker 部署 Spring Boot

    Docker 技术发展为微服务落地提供了更加便利的环境,使用 Docker 部署 Spring Boot 其实非常简单,这篇文章我们就来简单学习下. 首先构建一个简单的 Spring Boot 项目, ...

  8. 利用Swoole编写一个TCP服务器,顺带测试下Swoole的4层生命周期

    1首先我们写一个入口脚本,这里简单点的功能就是开启服务和关闭服务 <?php //CLI命令 if(isset($argv[1]) && in_array($argv[1], [ ...

  9. 简单DP入门四连发

    复习一下一直不太懂的dp. dp博大精深,路还长着呢 第一题;http://acm.hdu.edu.cn/showproblem.php?pid=2084 从下往上就是水题 #include<c ...

  10. 关于nodejs 假设httpserver,会发现一次网页打开,服务端会响应两次的问题;

    转自:http://cnodejs.org/topic/518772806d38277306804020 每个页面默认都会再发一个de style="line-height: 21px; p ...