A Simple Way to Inspire Your Team | David Burkus | TED

74,885 views ・ 2023-10-27

TED


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In 2014,
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KPMG's leadership had a problem.
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Accounting
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is boring.
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Apologies to any accountants in the room,
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but that really was the issue.
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The senior leadership of one of the world's premier accounting firms
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had been working for a while to improve morale and engagement
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across the nearly 30,000 employees of the firm.
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When they started, morale was in the tank.
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Only about half of employees had a favorable opinion of the firm
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when surveyed,
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which is to say about half of employees
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had an unfavorable opinion of the place they continued to work.
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They had tried to pull the standard levers,
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perks, pay increases,
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more flexibility, more opportunities to advance.
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But their initial gains had leveled off.
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And it's easy to understand why.
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Accounting, in particular auditing,
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can be a boring and thankless job.
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For most of the day, you're staring at documents and spreadsheets,
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you're sitting in a cubicle provided by a client
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who doesn't actually want you there
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and doesn't want to answer any more questions either.
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And so having run out of traditional ideas,
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KPMG's leaders decided to do something different.
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They decided to put purpose at the core of their engagement effort.
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And what they did first was particularly bold.
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They told stories.
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They launched what they called the We Shape History campaign,
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a promotional campaign designed to tell the story
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of how KPMG had been involved in pivotal moments in world history.
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They told the story of President Roosevelt’s Lend-Lease Act,
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which sent billions of dollars in aid to the Allies during World War II,
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and how he tapped KPMG to manage logistics.
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They told the story
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of how KPMG accountants resolved conflicting financial claims,
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which laid the groundwork for the release
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of 52 US hostages in Iran in 1981.
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They told the story of how KPMG certified the election of Nelson Mandela
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in South Africa in 1994.
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They told stories about how KPMG's work served a higher purpose
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and they hung posters everywhere to remind everyone of those stories.
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It was bold and it worked.
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Sort of.
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It moved the needle a little bit.
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What they did next was brilliant.
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To understand why their next move was so brilliant, though,
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we need to talk about purpose.
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See, most of us think of an organization's purpose or mission
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as a bold and lofty ambition,
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like, helping win a world war or certify a historic election.
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And most leaders think that to convey a purpose that truly inspires,
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they need a compelling answer to the question, “why?”
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As in, why do we do what we do?
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And this is where it gets weird
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because then most leaders look to their mission statement.
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And even though mission is different than purpose,
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but that's a totally different talk.
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They look at their mission statement,
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they work to rewrite it to make it more compelling.
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They go through rounds and rounds of editing and focus-group testing,
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and when their heavily workshopped, perfectly worded statement is complete,
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they send it out to employees in emails that get deleted.
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They print it on posters that get ignored.
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They put it on a page on the company website
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that no one visits.
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Because it turns out,
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most people are less inspired by a compelling answer to “why”
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and more motivated by a clear answer to the question, “who?”
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As in, who is served by the work that we do?
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I mean, think about yourself.
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If I asked you to think of a time when you felt highly engaged
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and inspired at work,
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you probably wouldn't mention
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the time your boss recited the company mission statement verbatim.
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Instead, you'd probably think of the last time you got a "thank you"
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from a client or a coworker,
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the last time you felt your work was important to someone else.
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To explain this further, let's switch cubicles.
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Let's move from the cubicles of auditors at an accounting firm
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to the cubicles of student workers at a university donation call center.
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You thought accounting was boring.
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Maybe you got called by one of these student workers
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in one of these call centers.
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They call in the evenings.
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They always have a perfectly worded script.
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It always ends in a request for a donation.
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So you end up having to say,
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"No, I don't want to donate 1,000 dollars to the new stadium."
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"No, I don't want to donate 500 dollars to the new student union."
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"No, I don't want to donate 20 dollars and five cents
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to commemorate my graduation year."
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It's like some collegiate version of "Green Eggs and Ham."
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"No, I don't want to donate in a box or with a fox."
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"No, I don't want to donate in a house with a mouse."
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"Kid, I don't want to donate here or there,"
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"Kid, I'm just trying to pay off my student loans ..."
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(Laughter)
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"And then you can call me back about donating."
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Think about the person on the other end of that line.
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They're sitting in a windowless room,
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they're constantly dialing people destined to hang up on them,
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yell at them, or worse.
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It's got to be boring.
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It's got to be thankless.
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It's got to be draining.
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And you can see it in the numbers.
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Annual turnover in these types of call center jobs exceeds 400 percent.
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You do the math on that, that means that in any given year,
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the entire staff quits every three months.
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In fact, when Adam Grant and a team of researchers were looking for ways
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to improve morale at a call center at their university,
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one of the first things they noticed was a sign in one student's cubicle.
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It read,
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"Doing a good job here
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is like wetting your pants in a dark suit."
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(Laughter)
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"You get a warm feeling ..."
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(Laughter)
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"but no one else notices."
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(Laughter)
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The researchers wanted them to feel noticed,
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obviously not for wetting themselves.
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They wondered if they could get the student workers to notice
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the difference they were making
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and if that would have a positive effect on them.
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So they took the break time that these workers received
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and they used it to run an experiment.
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Some of the workers, during one of the breaks,
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got to meet with a student
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who had received scholarship funds raised by that call center.
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And they got to hear how receiving those funds
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had made a positive impact on them.
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They got to meet their answer to the question
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"who is served by the work that we do?"
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And when the researchers followed up a month later,
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that little meeting had a big impact on the workers.
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The workers who got to meet someone who directly benefited
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from the work they were doing,
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they worked twice as hard.
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They made double the number of calls per hour,
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they spent double the number of minutes on the phone.
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Their weekly revenue went from an average of 400 dollars
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to more than 2,000 dollars in donations.
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I mean, it's impossible to overstate how big this effect is.
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These workers, they didn't get any additional perks or benefits.
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They didn't get any additional training.
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They certainly didn't get asked to memorize and internalize
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the university's mission statement.
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Instead, they got a five-minute chat
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with someone whose life was made better by the work they were doing.
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The researchers argued that these workers were inspired
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by a sense of pro-social motivation,
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the desire to protect and promote the well-being of others.
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And that word, pro-social,
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that points to what's wrong with most organizations' attempts
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at talking purpose.
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When you're talking about growth or shareholder value or disruption
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or even sustainability,
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it becomes awfully hard to tell specific stories
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about specific people whose life is made better
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by the work that you're doing.
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But pro-social purpose is what we want from our work.
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And it's what powered the second step of KPMG's purpose initiative.
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After the promotional campaign,
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after the corporate propaganda of the We Shape History campaign,
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the leaders launched what they called the 10,000 Stories Challenge.
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In essence, they said to their people,
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"You've heard how we've made a difference in the past.
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Now you tell us how you're making a difference right now."
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They set up an online application that not only captured individual answers,
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but let people design their own version of the poster
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like the one from the We Shaped History campaign.
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And the answers started rolling in.
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Answers like,
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"I combat terrorism
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because I help banks prevent money laundering
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that can go toward terrorist groups."
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Or, “I help farmers grow
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because I support the farm credit system that keeps family farms in business."
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Or, “I restore neighborhoods
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because I audit community development programs
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that revitalize low-income communities."
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They wanted 10,000 stories.
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They got 42,000 stories.
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And in time they also got massive increases in morale
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and engagement across the whole company.
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But it's important to emphasize why they got such a profound response.
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They got 42,000 stories
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because they stopped talking about purpose as a collective why,
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and started talking about it as an individual who.
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They didn’t give every employee a uniform answer to the question,
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“Why do we do what we do?”
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They helped each employee find a specific answer to the question,
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“Who is served by the work that we do?”
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And just like in the call-center research,
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that switch made all the difference in the world.
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So what does this mean for you?
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Well, if you're in a leadership role,
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it means part of your job is to become chief storytelling officer,
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always ready to tell the story of the client or coworker
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or community member whose life is made better
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by the work your team does.
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And if you're not in a leadership role,
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you can still motivate yourself and other people
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by capturing every instance that you come across,
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every time you hear about someone
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who’s served by the work that you’re doing.
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Every thank you that you get, capture it,
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save it for when you or anyone else needs a powerful story
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about how the work that we're doing matters.
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Because in the end, that's what we all want from our work, isn't it?
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People want to do work that matters,
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and they want to work for leaders who tell them they matter.
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And the most powerful way to tell them
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isn't to tell them some grandiose answer
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to “Why do we do what we do?”
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In fact, it isn't to tell them anything at all.
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It's to help them find the answer to the question "Who?"
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So let me ask you, do you know?
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Who is served by the work that you do?
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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