9 Ocak 2017 Pazartesi

Dayanıklılık ve Değerler Üzerine

Bugün Harvard Business Review'in "Kendinizi Yönetmek" adlı kitabındaki Diane L. Coutu'nun Dayanıklılığın Bileşenleri adlı makalesini okurken bir paragraf beni yakından ilgilendirdi ve blogumda, en azından kendim için, saklamak istedim.



How Resilience Works


The religious connotations of words like “credo,” “values,” and “noble purpose,” however, should not be confused with the actual content of the values. Companies can hold ethically questionable values and still be very resilient. Consider Phillip Morris, which has demonstrated impressive resilience in the face of increasing unpopularity. As Jim Collins points out, Phillip Morris has very strong values, although we might not agree with them—for instance, the value of “adult choice.” But there’s no doubt that Phillip Morris executives believe strongly in its values, and the strength of their beliefs sets the company apart from most of the other tobacco companies. In this context, it is worth noting that resilience is neither ethically good nor bad. It is merely the skill and the capacity to be robust under conditions of enormous stress and change. As Viktor Frankl wrote: “On the average, only those prisoners could keep alive who, after years of trekking from camp to camp, had lost all scruples in their fight for existence; they were prepared to use every means, honest and otherwise, even brutal…, in order to save themselves. We who have come back…we know: The best of us did not return.”

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