Four business values — Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic 2017 TEST 1 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic 2017 TEST 1

Four business values

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(0:00) Section 4. You will hear part of a lecture for business students about business values. (0:10) First, you have some time to look at questions 31 to 40. Now listen carefully and answer questions 31 to 40.
(1:14) In public discussion of business, we take certain values for granted. (1:18) Today I'm going to talk about four of them. Collaboration, hard work, creativity and excellence.
(1:29) Most people would say they're all good things. I'm going to suggest that's an over-simple view. (1:36) The trouble with these values is that they're theoretical concepts, removed from the reality of day-to-day business.
(1:44) Pursue values by all means, but be prepared for what may happen as a result. (1:50) They can actually cause damage, which is not at all the intention. (1:56) Business leaders generally try to do the right thing, but all too often the right thing backfires (2:02) if those leaders adopt values without understanding and managing the side effects that arise.
(2:09) The values can easily get in the way of what's actually intended. (2:14) OK, so the first value I'm going to discuss is collaboration. Let me give you an example.
(2:22) On a management training course I once attended, we were put into groups and had to construct a bridge across a stream (2:30) using building blocks that we were given. (2:33) The rule was that everyone in the team had to move at least one building block during the construction. (2:41) This was intended to encourage teamwork, but it was really a job best done by one person.
(2:48) The other teams tried to collaborate on building the structure and descended into confusion, (2:54) with everyone getting in each other's way. (2:57) Our team leader solved the challenge brilliantly. (3:00) She simply asked everyone in the team to move a piece a few centimetres to comply with the rule, (3:07) and then let the person in the team with an aptitude for puzzles like this build it alone.
(3:13) We finished before any other team. (3:16) My point is that the task wasn't really suited to team working, so why make it one? (3:24) Teamwork can also lead to inconsistency, a common cause of poor sales. (3:30) In the case of a smartphone that a certain company launched, one director wanted to target the business market (3:38) and another demanded it was aimed at consumers.
(3:42) The company wanted both directors to be involved, so gave the product a consumer-friendly name, (3:49) but marketed it to companies. (3:52) The result was that it met the needs of neither group. (3:56) It would have been better to let one director or the other have his way, not both.
(4:07) Now, industriousness, or hard work. (4:12) It's easy to mock people who say they work hard. (4:16) After all, a hamster running around in a wheel is working hard and getting nowhere.
(4:21) Of course, hard work is valuable, but only when properly targeted, (4:27) otherwise it wastes the resources that companies value most, time and energy, (4:33) and that's bad for the organisation. (4:36) There's a management model that groups people according to four criteria. (4:41) Clever, hard-working, stupid and lazy.
(4:46) Here, lazy means having a rational determination not to carry out unnecessary tasks. (4:53) It doesn't mean trying to avoid work altogether. (4:57) Most people display two of these characteristics, (5:00) and the most valuable people are those who are both clever and lazy.
(5:05) They possess intellectual clarity and they don't rush into making decisions. (5:11) They come up with solutions to save the time and energy spent by the stupid and hard-working group. (5:19) Instead of throwing more man-hours at a problem, (5:22) the clever and lazy group looks for a more effective solution.
(5:27) Next, we come to creativity. (5:31) This often works well, creating an attention-grabbing TV commercial, for example, (5:37) might lead to increased sales. (5:39) But it isn't always a good thing.
(5:43) Some advertising campaigns are remembered for their creativity (5:46) without having any effect on sales. (5:50) This happened a few years ago with the launch of a chocolate bar. (5:54) Subsequent research showed that plenty of consumers remembered the adverts, (5:58) but had no idea what was being advertised.
(6:02) The trouble is that the creator derives pleasure from coming up with the idea (6:06) and wrongly assumes the audience for the campaign will share that feeling. (6:12) A company that brings out thousands of new products (6:16) may seem more creative than a company that only has a few, (6:21) but it may be too creative and make smaller profits. (6:26) Creativity needs to be targeted to solve a problem that the company has identified.
(6:32) Just coming up with more and more novel products isn't necessarily a good thing. (6:38) And finally, excellence. (6:42) We all know companies that claim they strive for excellence, (6:46) but it takes a long time to achieve excellence.
(6:50) In business, being first with a product is more profitable than having the best product. (6:56) A major study of company performance compared pioneers, (7:02) that is, companies bringing out the first version of a particular product, (7:07) with followers, the companies that copied and improved on that product. (7:12) The study found that the pioneers commanded an average market share of 29%, (7:18) while the followers achieved less than half that, only 13%, (7:24) even though their product might have been better.
(7:29) Insisting on excellence in everything we do is time-consuming, (7:34) wastes energy and leads to losing out on opportunities. (7:38) Sometimes second-rate work is more worthwhile than excellence. (7:44) Make sure it's excellent sounds like a good approach to business, (7:48) but the just-get-started approach is likely to be more successful.
(7:53) That is the end of section 4. (8:01) You now have half a minute to check your answers.

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