For anyone who is looking to be self employed and run ones own business, most times we start up with all positivity and the only that fills our mind is the need to succeed as a business. We look at successful companies and wonder what the secret is behind their success. Sometimes we even assume the recipe for success should be studied like rocket science. However to be successful in life, be it in business, relationships, pursuit of a passion, talent career etc is based on virtually the same principles. We think we have got to do extra ordinary things, but as always its the little things that have big impacts and leave lasting impressions which in the end define success. I came across Ian Reads message on reputation and the reality of what he said, really inspired me. Have any views on this, or anything contrary? Lets share our views as you read his message below;
Reputation, built on our past, shapes our present and future. A good reputation can open many doors; a bad reputation can close many more. A good reputation generates respect. A bad reputation breeds suspicion.
Reputation, built on our past, shapes our present and future. A good reputation can open many doors; a bad reputation can close many more. A good reputation generates respect. A bad reputation breeds suspicion.
Few
things in one’s professional life are as important as building and protecting a
good reputation. It determines recommendations we receive, or not, for jobs and
work of all kinds. It helps define our place in our chosen field and in the
organizations where we work. It’s central to any assistance or consideration we
might seek when we find ourselves in a difficult situation.
The same
is true for your company, no matter how big or small. Consider, for example,
that if you need a plumber, you’re far more likely to call a local plumbing
company based on its reputation than on the skills of its plumbers, even as
that reputation is built over time on its employees’ work.
No
Substitute
Our
trust in a business is based largely on its reputation; and we respect that
company, or not, accordingly. No amount of talk can substitute for the work
they do and how they do that work. In fact, a company makes its reputation and
earns respect across an array of actions and public interactions, by its
employees and by the enterprise as a whole.
At
Pfizer — with 165 years of history and more than 77,000 employees serving
millions of healthcare providers and customers in 175 markets globally — the
challenges and stakes are made all the greater by the nature of our business,
which is to bring innovative therapies to patients to improve their lives. To
this end, Pfizer invests billions of dollars annually in research and
development, manages the attendant high levels of risk that see fewer than 1 in
10,000 compounds we discover making it to market and operates in one of the
most highly regulated of industries. It’s a tall order of scientific risk
management we perform each day; and the stakes, defined by the health of those
who take our products, couldn’t be higher.
License
to Operate
All of
this means that many people — including not only regulators but also
legislators and their constituents — have a say in how we can conduct our
business. At the same time, many have a great and sometimes emotionally charged
interest in what our business produces, what we charge for our products and how
we sell them, among other topics. And all of this together shines a brighter light
on our business than most others, which makes our reputation all the more
important to us. In fact, everything from government reimbursement for our
medicines to protection of our intellectual property to our ability to continue
innovating in our labs depends on our reputation. Indeed, our virtual license
to operate depends on this. It depends on earning the respect of our
regulators, legislators, healthcare professionals, patients, R&D partners
and of our employees, current and future.
This is
why we made “earning greater respect from society” one of our four business
imperatives not long after I was named CEO of Pfizer in late 2010.
Without
this respect and the consideration that comes with it we could not sustain our
business, with its innumerable collaborative dependencies and its central place
in an area of life so important to us all, our health. Making reputation and
respect all the more important to us is knowing that we gain it in drops, but
lose it in gallons.
Actions
Define Reputation
Understanding
can enhance respect. We see this in our own lives when we’ve had a chance to
talk with someone we previously had known only from a distance. Our respect for
the person and our view of his or her reputation can go up or down, depending
on whether we understand the person better in the end. The same is true for
companies, which is why we work hard at Pfizer to connect with our stakeholders
and make our positions as clear as possible.
But
what’s most important is action. What people do matters far more to us than
what they say. And the same is true for companies. We are judged, ultimately,
by our actions. In the end, actions make, or break, our reputations.
So,
ensuring that the work and actions of each individual in an organization are
properly focused and that the enterprise acts accordingly is the most critical
aspect of building a good institutional reputation and earning respect. And
this places the responsibility squarely where it belongs in any organization:
on the shoulders of its leaders, managers and employees, on the individuals who
together are the company.
What
people do matters far more than what they say. The same is true for a company
(http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20140219125245-322581966-you-gain-respect-in-drops-but-can-lose-it-in-gallons?trk=mp-details-rc)
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