Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Seth Godin: Why Employee Productivity Is at a 70-Year Low and What to Do About It | Leadership E225
Episode Date: May 29, 2023Traditional work methods are no longer effective in the American workforce. Because of the pandemic, the surge in remote work, and economic instability, employees are feeling unmotivated and constrain...ed creatively. To solve this problem, thought leader and best-selling author Seth Godin is on the search for significance. In this episode, Seth is back on YAP to discuss key topics from his newest book, The Song of Significance: A Manifesto for Teams and the People Who Lead Them. Seth will share why industrialism is currently leading us on a “race to the bottom,” the reason why humans are not a “resource,” and how to make change happen as a significant team and leader in 2023. Seth Godin is one of the top marketers of our generation. He is the founder of the altMBA, Squidoo, and Yoyodyne, one of the first internet companies. Seth Godin is a renowned author of dozens of international bestsellers. He writes one of the most popular marketing blogs in the world, and two of his TED talks are amongst the most popular of all time. In this episode, Hala and Seth will discuss: - Why work isn’t working anymore - Industrial Capitalism vs. Market Capitalism - New measures of productivity - What do the best jobs have in common? - Creating a culture of significance - What Seth learned from his project The Carbon Almonac - What jobs will be taken away by AI - Why we need high trust and high stakes work - How to avoid false proxies - And other topics… Seth Godin is an author, entrepreneur, and most of all, a teacher. In addition to launching one of the most popular blogs in the world, he has written 20 bestselling books, including The Dip, Linchpin, Purple Cow, Tribes, and What To Do When It's Your Turn (And It's Always Your Turn). His book, This is Marketing, was an instant bestseller in several countries around the world. In 2013, Seth was one of just three professionals inducted into the Direct Marketing Hall of Fame. In an astonishing turn of events, in May 2018, he was inducted into the Marketing Hall of Fame as well. By focusing on everything from effective marketing and leadership, to the spread of ideas and changing everything, Seth has been able to motivate and inspire countless people around the world. Resources Mentioned: Seth’s Website: https://www.sethgodin.com/ Seth’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sethgodin/ Seth’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThisIsSethsBlog?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor Seth’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sethgodin/ Seth’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sethgodin/ Akimbo: A Podcast from Seth Godin: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/akimbo-a-podcast-from-seth-godin/id1345042626 Seth’s book The Song of Significance: A New Manifesto for Teams: https://www.amazon.com/Song-Significance-New-Manifesto-Teams-ebook/dp/B0BSPJ567T The Carbon Almanac: https://thecarbonalmanac.org/ LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap Youtube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ Social + Podcast Services: yapmedia.com Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com/episodes-new Entrepreneurship, entrepreneurship podcast, Business, Business podcast, Self Improvement, Self-Improvement, Personal development, Starting a business, Strategy, Investing, Sales, Selling, Psychology, Productivity, Entrepreneurs, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Marketing, Negotiation, Money, Finance, Side hustle, Startup, mental health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth mindset.
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You have to have been living under Iraq to not realize that lots of people have quit their job,
that employee satisfaction is way down.
The productivity is lower than it's been in 70 years of measuring it.
Why is all of that happening?
The reason it's happening is we built work around industrialism, the assembly line,
being a cog in the system.
That kind of work is going away.
And bosses are freaking out because they only know how to do that old kind of work.
Where are the next billion jobs going to come from?
Because since 1960, this planet has invented six billion jobs that didn't used to exist.
Going forward, we're not hiring somebody to work in a steel mill.
We're not hiring somebody to crank out an insurance form anymore.
Because computers do that.
What's left is to ignore what they brainwashed you with in school, look around, find a problem, and solve it.
What is up Young and Profiters?
You're listening to Yap, Young and Profiting Podcast,
where we interview the brightest minds in the world
and unpack their wisdom into actionable advice
that you can use in your daily life.
I'm your host, Halitaha.
Thanks for tuning in and get ready to listen, learn, and profit.
Hey, Seth, welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast.
It's good to see you again, Hala.
How you doing?
I'm doing great.
Always love having you on the show.
So let's dive right in and set the stage for everyone.
You have a new book called The Song of Significance.
And based on your research for your new book and your own personal opinion,
let's talk about why work isn't working anymore.
Well, you have to have been living under a rock to realize,
to not realize that we've had a pandemic that lots of people have quit their job,
that we're working from home, that employee satisfaction is way down.
The productivity is lower than it's been in 70 years of measuring it.
Why is all of that happening? And the reason it's happening is we built work around industrialism,
the assembly line, making cars, having bosses, churning stuff out, being a cog in the system.
That's what school is, right? That number one question you ask in school, if you're smart,
is, will this be on the test? And it's not going to be on the test, you don't bother learning it.
Well, who invented the test? The test was invented by factory owners to teach people to be good employees
and what I am arguing in the book is that that kind of work is going away.
And it makes us unhappy and bosses are freaking out because they only know how to do that old
kind of work.
But the work that's actually scaling and creating value is human work is when we treat each other
with respect and dignity and build something new.
And I want to help people have a conversation about that because I think it's urgent.
Yeah, and I think this conversation is so important right now because all the signs are on the wall in terms of quiet quitting and people becoming entrepreneurs because they're not happy at work.
Managers unhappy with their employees, employees unhappy at work.
So what a great time to have this conversation.
So throughout the book, you talk about this fork in the road that we're at.
Can you describe this fork in a road?
Well, you know, when you see a fork, you should take it, left or right, but you should take it.
because standing in the middle isn't going to do any good. And lots of folks are seeing chat GPT right now.
If you're a mediocre writer, you need to acknowledge that we can get someone to do your writing for free
anytime we want now. And if you're a mediocre voiceover artist, well, 11 labs can reproduce the voice
of just about anybody if it's sort of average. And if you are going to race to the bottom by trying to
work more hours and sell things more cheaply, if you're on Upwork and you're the cheapest person,
and that's how you get your gigs.
If you're a wedding photographer,
who's half the price of every other wedding photographer,
you're racing to the bottom.
And the problem with that is you might win or come in second.
The alternative, the other fork is to race to the top,
to be the one and only.
Like, you are the one and only hollow.
We haven't talked in three years,
and I still remember the last time we engaged,
because you have chosen to be you,
not to be replaceable cog in a giant system.
But it's scary.
Fish don't want to be on the whole,
hook, and people don't really want to either, but it's the best place to be.
So I'd love to understand, just to kind of continue to set the foundation from my listeners,
the Industrial Revolution or the Industrial Capitalism, sorry, versus market capitalism.
Can you kind of go over those two concepts and why they're important in terms of what
you're speaking about?
So industrialism says, we have a factory with people and machines in it, and our job is to
make it go a little faster and a little cheaper every day.
That's what McDonald's does.
That's what General Motors does. They crank it out. You don't have to be a giant company to do that. You could be a three-person insurance agency and do the same thing. Do what you did yesterday, faster and cheaper. Market capitalism is, is there anybody out there who has a problem? Maybe I can solve it for them. And finding and solving problems is where capitalism started. It got hijacked by giant companies, the stock market machines and everything else. But now you know who owns the machines? Anyone with a laptop.
anyone with a smartphone. So if you own the machine, you don't want to be a machine. You want to be
a machine owner, which means you have to use that tool to do something that hasn't been done
before, something that might not work. And so can you talk to us about how industrial capitalism
really worked a long time ago? But now with AI and computers and the internet, how it's no longer
the same and no longer serving us in the same way. Well, I mean, it made us all rich.
You and I are both wearing clothes that we could buy somewhere for 10, 20 bucks.
Whereas the same clothes 30 years ago would have cost five times that.
That so many things that we depend on have gotten cheaper and cheaper and cheaper.
And you can't make them any cheaper.
We're creating so much trash.
We're poisoning the earth so badly that cheaper is not going to be our solution.
There's no question that wealth is unfairly distributed.
There's no question there are people who don't have enough.
that you and I have enough clothes in our closet that we would never have to buy another
piece of clothing ever again. But there are other people in the world who don't have that.
I'm not talking about that. What I'm talking about is in the engines of our economy where people
have jobs, where are the next billion jobs going to come from? Because since 1960, this planet
has invented six billion jobs that didn't used to exist. Where did they come from? And what kind of
jobs are they? Going forward, we're not hiring somebody to work in a steel mill. And we're not hiring
somebody to crank out an insurance form anymore because computers do that. So what's left is to ignore
what they brainwashed you with in school, look around, find a problem, and solve it. That doesn't
mean you have to start your own business. It's fine with me if you do. But you need to work
with people who are aligned in that human activity, creating value by doing something that might
not work, leading instead of managing, creating possibility instead of taking it away.
So in your book, you say that real value is no longer created by traditional measures of productivity.
So what would you say the new measures of productivity are?
So the old kind of productivity was how many widgets could you make in one hour of work?
And now what I want to know is, for every dollar I'm paying you, how many lives were changed?
And a nurse can change someone's life in 10 seconds, or they might be able to change someone's life in 40 hours.
But if you're not changing someone's life, why are you here?
If you're a marketer, why did you send that email if you weren't trying to change someone?
And if all you're doing is hustling, you're not making a profit. You're just bothering people.
And so this isn't about figuring out how to be the next Kim Kardashian, because we already have
too many Kardashians. We don't need another one. What this is about is to say, how can I earn the
trust and benefit of the doubt from people and offer them a solution to their problem?
For me, the real tagline is, and create value. Do work that we would miss if you were gone.
That you can't say, you can pick anyone and I'm anyone and hope for very much, because I'll just pick someone else.
And talk to us about how this is actually economically viable, how companies who are leaning into this strategy are actually doing well.
Well, almost every company that leans into this is doing well. This is not about free snacks and singing folk songs around the campfire and letting anyone take whatever day.
they want. This is about being very clear about the promise you are making. One of the things I talk about
in the book is the principle of criticizing the work relentlessly, but never criticizing the worker.
That we don't need dominance in order to do great work, but we do need standards. What are the
standards? What does it mean to make the best pizza in New York City? You're not going to do that
if you act like pizza. You're going to do that if you bring a different kind of case.
and humanity to what you do.
Totally. And of course, what you're saying is also going to make your employees happier,
which is going to lead to much better work and happy customers.
So in your book, you asked 10,000 people, or in your research for your book,
you asked 10,000 people in 90 countries to describe the conditions at the best job they've
ever had. What were some of the top answers that people gave?
What was the best job you ever had?
Me as an entrepreneur, CEO of my company, and this podcast, for sure.
Everyone knows the answer to that question. Everybody. And then I gave people 14 choices as to what made it the best job. Like I got paid a lot. I didn't get fired. I got to travel. No one picked those. Those are what bosses think people want. No one picked those. What they picked was I accomplished more than I thought I could. I worked with people who treated me with respect. And I did work that matters. So if we can build an institution like that, we will be more
proud of our work. And the people who work for us are more likely to bring magic to work, not just
their bodies. And you have a great analogy in your book that describes some of the songs that you lay
out. You talk about the song of increase, the song of safety, the song of significance, and you use honeybees
as an analogy to get your point across. So what can humans learn from honeybees? I love the bees.
I've been obsessed with them for a while. A hive of bees, which is almost entirely,
run by women, by the way. A hive of bees, if it makes it through a long winter, we'll have to make a
decision. And that decision is, do they have enough resources to sing the song of increase? And in that
moment, 12,000 bees will leave the hive in 10 minutes. They will leave behind all the honey,
all the baby bees, a new baby queen. They'll just leave. And they will go swarm to a tree about 100
feet away. To see this, to witness it is an extraordinary thing, this leap. Then they form a tight ball
in that tree and have to huddle together to maintain a body temperature of 98 degrees. Now they only
have three days to find a new place to live. If they don't, they're going to die. And during those three
days, just a few of them, scouts go out and look for the new place, but everyone else is basically
freaking out and hiding out. And we're not bees, but we've been singing the song of safety for too long.
For too long, we've been huddled at home, hoping that everything will get better. But we aren't
easily capable of singing the song of increase either. So what I talk about in the book is the song
of significance. Singing to each other about possibility, about being surprised, about doing things
that might not work, about eliminating false proxies, about deciding we're going to make a change
happen. And we can do that, but first we have to talk about it. And so let's stick on this idea of
safety. What do workers need in terms of feeling safe? And once those needs are,
Matt, what do we want? I think that for too long, at least in this country, we have over-indexed
for, I don't want to get fired. That turnover is a horrible thing. But when I was coming up,
the average person had a job that lasted 20 or 30 years. Now that's insane. No one has a job
that lasts 20 or 30 years. Turnover is a given. If you look at almost anybody on LinkedIn,
you will see that turnover is a good thing, not a bad thing. Safety comes from, are you being
manipulated, criticized, or attacked for who you are, not for the work you do. Safety means being in a
place where it's understood that we tell each other the truth. It's understood that part of what it means
to discover the next thing is to fail on the way. That failure is not a bad thing if we take
responsibility and talk about it. And so when we feel these safety things around our
identity, we are far more likely to sing than if we are constantly on defense because we don't
fit the dominant paradigm.
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Okay, so let's talk about significance. Why do we need significance in our work? And then how do we
create the conditions of significance as a leader or a manager? I think that there's a long history
of people like 10,000 years, not having significance in their work. If you are a hunter or
gatherer, if you're collecting berries or chasing down a buffalo, thank you. You fed the family.
But that wasn't the purpose of your life. But as the years have gone by, A, we spend way more time
at work. In the days of the cavemen, cavemen worked about an hour a day, maybe two. We worked nine
or ten or more. And number two is it's become much more intellectually rigorous and rewarding.
So you're going to spend 90,000 hours at your job before you die.
And if you want to say, well, I'll just get that over with and then I can go home and watch
Netflix, I'm afraid you've given up an enormous portion of your life for no good reason.
And we think about the hive.
The point of a beehive isn't to make honey.
The honey is a byproduct of a healthy hive.
The honey enables the hive.
It's not the point.
And I think we should think the same thing about our jobs.
And then how would you say that managers and leaders can create a culture of significance or
ensure that there's significance in their employees work?
I think it's a trap to wait for your boss to announce this is going to happen.
We can each find significance, whether we're a barista or a surgeon, simply by claiming responsibility,
making things better, giving away credit, doing it again.
what's the smallest single unit of innovation you could bring to your work? The smallest,
not the biggest possible thing that would change everything. If you showed up on your next
podcast and introduced a feature that lasted 30 seconds at the end of the podcast that no one had
ever done on a podcast before, it would be pretty scary. And if it worked, that would be great
because you could do it again. And if it didn't work, you wouldn't have to do it again.
No thing bad would happen. But if we're so indoctrinated into reading the script, we never
experience that feeling. So then the second part is, let's get real or let's not play. Let's talk about it.
Let's have a discussion with coworkers. Let's organize whatever it is, a book group. No one ever got
fired for organizing a book group at work. Organize a book group. Talk to other people,
find their humanity, figure out where possibility lies. Pick up the phone and answer the customer
service calls, even if you're not the customer service person. Do it one day after work for 15 minutes.
hear from customers and learn things you didn't know before. All of these things are possible,
but we've been so indoctrinated into doing as little as possible because the boss keeps taking
from us that we're exhausted and we remain cogs in the system. So I know that one of the key
concepts you talk about in terms of having significance at work is to make sure that employees
have agency and dignity at work. Can you talk to us about why those two things are really important?
Well, because we're humans. Agency is the freedom to make a decision. That that's what we all make
actually. We don't make kettlebells. We don't make chairs. We make decisions. And machines or factories make
the stuff. And dignity is something that human beings crave, but it's very hard to claim it for
yourself. But it's very easy to give it to someone. And what we could do is build an institution that is
functioning at a high level. That is profitable. Whether we're a freelancer with two or three clients
or someone running a big company, where our nature is to engage with other people in this sort of dance.
I remember coming up in my 20s, starting my first companies. It's so easy to just buy the cheapest,
work with the cheapest, be very dictatorial. And you're panicking because you're not making an enormous
amount of profit, it doesn't cost more for the people you work with to have agency. It costs less.
Because when you offer people the chance to contribute, they're so eager to do so that productivity
goes up, not down. I totally agree. So related to this, you talk about this Japanese concept,
Kokoro, I hope I said that right. What is Kokoro and how can we employ it?
It might be pronounced Kokoro, but I have seen different pronunciations.
It's an ideogram from the Chinese, and it's a picture of a house and a heart.
And what it says is that wherever you are in the world, if you can be in a place where your heart is as well, your life is better.
It's a form of love and belonging and activation.
And for too long, we've been confused.
Either we say, don't bring your full self to work because they're going to beat you up.
Or we say, you should be authentic at work, which is selfish.
Because what you really need to be at work is eagerly empathic.
You're not at work to help you when you're dealing with a customer.
You're there to help them.
And so if we can find heart in doing that,
if we can find heart in the connection that we get to make
with our coworkers and our customers, everybody comes out ahead.
So next thing I want to talk about was really interesting to me.
So you debunked the fact that people don't want to work hard these days
because you actually put together a volunteer organization
for the carbon almanac.
And you were able to get a lot of people
to work together for free for this project.
So I would love to understand
what you learned from putting on this project
and how you created this culture of significance
to get the project done.
I love talking about this.
I need to clarify,
I didn't get people to work really hard for free.
I also worked for free, full time, for over a year,
to build something.
And what I did, my contribution,
was to create the conditions
for people to do what they wanted to do all along,
which is connect with other people to work that matters and make a difference.
We had 300 volunteers, now it's 1900 in 40 countries working 24 hours a day around the clock.
We had not one meeting, not one for the entire crew.
It was all built online.
And we beat our deadline.
We wrote a 97,000-word almanac.
We footnoted it.
We illustrated it.
We fact-checked it.
We didn't make one significant error, and it was translated into languages around the world,
including Italian, Korean, and Czech, and Chinese.
And we did all that in just five months.
The way we did it was by following the precepts in this book, page 19 thinking, seeing other people,
offering them dignity, figuring out how are we going to raise our standards in a way that thrills us?
And the output speaks for itself.
doesn't mean people should work for free. That's not what I was implying. We did this for free
so that we could spend every penny we earned to promote the book itself, because that's why we did
the project to change people's minds. But the same thing happens at a community orchestra,
where you've got 100 people who are paying a conductor so that they can perform in an orchestra
like they did in school. Why would someone do that? Some people get paid to play the flute,
but people are paying to do it with passion and love because they can. So,
where we started this conversation a little while ago. It's not a good job because they pay you a lot of
money. It's a good job because you made a difference. It's so true. I have to tell a personal story.
So I, when I first started Young and Profiting Podcast, I had 20 volunteers who used to help me on the show.
And that turned into my company two years later. But for two years, 20 people worked for free for me
because I had no guidelines for them. It was like, what do you want to learn? What do you want to do?
I'll teach you this. Sure, you want to do that. Go ahead and do that.
That makes you happy? Okay, cool. And it was just so flexible and everybody worked together and still
some of the same people work with me. But as soon as we were a profit generating company,
the whole culture changed. And we're still a great culture, but it's just different because
people can't do exactly what they want to do. Or now that I read your book, I'm going to try to
think about that a little bit differently. But it's just so interesting how well things ran for
really long time when nobody was getting paid. Yeah. And one of the things I want to highlight is,
if you're doing productive work in a team, nobody gets to do exactly what they wanted to. That's not
what's on offer. What's on offer is helping people choose what they want to do based on what needs
to be done. So as we were exploring the stuff in the Carbon Almanac, we learned a lot about
climate. But that doesn't mean the readers knew what we knew. So we had to say, well,
based on the person we're imagining is going to read this, what needs to be on page 25.
You might not feel like writing what's on page 25, but you do feel like making the change we
seek to make. So knowing that there is a hole on page 25, if you enjoy that thing, go do it.
The difference in surfing and golf is really important. Most profit-making institutions think
they're playing golf. And golf is, how do I beat the other person by a half a percent? And if they
want to change the golf course. They have to have a meeting, and it's a big deal to move the
little cup by a foot. Whereas in surfing, every wave is different. And that's the point. There's no
bad oceans. There's just surfers who don't know how to surf what's right in front of them.
And so a surfing champion actually built a surf farm in California on an abandoned farm,
and he installed train tracks and a full-size locomotive with a snowplow.
in front of it. Then he filled it with two feet of water. So the snowplow comes down and makes a giant
wave and you can surf the same wave over and over again because that was going to be the future
of surfing. You don't hear about that place very much because surfers like the idea that they don't
get to pick the wave. They just have to surf it as well as they can. And that's sort of also why
machines and AI aren't going to necessarily take over every single job, right? They're going to
take over all the jobs where people have been trying to fit in. That if you look, 80% of the stuff
that's on social media could have been written by anybody. So now it will be written by
anybody, a computer. Whereas if you are distinctive in your point of view and are connected in a way
that shifts over time, and AI can't do that. Because AIs only look backwards. And what we need
to do is look forward. So you alluded to this concept of the page 19.
principle that helped you guys get a lot done for creating this almanac. How did that principle help
you guys overcome overwhelm and perfectionism? So on the third or fourth week, a few of us were talking,
and I said, well, you know, this almanac has to have page 19. But there's not one person in the
entire community who knows everything they need to know to make page 19 happen. There's not one person
who can write it, edit it, footnote it, copy edit it, illustrate it, chart it, and finish it. But there will be a
page 19. So how are we're going to get from where we are to where we need to go? And the answer is
page 19 thinking, which says, if you can write a paragraph of it, please do, and then share it
with us. And if you can make that paragraph better, please do. And if you can footnote that paragraph,
please do. And so the idea of here, I made this, doesn't mean here. This is done and it is perfect.
It's here, can you please improve this? When you improve it, I won't feel bad. I'll feel good,
because that's what we do around here.
And too often in big and small companies, the opposite is true.
We're afraid to show our work.
And if we do show our work and so it improves it, we feel badly.
And that's because we've been indoctrinated to feel that way.
So I'm going to switch gears a little bit here, and let's talk about the four kinds of work.
So in your book, you have a two-by-two grid with stakes and trust as the two axes.
I'd love to understand these four kinds of work and why a significant organization is one with
high trust and high stakes. Okay, so there are stakes, high stakes and low stakes. It is low stakes
to go to the local coffee shop for your morning coffee. If they're closed, you can get it at the
coffee shop next door. If the coffee's not that good, it's fine. But then there's high stakes work,
like open heart surgery or a jazz quartet playing at Carnegie Hall and recording a live album. It's
pretty easy to understand there's
high stakes and low stakes. And then there's high trust and low trust.
Low trust work is surveillance. So if you're
taking an airplane, you know that nobody in the entire
thing got to make stuff up as they went along. The pilot, the baggage
handlers, the schedulers, everyone had to do it based on how it has
been done before. And you like that because planes don't crash.
And it's quite likely you're going to get to where you're going.
That is high stakes, low trust. And it enables our
world to work because there's lots of transactions we have where we can't be sure and we don't get a
do-over. But you don't have to work at an airline. I hope you don't. Because airline employee satisfaction
is very low. People are mistreated by their bosses and by their customers. Not fun. On the other hand,
when a jazz quartet is trading fours on stage at Carnegie Hall with people they know and respect and
the bass player throws a riff to the trumpet player, that's magic. That is high. That is high.
high trust, high stakes. Or if a barista greets you, even though it's not in the manual,
smiles at you, says, hallo, welcome back. I hope you had a good trip this weekend.
That was worth more than the cost of the coffee. And it was worth more to you and to the
barista because they got to do high trust work even though the stakes were low. And so what we
seek when we are a customer with a choice and what we seek when we're looking where to work
is high trust work, and maybe high stakes, maybe not.
That's up to us.
But if you're under surveillance, you don't have any agency,
and you're unlikely to find joy or growth at work.
I love that.
So one of the biggest ways to create a significant organization
is to remember that humans are not a resource.
Can you talk to us about the concept of human resources
and why it's flawed and outdated?
So you've heard the phrase,
he was jerking me around.
Yes.
That came from the assembly line in 1920. Someone visited the Ford plant and saw the workers being jerked around like they were strings, marionettes with strings, this way, that way, this way, that way. And someone was a stopwatch measuring every motion. Because if you could get the human to act like a machine, you could make more money. And that's when the phrase human resources was born. Because the job of the boss is to get the person to be a reliable machine.
And just like the honey isn't the point of the hive, humans are not a resource.
Humans are the point.
Humans are why we are here.
And if we can make productivity go up, that's great.
If we can use machines and outsourcing AI, that's great.
But sooner or later, the reason we are here is to dance with other humans.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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And as we start to close out this interview, Seth,
I'd love to understand from you your best advice to leaders and managers
who want to create a culture of significance in their organization.
What should they do next as an actionable step?
Other than read your book, of course.
I would say the most important first step is to realize that you're either,
in any given moment a leader or a manager. They are two different jobs. Managers have a spot in the hierarchy.
They have power and authority and they move ahead by getting people to do what they say. Leaders do something
voluntary and optional. They explore what might not work. They get voluntary cooperation. You can be a
leader with no employees. That person who organized the book group at work, they're being a leader in that
moment. And then the second part of it is once you decide to lead, the work is to talk about it.
What does it mean to work here? What is it like around here? How do we have meetings? Why are we having
meetings? What are we doing where we criticize the worker when we really should be criticizing the work?
What are we measuring? Who are we here to change? My book has more than 150 questions in it because
we're not talking about it. And the reason it's worth you and I talking in this setting is not
because I like hearing the sound of my own voice. I really don't. It's because we are modeling
something that should happen in every breakroom, in every review session, with every boss,
at every board of directors meeting, which is, why are we even here? The goal of a company
should not be to maximize its short-term profit. The goal of a company is to create the conditions
for better. And that means better for the planet, better for their employees, better for their
customers. If you do those things, the profits will take care of themselves. There is a company
that you talk about in your book that is employing this strategy really well. It's called
Arvind, I care. So I'd love to understand what they're doing and how we can learn from them.
So if I add up the total population of New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, that's how many people
Aravind has restored eyesight to. Wow. They are a hospital chain in India that does cornea
replacement and operations. And if you go there, these are numbers a little old, but pretty close.
If you go there, you have a choice. It's either $130 or it's free. Up to you. You get exactly the same
surgery either way. The only difference is how nice the recovery room is. Now, you take a look at what
is it like to open an eye hospital. The thing you should be the most afraid of is that you will make
someone's eyes worse. And the way that that could happen is with an infection. Well, the rate of
infection on the eye surgery at Aravind is less than the infection you would get rate in London.
So they have rigor. They have high standards. They are operating at such a high level that if you go to an
ophthalmologists in the United States, it's likely they studied at Arvin in India. At the same time, the nurses,
the staff, they have agency. Their job is to make that patient feel like they're the only patient.
Their job is to find new ways to create possibility. So they are balancing high standards,
and humanity and the output is that they have restored the site of more people than any institution
in the history of the world. And they do that every single day, often for free. So this is doable.
It's not just doable in Chicago or New York. It's doable in small villages. It's doable for big
companies and little ones if we decide it's important. And I think the big thing with this
organization, right, is that they don't have like really strict rules from my understanding.
They're all acting in their best judgment and getting the job done.
So it's high trust, high stakes, which is pretty unusual, right?
Yes, but I have to balance this with, except for that 20 minutes of the actual surgery.
Then the standards are insanely rigorous because the only way to reliably do this at high output
is to learn from the people who came before you.
So if you have an improvement, they add it to the system.
But the system is a system, and they relentlessly criticize the system. They keep improving the system. But if you are doing eye surgery at Aravind, you do not get to do it your way. You must do it their way. Okay, one last question on the road to significance. And this is the idea of avoid false proxies. How can we avoid the trap of measuring the easy measurements and instead focus on measuring the health and output of our culture?
I'm really glad we're including this. This is the cause of so many of the problems in our culture.
You know, we need proxies. You're not allowed to read a book before you buy it. And you're not allowed
to taste the ketchup in the store before you take it home. So you have to judge a book by its cover.
You have to judge the bottle by the label. Proxies are important. Well, if we were hiring folks to work
in a factory with heavily manual labor, we would hire people who were strong. And that's an easy
thing to measure and an accurate proxy. But when we started working in the office, we have
no clue. So what you know what we did? We started hiring people who looked like us. We instigated all
sorts of prejudices. We brought misogyny to the table. We gave attractive people the benefit of the
doubt. We reinforced caste systems. We discriminated against people with disabilities that were totally
unrelated. We rewarded people who went to a famous college or didn't have a typo on their resume.
None of which has to do with your actual job. And just because you're good at interviewing,
doesn't mean you're good at your job. And then add to that, once you have your job, we're measuring
easy things as opposed to the things that the customers actually care about. So how long,
if you work in the call center, how fast did you get that person off the phone? Well, that's a proxy
for one thing, but it's not a proxy for customer service. Customer services, did you delight this person?
The end. That's what you were supposed to do. We need, now that we have all this surveillance,
now that we have all these measures to ignore the easy ones and focus on the important one.
Because, yes, some people perform better than others.
We should find out who those people are and learn from them, not get confused by plugging
into old-fashioned cultural tropes.
I totally agree on that.
So I asked you a question about leaders and managers, Seth, but I haven't asked you about
what employees, people who are in the corporate world, I have a lot of listeners.
what can they do to contribute to this
and make sure that they're in a workplace
that has significance,
that gives them dignity, agency, and so on?
Yeah, well, this is the whole point.
I could have written a blog post
which would have reached far more people
than writing a book.
I don't write a book because I want to chop down trees.
I write a book because it's a way to have a conversation.
You don't have to have your boss tell you
it's a significant organization for you to make it one.
That in five minutes a day or 10 minutes a day
or 15 minutes a day, you have enough agency to do something that matters to someone.
And if you take responsibility for that, give away credit, take responsibility, do it again,
do it again, then they're going to start asking you to do it. And I have worked at some big
companies and some little ones, and I have seen millions of people at work. And people are happy
or unhappy in the same job because they have chosen to bring significance there. And yes,
bosses are going to figure this out. And one way is you can leave a copy of this book on the desk.
But what's really going to happen is that workers are going to show up and make things better
by making better things and working with people they care about. And that is already changing
our world. Thank you, Seth, so much for your time. The last question I ask, all my guests,
is what is your secret to profiting in life? I would say my secret is being really clear about
what profit means. And if you can leave things better than you found them, you have created a
profit. I love that. And where can our listeners learn more about you and everything that you do?
If you go to Seths.com blog slash song, you will find videos and links about the new book.
And it's shtz.com. There's 8,000 free blog posts. That should keep you busy for a little while.
Amazing. Thank you so much. Thank you. What a pleasure.
Ladies and gentlemen, Seth Godin on Yap for round two, always a blessing to have him on the show.
And I really love this conversation because it was important for leaders and employees alike.
The nature of work is changing.
For a long time, we measured productivity by how much stuff we could produce and how cheaply we could produce it.
We were once the machines, but now we own the machines.
So we need to find new ways to measure our human product.
productivity. Seth argues the goal of work is no longer to maximize short-term profits as it was
back in the industrial revolution. Work now, that's actually scaling and creating value,
is human work. When we treat each other with respect and dignity and build something new,
this is what it means to sing the song of significance. We need to find the humanity in our work.
Instead of racing to the bottom, working more hours, making things faster and cheaper,
competing against other companies and AI, Seth argues we should race to the top and try to be
one of one. He also believes that future jobs are going to require a lot of problem solving.
Technology has and will take over more and more jobs, whether that's factory jobs or selling
insurance. But this doesn't mean you have to become an entrepreneur. Seth says
you need to work with people who are aligned in that human activity,
creating value by doing something that might not work.
Leading instead of managing, creating possibility instead of taking it away.
His page 19 principle really sums up this idea nicely.
300 people and 40 countries showed up to build the carbon almanac with Seth Godin.
No one knew how to write, edit, fact check, or illustrate page 19 of the almanac alone,
but it needed to be done.
So each page was started and then improved and polished by more than a dozen people.
The page 19 metaphor is the antidote to paralysis, overwhelm, and perfection.
It's not about getting it right the first time.
It's about saying, here, I made this.
Team, please make it better.
It's about creating a process and then giving people permission to take action and advance a group's goal.
It's about criticizing the work relentlessly to make it better,
but never criticizing the worker.
Today, nearly everything is built this way, not just almanacs.
No one built Nike or Google from a singular plan.
No one builds great organizations alone.
And I'll leave you with this young improfitors.
Seth asked 10,000 people in 90 countries
to describe the conditions at the best job they've ever had.
And the top answers were,
I surprised myself with what I could accomplish.
I could work independently.
the team built something important, people treated me with respect.
So like Seth said in our conversation today, it's great to be young, it's fine to be
profiting, but the real goal is to create value and to do work that others will miss if
you're gone.
Thanks for listening to this episode of Young and Profiting Podcast.
If you listen, learned, and profited from this episode, please thank us by sharing a five-star
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platform. If you like watching your podcast videos, you can find us on YouTube. Every single episode
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aka the podcast princess, signing off.
