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Margaret Heffernan [1955-0] American
Rank: 102
Businesswoman, Author


Margaret Heffernan is an international businesswoman, author, interviewer, and TED speaker. She is currently settled in the UK in the city of Bath and is a part-time lecturer at the School of Management of the University of Bath.

Leadership, Computers, Courage, Design, Father's Day, Good, Medical, Power, Sad, Science, Travel, Trust

QuoteTagsRank
For good ideas and true innovation, you need human interaction, conflict, argument, debate. Good
101
I hate people walking down the street listening to the soundtrack of their lives which responds to them but not their setting. I hate the overspill of sound which metro and subway riders are oblivious to because they notice no one and nothing around them.
102
Many CEOs and leaders think that silence is indeed golden, that consensus is bliss. It is - sometimes. But more often what it signifies is that there are no respected processes for surfacing concerns and dissent.
103
When you use words loosely, without care and consideration, you erode trust in yourself and in what you're saying. When you squander words, you diminish your power. Power, Trust
104
Those in powerless positions aren't about to complain about bullying bosses, abusive supervisors or corrupt co-workers. There is no safe way to do so and no process that promises redress.
105
The cell phone has become the adult's transitional object, replacing the toddler's teddy bear for comfort and a sense of belonging.
106
Clearing your head of distractions in order to notice and understand the people you are with can feel inefficient - there are so many other people and issues to think about. But being present makes you effective.
107
Words are how people think. When you misuse words, you diminish your ability to think clearly and truthfully.
108
In our house, Mother's Day is every day. Father's Day, too. In our house, parents count. They do important work and that work matters. One day just doesn't cut for us. Father's Day
109
Once you have power, you are inevitably surrounded by people who have their own agendas and will tell you whatever advances them.
110
Noise is a buffer, more effective than cubicles or booth walls.
111
The single hardest part of leading any organization is knowing what is going on. There's too much noise in the system, too much complexity: you absolutely depend on people speaking up and raising concerns.
112
Research shows that when we read words on paper, it reduces our stress levels by nearly 70 percent. We also read more carefully than on tablets or laptops.
113
The best remote companies I've seen do almost everything online, via email and telephone. But they also get together face to face on a regular basis.
114
Business is not a science; it is not susceptible to experiments that can be controlled and replicated. Everything in business is too unpredictable for that - every business, employee, product, market is different and keeps changing. Science
115
The truth won't set us free - until we develop the skills and the habit and the talent and the moral courage to use it. Courage
116
It is nobody's right to be waited on and nobody's fate to do the waiting.
117
A great deal of creativity is about pattern recognition, and what you need to discern patterns is tons of data. Your mind collects that data by taking note of random details and anomalies easily seen every day: quirks and changes that, eventually, add up to insights.
118
Very few entrepreneurs start their business on the back of market research. Instead, they have tremendous zeitgeist, honed by paying attention to where they are.
119
I'm all for ambition and stretch goals. I set them for myself. But leadership isn't the same as cheerleading. Believing in something is a necessary but absolutely insufficient condition for making it come true. Leadership
120
Building businesses takes tremendous stamina, and success isn't achieved without it.
121
Everyone I know feels harassed by email which has invaded their waking and sleeping hours.
122
The biggest catastrophes that we've witnessed rarely come from information that is secret or hidden. It comes from information that is freely available and out there, but that we are willfully blind to.
123
All businesses and jobs depend on a vast number of people, often unnoticed and unthanked, without which nothing really gets done. They are all human and deserve respect and gratitude.
124
A great advantage of a large corporation is supposed to be the large pool of talent in which its leaders can find and groom high achievers and successors.
125
British innovation in design, in the creative arts, in engineering and manufacturing is world class. Design
126
Most executives I know are so action-oriented, or action-addicted, that time for reflection is the first casualty of their success.
201
I haven't always hated McDonald's. When my kids were little and I lived in the U.S., they were as susceptible as anyone to Happy Meals and tatty toys that subsequently littered our sitting room.
202
How can any company know if its processes, products, people are safe? Only if everyone is watching and telling the truth. The first part can be assumed; the second cannot.
203
I regularly take my entrepreneurship students out walking because I want to get them in the habit of noticing and thinking about what they notice. They have to leave their phones behind to learn the basic lesson: Be where you are.
204
If the company depends entirely on you - your creativity, ingenuity, inspiration, salesmanship or charisma - nobody will want to buy it. The risk and the dependency are too great.
205
Phones and soundtracks and Muzak and fountains replace genuine and unpredictable human contact with a seamless soundtrack from a bad movie and a cliche that makes us believe we must all be happy.
206
I don't mind if the couple next to me is tense or the kids are whiny. I'd even be happy to hear an honest argument, evidence of thinking. I'd like to know these teeth-perfect families don't just buy each other stuff but just occasionally can talk to one another.
207
The medical profession is - and knows itself to be - endemically conservative and conformist. Medical
208
The vast literature concerning whistleblowers shows that, far from weird extremists, they are really quite ordinary people: male and female, young and old, junior and senior, no more nerdy or obsessive than most hard workers.
209
One of the sad truths about leadership is that, the higher up the ladder you travel, the less you know. Leadership, Sad, Travel
210
Everywhere I look, there are ads marking Mother's Day. Mostly they conform to stereotype: flowers, jewelry, perfume. Not a lot of books. Not many computers. Few tools. Little that's useful. Computers
211
As a mother, I work hard every day and I expect that work to be recognized and appreciated. Because I work for and with human beings, sometimes they're grateful and sometimes they aren't.
212
Making those around you feel invisible is the opposite of leadership. Leadership
213
Most people have their best ideas when they take their minds away from problems they're trying to solve.
214
On overnight flights, I have trained myself to get to sleep almost instantly after takeoff. I always listen to the same audiobook on my iPod so my brain knows, regardless of time zone, that that voice means it's time for bed.
215
Huge open source organizations like Red Hat and Mozilla manage the collaboration of hundreds of people who don't know one another and have spent no time hanging around the water cooler.
216
Speaking is what most people work on. They forget the thinking and the breathing and instead try to occupy space with sound.
217
Companies are bought for their revenue, customer base, technology, or people. A few great companies offer all of these, but any valuable business offers one.
218
The healthiest companies are always characterized by organic talent development.
219
In business, staying focused requires that you turn most opportunities down.
220
Making a company fit to sell may be the only way to ensure you never need a buyer.
221
If we aren't going to be afraid of conflict, we have to see it as thinking.
222
Britain is famous for being great at inventing and poor at commercializing.
223
Every organization has issues and concerns which are known about by many people who choose to remain silent.
224
If I have to spend a lot of time on planes, I try to think of this as time off. In certain ways, it's more restful than home: no Internet, no phones, no interruptions.
225
I don't think a true company - one that builds sustainable value - can ever only exist online or remotely.
226
What do you want your business to do? Make money, of course. To pay for people and supplies, to be able to grow.
301
Customers who have to come back and spend, or customers who just don't want the hassle of leaving - those are the ones who are most worth attracting.
302

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