子どもたちの夢を実現するために キッズコンパス

子どもたちが持っている夢を叶えるため、小学校から実社会へ巣立つまでの学生生活を保護者とともに応援します。

rnesto Sirolli: Want to help someone? Shut up and listen!

2014-02-19 10:26:04 | 高等教育

rnesto Sirolli: Want to help someone? Shut up and listen!


Everything I do, and everything I do professionally – my life – has been shaped by seven years of work as a young man in Africa. From 1971 to 1977 – I look young, but I'm not – I worked in Zambia, Kenya, Ivory Coast, Algeria, Somalia, in projects of technical cooperation with African countries. 

I worked for an Italian NGO, and every single project that we set up in Africa failed. And I was distraught. I thought, age 21, that we Italians were good people and we were doing good work in Africa. Instead, everything we touched we killed. 

Our first project, the one that has inspired my first book, Ripples from the Zambezi, was a project where we Italians decided to teach Zambian people how to grow food. So we arrived there with Italian seeds in southern Zambia, in this absolutely magnificent valley, going down to the Zambezi River, and we taught the local people how to grow Italian tomatoes and zucchini and... And, of course, the local people had absolutely no interest in doing that. So we paid them to come and work, and sometimes they would show up. And we were amazed that the local people, in such a fertile valley, would not have any agriculture. And... but instead of asking them how come they were not growing anything, we simply said, “Thank God we're here – just in the nick of time to save the Zambian people from starvation.” And, of course, everything in Africa grew beautifully. We had these magnificent tomatoes. In Italy, a tomato would grow to this size. In Zambia, to this size. And we could not believe, and we were telling the Zambians, “Look how easy agriculture is.” When the tomatoes were nice and ripe and red, overnight some 200 hippos came out of the... from the river and they ate everything. And we said to the Zambians, “My God, the hippos!” 
And the Zambians said, “Yes, that's why we have no agriculture here.”
“Why didn't you tell us?”
“You never asked.”
I thought it was only us Italians blundering around Africa, but then I saw what the Americans were doing, what the English were doing, what the French were doing. And after seeing what they were doing, I became quite proud of our project in Zambia, because, you see, at least we fed the hippos. 

You should see the rubbish. You should see the rubbish that we have bestowed on unsuspecting African people. You want to read the book, read Dead Aid, by Dambisa Moyo, Zambian woman economist. The book was published in 2009. We Western donor countries have given the African continent two trillion dollars American in the last 50 years. I'm not going to tell you the damage that that money has done. Just go and read her book. Read it from an African woman, the damage that we have done. 

We Western people are imperialist, colonialist, and missionaries. And there are only two ways we deal with people: we either patronize them or we are paternalistic. The two words come from the Latin root “pater,” which means “father,” but they mean two different things. Paternalistic – I treat anybody from a different culture as if they were my children. “I love you so much.” Patronizing – I treat everybody from another culture as if they were my servants. That's why the white people in Africa are called “bwana,” boss. 

I was given a slap in the face reading a book, Small Is Beautiful, written by Schumacher, who said, above all in economic development, if people do not wish to be helped, leave them alone. This should be the first principle of aid. The first principle of aid is respect. 

This morning, the gentleman who opened this conference laid a stick on the floor and said, “Can we... can you imagine a city that is not neocolonial?” 

I decided when I was 27 years old to only respond to people, and I invented a system called Enterprise Facilitation, where you never initiate anything, you never motivate anybody, but you become a servant of the local passion, the servant of local people who have a dream to become a better person. So what you do – you shut up, you never arrive in a community with any ideas, and you sit with the local people. We don't work from offices. We meet at the cafe. We meet at the pub. We have zero infrastructure. And what we do – we become friends, and we find out what that person wants to do. The most important thing is passion. You can give somebody an idea; if that person doesn't want to do it, what are you going to do? The passion that the person has for her own growth is the most important thing. The passion that that man has for his own personal growth is the most important thing. And then we help them to go and find the knowledge, because nobody in the world can succeed alone. The person with the idea may not have the knowledge, but the knowledge is available. 

So, years and years ago, I had this idea: Why don't we, for once, instead of arriving in the community to tell people what to do, why don't... for once, listen to them? But not in community meetings. Let me tell you a secret. There is a problem with community meetings. Entrepreneurs never come. And they never tell you at the... in a public meeting what they want to do with their own money, what opportunity they have identified. So planning has this blind spot. The smartest people in your community you don't even know, because they don't come to your public meetings. 

What we do – we work one-on-one. And to work one-on-one, you have to create a social infrastructure that doesn't exist. You have to create a new profession. The profession is the family doctor of enterprise, the family doctor of business, who sits with you in your house, at your kitchen table, at the cafe, and helps you find the resources to transform your passion into a way to make a living. 

I started this as a tryout in Esperance, in Western Australia. I was doing a PhD at the time, trying to go away from this patronizing bullshit that we arrive and tell you what to do. And so what I did in Esperance that first year was to just walk the streets. And in the... in three days, I had my first client. And I helped this first guy who was smoking fish from a garage, was a Maori guy. And I helped him to sell to the restaurant in Perth, to get organized. And then the fishermen came to me to say, “You the guy who helped Maori? Can you help us?” And I helped these five fishermen to work together and get this beautiful tuna not to the cannery in Albany for 60 cents a kilo, but we found a way to take the fish for sushi to Japan for 15 dollars a kilo. And the farmers came to talk to me, said, “Hey, you helped them. Can you help us?”
In a year, I had 27 projects going on. And the government came to see me to say, “How can you do that? How can you do...?”
And I said, “I do something very, very, very difficult. I shut up and listen to them.”
So... So the government says, “Do it again.” 

We've done it in 300 communities around the world. We have helped to start 40,000 businesses. There is a new generation of entrepreneurs who are dying of solitude. 

Peter Drucker, one of the greatest management consultants in history, died aged 96 a few years ago. Peter Drucker was a professor of philosophy before becoming involved in business, and this is what Peter Drucker says: “Planning is actually incompatible with an entrepreneurial society and economy. Planning is the kiss of death of entrepreneurship.” 

So now you're rebuilding Christchurch without knowing what the smartest people in Christchurch want to do with their own money and their own energy. You have to learn how to get these people to come and talk to you. You have to offer them confidentiality, privacy, you have to be fantastic at helping them, and then they will come, and they will come in droves. In a community of 10,000 people, we get 200 clients. Can you imagine, in a community of 400,000 people, the intelligence and the passion? Which presentation have you applauded the most this morning? Local, passionate people – that's who you have applauded. 

So what I'm saying is that entrepreneurship is where it's at. We are at the end of the first industrial revolution – non-renewable fossil fuels, manufacturing – and all of a sudden, we have systems which are not sustainable. The internal combustion engine is not sustainable. Freon way of maintaining things is not sustainable. What we have to look at is at how we feed, cure, educate, transport, communicate for seven billion people in a sustainable way. The technologies do not exist to do that. Who is going to invent the technology for the green revolution? Universities? Forget about it! Government? Forget about it! It will be entrepreneurs, and they're doing it now. 

There's a lovely story that I read in a futurist magazine many, many years ago. There was a group of experts who were invited to discuss the future of the city of New York in 1860. And in 1860, this group of people came together, and they all speculated about what would happen to the city of New York in 100 years, and the conclusion was unanimous: the city of New York would not exist in 100 years. Why? Because they looked at the curve and said, if the population keeps growing at this rate, to move the population of New York around, they would have needed six million horses, and the manure created by six million horses would be impossible to deal with. There was... already drowning in manure. So 1860, they are seeing this dirty technology that is going to choke the life out of New York. 

So what happens? In 40 years' time, in the year 1900, in the United States of America, there were 1,001 car manufacturing companies – 1,001. The idea of finding a different technology had absolutely taken over, and there were tiny, tiny, little factories in backwaters. Dearborn, Michigan. Henry Ford. 

However, there is a secret to work with entrepreneurs. First, you have to offer them confidentiality. Otherwise they don't come and talk to you. Then you have to talk... offer them absolute, dedicated, passionate service to them. And then you have to tell them the truth about entrepreneurship. The smallest company, the biggest company, has to be capable of doing three things beautifully: the product that you want to sell has to be fantastic, you have to have fantastic marketing, and you have to have tremendous financial management. Guess what. We have never met a single human being in the world who can make it, sell it, and look after the money. It doesn't exist. This person has never been born. We've done the research, and we have looked at the 100 iconic companies of the world – Carnegie, Westinghouse, Edison, Ford, all the new companies, Google, Yahoo. There's only one thing that all these successful companies in the world have in common, only one: none were started by one person. 

Now, we teach entrepreneurship to 16[-year-olds] in Northumberland, and we start the class by giving them the first two pages of Richard Branson's autobiography, and the task of the 16[-year-olds] is to underline, in the first two pages of Richard Branson's autobiography, how many times Richard uses the word “I” and how many times he uses the word “we.” Never the word “I,” and the word “we” 32 times. He wasn't alone when he started. Nobody started a company alone. No one. 

So we can create the community where we have facilitators who come from a small-business background sitting in cafes, in bars, and your dedicated buddies who will do to you what somebody did for this gentleman who talks about this epic, somebody who will say to you, “What do you need? What can you do? Can you make it? Okay, can you sell it? Can you look after the money?”
“Oh, no, I cannot do this.”
“Would you like me to find you somebody?”
We activate communities. We have groups of volunteers supporting the Enterprise Facilitator to help you to find resources and people. And we have discovered that the miracle of the intelligence of local people is such that you can change the culture and the economy of this community just by capturing the passion, the energy and imagination of your own people. 

Thank you. 


Want to help someone? Shut up and listen! 人を助けたい? なら 黙って話を聞け!

2014-02-19 09:35:20 | 高等教育

優秀なデザイナーは、「みんなのアイデアを聞いて、助ける」

アルネスト・シローリは、開発援助の専門家です。彼は「地元の人たち自身が何をしたいか理解して、それをサポートする」といってますが、これは結構大きな流れです。開発援助だけではなく、世の中全体も、その方向に動いていると思います。

僕から見れば、彼はとても優秀なデザイナーです。デザインというと、絵を描いたりすることをイメージするかもしれないですが、最近は、デザインという言葉はもっと広い意味で使われています。たとえば、環境のニーズを理解して、そのニーズによって何かをつくることもデザインです。

そのことを表すのにuser-centric designという言葉が使われます。スティーブ・ジョブズは、マッキントッシュやアップルをつくったとき、ユーザーのことをとても意識していました。エンジニアが中心ではなく、使う人を中心にモノをつくる。それがuser-centric designです。

MITメディアラボ所長 伊藤穰一

で、その次の段階には、participatory designがあります。ネットでは最近、洋服や靴を自分でカスタマイズして、自分に合った組み合わせを注文できますが、これがparticipatory designです。ユーザーがデザインに参加しています。

そして最近、個人的にとても注目していて、世の中の大きな流れにもなっているのが、co-designです。co-designでは、ユーザー自身がデザイナーになります。アルネスト・シローリはプレゼンテーションで、「村に行って、そこに自分のアイデアを持ち込む」のではなく、「みんなのアイデアを聞いて、助ける」という話をしていました。そのやり方こそ、co-designの、とてもよい例だといえるでしょう。

 

起業家精神を育む(9)

2014-02-13 23:40:00 | 高等教育

 リーダー経験は早期から 早稲田大学教授 東出浩教

 企業において新製品の発売や新規事業のスタートを成功させ、顧客に価値を届けるには「チャンピオン」と呼ばれるリーダーが欠かせない。英米ではものづくりで活躍する「プロダクトチャンピオン」の需要が高い。

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 チャンピオンの仕事の第1段階は、社内で新たな製品やプロジェクトのアイデアを見いだすことだ。このときチャンピオンは企業内起業家(イントラプルナー)だ。第2段階ではアイデアを絞り込み、ビジネスプランを作る。第3段階で必要な人材や資金を調達。第4段階で会社の正式な事業になるまで指導する。この過程で社内の反対勢力からプロジェクトを守ることも大事な任務だ。

 職務範囲を超え、非公式な活動もしながらプロジェクトを形にする。

 やや古いが、1974年に米航空宇宙局(NASA)に対する米国のアロック・チャクラバルティの調査では、チャンピオンが存在したプロジェクトの大半が成功。ところが、存在しなかった場合は大部分が「さほど成功しなかった」だった。

 英米ではビジネスプランを作成するまでは課長を目指す30歳代がチャンピオンのイメージだ。人材や資金を調達する40歳代後半以降の幹部クラスはエグゼクティブチャンピオンとも呼ばれる。

 私の研究室に在籍した古村修平氏と私の共同研究(2012年)によれば、日本企業では実績と人脈を積み上げた40歳代のベテランが、チャンピオンの様々な役割を1人でこなす例が多い。企業がチャンピオンを育てるには、20歳代後半にはリーダシップ経験を積ませ始めなければならない。


大学でbe動詞教える授業、文科省が改善要求

2014-02-12 22:32:17 | 高等教育

 文部科学省は12日、新設の大学や学部などの運営状況を調べた2013年度の調査結果を発表した。

 中学校レベルの英語の授業で単位認定を行っていたり、教員数が大学設置基準を満たしていなかったりした266校に改善を要求した。

 調査は、卒業生がまだ出ていない新設の大学や短大、大学院を中心に、全国528校が対象。学生数が定員と大幅に異なったり、定年に達した教員を雇い続けたりする事例が目立ったほか、ヤマザキ学園大(東京都)では、必修科目の英語で、be動詞の使い方などを教える授業が行われており、同省は大学教育にふさわしい水準に改めるよう求めた。

 仙台青葉学院短大(仙台市)では、新設の学科で専任教員の7割以上が大卒や専門学校卒の資格しかなく、教育を行う体制が不十分とされた。聖隷クリストファー大(浜松市)では、新設の学科で大学設置基準上8人必要な専任教員が、調査時に6人しかいなかった。中部大(愛知県)の新設学科でも、設置基準上、教授4人が必要だが、2人しかいない時期があり、現在も3人にとどまっている。

(2014年2月12日21時49分  読売新聞)

起業家精神を育む(3)

2014-02-12 13:59:49 | 高等教育

「幸せ」が企業の革新を促す 早稲田大学教授 東出浩教

 起業家精神と創造力の大きさは切り離せない。同時に幸福感と創造力にも密接な関係がある。

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 私が社会学や心理学の研究を基に、幸福感の好影響をまとめた図を掲げた。違いを認めあう仲間たちが顧客のために創造的に考え、行動する機会や場面を共有することが、起業家的な社風を持つ企業の特徴だ。これに近いユニークな会社が、浄水器レンタルなどを手がけるジャスト(さいたま市)である。商品での差別化は困難なのに、長く増益基調を続ける。

 ジャストは未上場だが、全従業員が株主だ。代表取締役の本多均氏は従業員がいつでも同社の株式を、純資産を基準とした株価で売買できる仕組みを導入したからだ。

 本多氏は「経営の目的は従業員を幸せにすること」と公言する。業務は経営陣と従業員が幸福を「共創」する手段だ。従業員の不満は除く。すべての従業員は株主の立場で、顧客にとっての価値とは何かを考える。

 従業員は起業家と同様に目的を持ち、自分で考えて実行すれば達成できるという意識を持つ。達成は自分の糧だと考えるのだ。ここには成功する起業家を語るうえで欠かせない経営学の「コグニティブセオリー(認知理論)」の本質がある。

 ジャストの経営情報は株主総会を通じ、主な株主である従業員に開示される。革新を促すのに有効な経営思想「オープン・ブック・マネジメント」が先取りされた好例でもある。この思想の狙いは経営指標の公開、権限委譲、成功報酬などによって従業員の自律的な行動を促し、企業活動を活性化することなのだ。