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Sisällön tarjoaa Mbaacha and Della Mbaacha. Mbaacha and Della Mbaacha tai sen podcast-alustan kumppani lataa ja toimittaa kaiken podcast-sisällön, mukaan lukien jaksot, grafiikat ja podcast-kuvaukset. Jos uskot jonkun käyttävän tekijänoikeudella suojattua teostasi ilman lupaasi, voit seurata tässä https://fi.player.fm/legal kuvattua prosessia.
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HR is no longer just about managing people—it’s about shaping the future of work. Jens Baier, BCG’s HR transformation expert, discusses how AI and shifting employee expectations are forcing companies to rethink talent strategies. From re-recruiting to upskilling employees, HR must adapt to a rapidly changing landscape. Learn More: Jens Baier: https://on.bcg.com/41ca7Gv BCG on People Strategy: https://on.bcg.com/3QtAjro Decoding Global Talent: https://on.bcg.com/4gUC4IT…
We over indulge🦀. (Today I Learned #137)
Manage episode 415177677 series 1912462
Sisällön tarjoaa Mbaacha and Della Mbaacha. Mbaacha and Della Mbaacha tai sen podcast-alustan kumppani lataa ja toimittaa kaiken podcast-sisällön, mukaan lukien jaksot, grafiikat ja podcast-kuvaukset. Jos uskot jonkun käyttävän tekijänoikeudella suojattua teostasi ilman lupaasi, voit seurata tässä https://fi.player.fm/legal kuvattua prosessia.
Today I learned we over indulge. I started my job at this restaurant around my house. They asked me to be one of the servers. So there I was behind trays of hot steaming food prepared to serve anyone who presented an empty plate in front of me. I didn’t mind being the male equivalent of a lunch lady. It’s a fairly easy job that is helping me pay off my tuition. But what I noticed as I was dispensing scoops of macaroni and cheese and tongs of salmon cake is that when people like something they over indulge in it. The most sought after food was crab legs. People would come back as much as they could for crab legs. I was at first annoyed by why people were so pressed to get freaking crabs legs. Like how good can they be? But I now realize that it’s not necessarily the crab legs itself it’s the pleasure that the food itself stimulates. It’s now obvious to me that when people find some sort of stimuli pleasurable. They’ll max out on it. I can see that truth just by looking at myself and how frantic I was about Oreo cookies, particular songs, and even producing podcast. I use to have an obsession with Oreo cookies when I was 18. I would eat an entire tray all by myself. It was weird because this addiction came out of nowhere. I’m the same way with certain songs. When I find a song I like I’ll play it over and over. I play the song until I no longer find it pleasurable. I max out. I’m trying to not do so much of that with my podcast. I derive pleasure from producing podcast and their something in me that wants to do it all the time. But I don’t want to completely max out and thus not want to do it anymore. By design humans will irrationally engorge themsemles with whatever they find pleasurable. By default if we really get a positive stimuli from something we will go over board. But that is fantastic news to someone who wants to be more of a producer than he is a consumer. Watching so many different people act so irrationally for crab legs made me want to create a product that people love so much that they can’t remove themselves from it. I have to make products. Whether electronic products or physical products either way. When people love something they will over indulge and in that moment is where fortunes can be made.
…
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38 jaksoa
Manage episode 415177677 series 1912462
Sisällön tarjoaa Mbaacha and Della Mbaacha. Mbaacha and Della Mbaacha tai sen podcast-alustan kumppani lataa ja toimittaa kaiken podcast-sisällön, mukaan lukien jaksot, grafiikat ja podcast-kuvaukset. Jos uskot jonkun käyttävän tekijänoikeudella suojattua teostasi ilman lupaasi, voit seurata tässä https://fi.player.fm/legal kuvattua prosessia.
Today I learned we over indulge. I started my job at this restaurant around my house. They asked me to be one of the servers. So there I was behind trays of hot steaming food prepared to serve anyone who presented an empty plate in front of me. I didn’t mind being the male equivalent of a lunch lady. It’s a fairly easy job that is helping me pay off my tuition. But what I noticed as I was dispensing scoops of macaroni and cheese and tongs of salmon cake is that when people like something they over indulge in it. The most sought after food was crab legs. People would come back as much as they could for crab legs. I was at first annoyed by why people were so pressed to get freaking crabs legs. Like how good can they be? But I now realize that it’s not necessarily the crab legs itself it’s the pleasure that the food itself stimulates. It’s now obvious to me that when people find some sort of stimuli pleasurable. They’ll max out on it. I can see that truth just by looking at myself and how frantic I was about Oreo cookies, particular songs, and even producing podcast. I use to have an obsession with Oreo cookies when I was 18. I would eat an entire tray all by myself. It was weird because this addiction came out of nowhere. I’m the same way with certain songs. When I find a song I like I’ll play it over and over. I play the song until I no longer find it pleasurable. I max out. I’m trying to not do so much of that with my podcast. I derive pleasure from producing podcast and their something in me that wants to do it all the time. But I don’t want to completely max out and thus not want to do it anymore. By design humans will irrationally engorge themsemles with whatever they find pleasurable. By default if we really get a positive stimuli from something we will go over board. But that is fantastic news to someone who wants to be more of a producer than he is a consumer. Watching so many different people act so irrationally for crab legs made me want to create a product that people love so much that they can’t remove themselves from it. I have to make products. Whether electronic products or physical products either way. When people love something they will over indulge and in that moment is where fortunes can be made.
…
continue reading
38 jaksoa
Kaikki jaksot
×Cover Your Bases (Bossing Up #24) by Della Mbaacha
mbaacha.d@gmail.com.
Write Out My Creative Process. (Bossing Up #22) by Della Mbaacha
You're an Athlete. (Bossing Up #21) by Della Mbaacha
Manumission (Bossing Up #20) by Della Mbaacha
Bossing Up Formula. (Bossing Up #19) by Della Mbaacha
The Law Of Averages. (Bossing Up #18) by Della Mbaacha
Reward Myself At The End Of The Day. (Bossing Up #17) by Della Mbaacha
Meet My Basic Needs. (Bossing Up #16) by Della Mbaacha
Take A Day Off Every 50 Days. (Bossing Up #15) by Della Mbaacha
Critique My Work. (Bossing Up #14) by Della Mbaacha
visual: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BqvzEwtuMDw&t=37s
Create a Bucket List. (Bossing Up #11) by Della Mbaacha
visual: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eau4byco6T4&feature=youtu.be
Teamwork Makes The Dreamwork. (Bossing Up #9) by Della Mbaacha
Visualize It. (Bossing Up #8) by Della Mbaacha
Count The Days Until. (Bossing Up #7) by Della Mbaacha
Build Up Slowly. (Bossing Up #6) by Della Mbaacha
art by @tamasaku
M
Mbaacha

song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pw90OreHb-8
song: www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZjlP-N7Hl4
song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w8LLbXtDGHo
Song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-G_f_IQeru8&t=170s
Song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRzNTZ53xFU
Artwork by Zeren Badar. Song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-aWkhuAu8go From reading a book I just bought I stumbled across this Theory on human behavior brought about by Sigmuead Freud. The idea is states that there is a driving force in all humans that seeks for pleasure and avoids pain. When I stumbled across this idea I knew it had me peg. There is a side of me that I have to constantly fight so that I can go about my life and get projects finished and make progress in life. There is a part of me that does not want to accept the harsh reality of life. This side wants to willing stay in the dark because ignorance is bliss. Finding out about this idea makes me more relaxed. It relieves anxiety because I now that I know that this is just an aspect of human nature I don’t have to guilt trip myself when my productivity stifles. Learning about this idea makes me understand more why things like goal setting and delaying gratification are effective. There is a force with us that seeks for pleasure and avoids pain. It’s good to seek pleasure and its wise to avoid pain. Though a lot of times rewards are on the other side of pain. A lot of times one has to embrace experiencing pain to accept the reality of matter.…
Today I learned the benefits of reinterpreting other people’s style. I was watching this video on auction houses selling paintings that honestly look like chicken scratch for millions of dollars and I found out that a painting that Picasso made in one day sold for $106 million dollars. At first I wouldn’t let myself believe this. It’s still hard to believe this because it makes me question what am I doing in college? If a guy can make a painting in a day and years later even after that guy passes away that very same painting he made sells for $106 million dollars then why am I not investing my time into doing something like that? I was befuddled when I learn this and I even stopped what I was doing and went to take a walk. After a few little while I realized that the value of my college education transcends monetary value. I still wanted to learn more about Picasso so I watched a documentary on him over the span of a couple days and learned that he would habitually reinterpret the styles of other artist's paintings. I learned from this documentary and a bit extra research that Picasso would go to The Louvre repetitiously to stare at an artwork that he wanted to reinterpret. After some time he would do his on rendition of the style. This technique of adopting someone else’s idea and embodying it in their own work echos a similar programming philosophy. From what I learned so far a good practice in programming software is to build on the back of someone before you's work. This enables one to be more efficient because instead of starting from scratch one can focus on improving. Why reinvent the wheel? It’s alway easier to improve someone else's idea. I first rejected this way of going about one’s work because it seemed to diminish creativity. There is something about creating something from scratch that just seems cooler. But after a bit I realized that almost everything is built from other things. Nothing just comes out of nowhere. One idea leads to the next idea. Many things like the iPhone, Uber, and even Ice Cream Sandwiches are composites of different ideas. Learning this makes me want to work with others more, it opens my eyes to the fact that the world is full of good ideas to use. One of the best things about the concept of reinterpreting other people’s ideas is that for the most part information is free so it’s almost like a free for all on ideas. So the #1 thing I learned from that documentary on Picasso is to increase my tendency of reinterpreting other people’s ideas. If I see somebody doing something in a way that I feel is pretty dope than I should do my own rendition based upon their work, if Picasso is humble enough to do that so can I. Ending Song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4N83L29yGKI…
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