ceo演讲稿4篇.doc

上传人:de****x 文档编号:56566074 上传时间:2022-11-02 格式:DOC 页数:19 大小:72.01KB
返回 下载 相关 举报
ceo演讲稿4篇.doc_第1页
第1页 / 共19页
ceo演讲稿4篇.doc_第2页
第2页 / 共19页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述

《ceo演讲稿4篇.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《ceo演讲稿4篇.doc(19页珍藏版)》请在得力文库 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。

1、此资料由网络收集而来,如有侵权请告知上传者立即删除。资料共分享,我们负责传递知识。ceo演讲稿4篇hello gw. thank you very much, president knapp, for that kind intro. alex, trustees, faculty and deans of the university, my fellow honorees, and especially you the class of XX. yes.congratulations to you, to your family, to your friends that are atte

2、nding today's ceremony.you made it. it's a privilege, a rare privilege of a lifetime to be with you today. and i thinkthank you enough for making me an honorary colonial.before i begin today, they asked me to make a standard announcement. you've heard thisbefore. about silencing your pho

3、nes. those of you with an iphone, just place it in silent mode.if you don't have an iphone, please pass it to the center aisle. apple has a world‑class recyclingprogram.you know, this is really an amazing place. and for a lot of you, i'm sure that being here inwashington, the very cent

4、er of our democracy, was a big draw when you were choosing whichschool to go to. this place has a powerful pull. it was here that dr. martin luther kingchallenged americans to make real the promises of democracy, to make justice a reality for allof god's children. and it was here that president

5、ronald reagan called on us to believe inourselves and to believe in our capacity to perform great deeds. i'd like to start this morningby telling you about my first visit here. in the summer of 1977 – yes, i'm a little old – i was 16years old and living in robertsdale, the small

6、town in southern alabama that i grew up in. atthe end of my junior year of high school i'd won essay contest sponsored by the national ruralelectric association. i can't remember what the essay was about, what i do remember veryclearly is writing it by hand, draft after draft after draft. ty

7、pewriters were very expensive andmy family could not afford one.i was one of two kids from baldwin county that was chosen to go to washington along withhundreds of other kids across the country. before we left, the alabama delegation took a trip toour state capitol in montgomery for a meeting with t

8、he governor. the governor's name wasgeorge c. wallace. the same george wallace who in 1963 stood in the schoolhouse door at theuniversity of alabama to block african americans from enrolling. wallace embraced the evils ofsegregation. he pitted whites against blacks, the south against the north,

9、the working classagainst the so‑called elites. meeting my governor was not an honor for me.my heroes in life were dr. martin luther king, and robert f. kennedy, who had fought againstthe very things that wallace stood for. keep in mind, that i grew up, or, when i grew up, i grewup in a place t

10、hat where king and kennedy were not exactly held in high esteem. when i was akid, the south was still coming to grips with its history. my textbooks even said the civil warwas about states' rights. they barely mentioned slavery.so i had to figure out for myself what was right and true. it was a

11、search. it was a process. itdrew on the moral sense that i'd learned from my parents, and in church, and in my own heart,and led me on my own journey of discovery.i found books in the public library that they probably didn't know they had. they all pointed tothe fact that wallace was wrong.

12、that injustices like segregation had no place in our world. thatequality is a right.as i said, i was only 16 when i met governor wallace, so i shook his hand as we were expectedto do. but shaking his hand felt like a betrayal of my own beliefs. it felt wrong. like i wasselling a piece of my soul. fr

13、om montgomery we flew to washington.it was the first time i had ever been on an airplane. in fact it was the first time that i traveledout of the south. on june 15, 1977, i was one of 900 high schoolers greeted by the newpresident, president jimmy carter on the south lawn of the white house, right t

14、here on theother side of the ellipse. i was one of the lucky ones, who got to shake his hand. carter saw baldwin county on my nametag that day and stopped to speak with me. he wanted to know how people were doing afterthe rash of storms that struck alabama that year. carter was kind and compassionat

15、e; heheld the most powerful job in the world but he had not sacrificed any of his humanity. i feltproud that he was president. and i felt proud that he was from the south.in the space of a week, i had come face to face with two men who guaranteed themselves aplace in history. they came from the same

16、 region. they were from the same political party.they were both governors of adjoining states. but they looked at the world in very differentways. it was clear to me, that one was right, and one was wrong. wallace had built his politicalcareer by exploiting divisions between us. carter's message

17、 on the other hand, was that we areall bound together, every one of us. each had made a journey that led them to the values thatthey lived by, but it wasn't just about their experiences or their circumstances, it had to comefrom within.my own journey in life was just beginning. i hadn't even

18、 applied for college yet at that point.for you graduates, the process of discovering yourself, of inventing yourself, of reinventingyourself is about to begin in earnest. it's about finding your values and committing to live bythem. you have to find your north star. and that means choices. some

19、are easy. some arehard. and some will make you question everything.twenty years after my visit to washington, i met someone who made me question everything.who upended all of my assumptions in the very best way. that was steve jobs.steve had built a successful company. he had been sent away and he r

20、eturned to find it inruins. he didn't know it at the time, but he was about to dedicate the rest of his life torescuing it, and leading it to heights greater than anyone could ever imagine. anyone, that is,except for steve. most people have forgotten, but in 1997 and early 1998, apple had beenad

21、rift for years. rudderless. but steve thought apple could be great again. and he wanted toknow if i'd like to help.his vision for apple was a company that turned powerful technology into tools that were easy touse, tools that would help people realize their dreams. and change the world for the b

22、etter. ihad studied to be an engineer and earned an m.b.a. i was trained to be pragmatic, a problemsolver. now i found myself sitting before and listening to this very animated 40‑something guywith visions of changing the world. it was not what i had expected. you see, when it came tomy career

23、, in 1998, i was also adrift. rudderless.i knew who i was in my personal life, and i kept my eye on my north star, my responsibility todo good for someone else, other than myself. but at work, well i always figured that work waswork. values had their place and, yes, there were things that i wanted t

24、o change about theworld, but i thought i had to do that on my own time. not in the office. steve didn't see it thatway. he was an idealist. and in that way he reminded me of how i felt as a teenager. in thatfirst meeting he convinced me if we worked hard and made great products, we too could hel

25、pchange the world. and to my surprise, i was hooked. i took the job and changed my life. it'sbeen 17 years and i have never once looked back.at apple we believe the work should be more than just about improving your own self. it'sabout improving the lives of others as well. our products do a

26、mazing things. and just as steveenvisioned, they empower people all over the world. people who are blind, and needinformation read to them because they can't see the screen. people for whom technology is alifeline because they are isolated by distance or disability. people who witness injustice

27、andwant to expose it, and now they can because they have a camera in their pocket all the time.our commitment goes beyond the products themselves to how they're made. to our impacton the environment. to the role we play in demanding and promoting equality. and inimproving education. we believe t

28、hat a company that has values and acts on them can reallychange the world. and an individual can too. that can be you. that must be you. graduates,your values matter. they are your north star. and work takes on new meaning when you feelyou are pointed in the right direction. otherwise, it's just

29、 a job, and life is too short for that. weneed the best and brightest of your generation to lead in government and in business. in thescience and in the arts. in journalism and in academia. there is honor in all of these pursuits.and there is opportunity to do work that is infused with moral purpose

30、. you don't have tochoose between doing good and doing well. it's a false choice, today more than ever.your challenge is to find work that pays the rent, puts food on the table, and lets you do whatis right and good and just. so find your north star. let it guide you in life, and work, and i

31、n your life's work. now, isuspect some of you aren't buying this.i won't take it personally. it's no surprise that people are skeptical, especially here inwashington.where these days you've got plenty of reason to be. and a healthy amount of skepticism isfine. though too often in

32、 this town, it turns to cynicism. to the idea that no matter who'stalking or what they're saying, that their motives are questionable, their character is suspect,and if you search hard enough, you can prove that they are lying. maybe that's just the worldwe live in. but graduates, this i

33、s your world to change.as i said, i am a proud son of the south. it's my home, and i will always love it. but for the last17 years i've built a life in silicon valley; it's a special place. the kind of place where there's noproblem that can't be solved. no matter how difficult or

34、 complex, that's part of its essentialquality. a very sincere sort of optimism. back in the 90s, apple ran an advertising campaignwe called "think different." it was pretty simple. every ad was a photograph of one of ourheroes. people who had the audacity to challenge and change the wa

35、y we all live. people likegandhi and jackie robinson, martha graham and albert einstein, amelia earhart and milesdavis. these people still inspire us. they remind us to live by our deepest values and reach forour highest aspirations. they make us believe that anything is possible. a friend of mine a

36、tapple likes to say the best way to solve a problem is to walk into a room full of apple engineersand proclaim, "this is impossible."i can tell you, they will not accept that. and neither should you. so that's the one thing i'd liketo bring to you all the way from cupertino, califo

37、rnia. the idea that great progress is possible,whatever line of work you choose. there will always be cynics and critics on the sidelines tearingpeople down, and just as harmful are those people with good intentions who make nocontribution at all. in his letter from the birmingham jail, dr. king wro

38、te that our societyneeded to repent, not merely for the hateful words of the bad people, but for the appallingsilence of the good people.the sidelines are not where you want to live your life. the world needs you in the arena. thereare problems that need to be solved. injustices that need to be ende

39、d. people that are stillbeing persecuted, diseases still in need of cure. no matter what you do next, the world needsyour energy. your passion. your impatience with progress. don't shrink from risk. and tuneout those critics and cynics. history rarely yields to one person, but think, and never f

40、orget,what happens when it does. that can be you. that should be you. that must be you.congratulations class of XX. i'd like to take one photo of you, because this is the best view inthe world. and it's a great one. thank you very much.90后CEO余佳文在青年中国说的演讲稿上周六,超级课程表ceo余佳文在中国首档青春分享节目青年中国说中分享自己的

41、青春故事。余佳文是一名90后,在节目中霸气放言”;明年发一亿利润给员工开心一下”; ,被网友冠以”;史上最霸道总裁”;,更有网友惊呼”;王思聪不是我老公,余佳文才是!”;一夜之间,网络上流出的余佳文演讲一天之间阅读量近10万次,人气之高令人咋舌。以下为余佳文在青年中国说上的演讲实录:我要做一个不一样的人大家好,我是一个90后的ceo。很多人说90后很散漫很自由,工作不负责任,我觉得其实这跟年龄没有很大的关系。我来自于一个很不富裕的家庭,我爸妈是在市场上卖猪肉的,然后我从小特别讨厌猪肉味、市场那个臭味。我爸说,佳文,如果你不好好努力的话,你这辈子就跟我一样,在市场上卖猪肉。所以从小到大我都比别人

42、花出十倍二十倍的努力,我要做一个不一样的人。我十四岁就出来做生意了,那年我高一。当身边很多小伙伴们都还沉浸在单纯的一个校园生活的时候,我就做了一个高中生的交友网站。高二那年我赚得了我人生的第一桶金:一百万人民币。高三那年我突然觉得如果我每天沉浸于这种小钱的话,我一辈子不会有很大的长进,所以我觉得我应该考上大学,去认识更多的朋友。当我来到大学的时候,我发现老师根本教不了我什么,然后我就在学校对面租了个小房子,开始我的二次创业。我从小到大都是一个不太招人喜欢的人,所以没有人会喜欢我,这让我很孤独。但有时候孤独让我成长得特别快,因为我知道只有靠我自己,我才能很努力、很努力地跑下去。霸道总裁:员工薪水

43、自己开实际上我们公司管理上也是这样的,我觉得我就像是一个野孩子,每天光着脚丫,在公司到处乱跑,然后开会也是跟员工坐地上。我跟我员工说你要野、要够野性,因为我们都是野孩子,我们必须生存。我跟他们说,遇到问题解决不了就吵,吵不了就打,住院了我出钱。在我们这家公司,员工的所有医疗费用是免费的,他们父母的医疗费用也是免费的。我把公司人力资源部砍掉,我让员工薪水自己开。我懒得跟你讲你薪水多少。所以这种情况下我们公司特别野,也毫无章法,但是我们业绩跑得特别特别快。外面同样一家公司获取一个互联网用户的成本是八块钱,我三毛钱就拿到了。所以我认为一家企业的文化其实是老板的性格,国内没有一家企业的老板敢像我这么做

44、,因为他们没有我这种魄力。很多人说90后不能吃苦,甚至有些人说,余佳文,你今天成功了,你是因为你运气好。对,我确实小小年纪,我就实现财务自由,我爸妈不用再做生意了。大家说是你们家风水好、祖宅好、运气好,其实没有这回事的,我也经历过很多痛苦的事情。经历低谷:公司破产+被诊断得淋巴癌去年八月份我公司破产了,投资人打了个电话跟我说,余佳文,我要撤资,我不投你了。就这么一下子,一百多个员工的工资我都发不起;物业管理费、一个月十几万的租金,我完全交不起。要交六个月的续租期,所以我被物业追债,公司东西全被没收了。真是”;人逢喜事精神爽”;,我去医院检查一下发现我医生诊断我得了淋巴癌。那时候我特别怕死,我很

45、怕,我说我丢了这么多烂事我一定要解决,不解决好我怎么能死?所以我把我基本所有的事列成一件一件的小事,每件去做。我第一件事是我需要二十万,我觉得只有二十万或许我能翻身。然后我把手机通讯录所有的电话打了一遍,没有一个人愿意借我二十万,甚至身边所有所谓的好朋友也没有人愿意借我。最后是一个跟我关系最糟糕的朋友,拿了二十万借我。拿着这二十万,我找了一个特别特别破旧的场地,连桌子都是我拿木板盖上去、盖个桌布就上班了。我跟我全公司一百多个员工讲,一、我发不起工资,可能未来两个月、三个月、甚至半年,我都发不起工资,但是如果你们愿意陪我熬,我会给你们一个很好的、更好的生活条件。我的员工答应我了,都陪着我,陪我每

46、天吃炒面、配白粥,我们就这样干。我们特别特别疯狂,那时候我一方面需要筹集资金,一方面需要跟投资人谈判,一方面要处理债务,一方面公司这么多乱七八糟的事:电脑、网线什么,全得我一个小朋友搞。然后我还得去医院看病,你知道吗?很幸运的是,真的,我在两个月的时间里把公司业绩翻了足足两倍,让我的投资人目瞪口呆了,觉得这家公司也太可怕了吧。然后当我那时候拿到了医院的检查报告,发现是误诊的时候,其实我心里特别平静。我心里只有一句话:余佳文,你真牛!真正的年轻就是把你的枷锁去掉今天我看到了在场很多年轻人,但我觉得今天很多年轻人一点都不年轻。什么叫年轻呢?我依稀记得我幼稚园的时候然后老师问一个问题,说哪个小朋友懂

47、啊?我们都会举手,说,老师,我懂我懂。但是今天在座很多人其实不敢的,为什么?你怕答错,怕答错被人冷落、被别人否认。我觉得就是一些枷锁让你变得一点都不年轻,真正年轻就是把你的枷锁去掉。勇者无畏,没有枷锁,你就更有冲劲、更有勇气,去干更多更多更多的事情。别拿90后说事,90后也没什么了不起的。今天我看到整个社会,都在吹捧 90后的时候,我觉得我们是不是应该向我们60后、70后、80后的前辈们致敬呢?是他们开创了这个时代给我们创造了一个很好很好的环境。所以我从来不称呼自己为90后,我说我是个年轻人,年轻的头脑、年轻的思想一直会流行,但90后一定会过去。谢谢大家!CEO演讲稿(优秀演讲稿)我们现在打出

48、来的是云南红的故事,但是最早不是云南红,而是蒙牛,现在已经很有名了。过去跟我是好朋友,我几年前到蒙牛看,管理很好,厂房比大楼餐厅还要干净,厂子管理的非常好,厂里还有很好的企业文化,叫做有德有才,破格使用,无德无才,坚决不用,有才无德,培养使用,有才少德,兼职使用。我觉得很好,聪明留下你的智慧,天生勤劳留下你的汗水,什么都没有就请你离开。我说你公司一年销售3亿,那你想不想做30亿的公司,想不想做300亿的公司,当你做300亿的公司的时候,全中国有5万个销售点,你怎么知道5万个销售点有多少库存?你怎么知道这边的东西拿到那边好不好卖?你怎么知道半斤装好卖,一斤装不好卖?当你300亿的时候,一个礼拜营

49、业额可能是全年利润的20,就是说你是在一个必须用数化管理的企业中,还实现着一种原始的管理,他听了以后觉得有道理,他也很艰苦地两年前弄了一批人培训,现在蒙牛已经做到了每一个销售的数量可以及时反馈,老牛觉得挺好,去年被评为中国最有潜力增长的企业第一名,我说你好什么好,我就说了一个数,当你能够进行这种管理的时候,你是简单地销售数据的管理,但是从企业文化的管理上,你存在巨大的差距。第一如果杂志上出现5000篇关于乳液的报道文章,不同人员的可能获取量为部门经过400篇,总经理500篇,销售经理300篇,一般人员100篇,我说有5000篇的时候,你只能获得500篇,只有获取市场信息的10,为什么你知道10你还能生存,因为你的竞争对手像上海的光明乳液老总也就知道10,因此你们在信息不对称的时候占山为王,所以中国企业大量的生产能力过剩,都打不死,我说你整个公司跟市场的数量来算是10,公司内部信息对称量是多少,连1都不到,你不是500和5000,你看了500篇,

展开阅读全文
相关资源
相关搜索

当前位置:首页 > 应用文书 > 工作报告

本站为文档C TO C交易模式,本站只提供存储空间、用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。本站仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知得利文库网,我们立即给予删除!客服QQ:136780468 微信:18945177775 电话:18904686070

工信部备案号:黑ICP备15003705号-8 |  经营许可证:黑B2-20190332号 |   黑公网安备:91230400333293403D

© 2020-2023 www.deliwenku.com 得利文库. All Rights Reserved 黑龙江转换宝科技有限公司 

黑龙江省互联网违法和不良信息举报
举报电话:0468-3380021 邮箱:hgswwxb@163.com