Social Responsibility
Social Responsibility

The company is a ship, and I'm on board.


A company is like a ship. When you choose to join a company, you become a crew member on this ship. Whether this ship returns with a full load or runs aground depends on whether you work together with all the crew members on the ship.

 

 

An entrepreneur was asked why he liked sailing. His answer was that sailing and running a business have strong commonalities: the development of a business requires the joint efforts of all members just like a ship needs to cut through the waves to move forward requires all crew members to perform their duties, work together in unity to successfully reach the destination.

In other words, everyone should regard their platform company as a ship, their own ship. In this way, you will do your best to contribute your strength, proactively, efficiently, and enthusiastically complete tasks, and work hard to build your own "ship". Your superiors and colleagues are partners who share the same fate, bound together. You are collaborators on the same ship. Only when everyone performs their duties and does their job well, will this ship sail steadily forward.

 

 

Andy Grove, former president of Intel, once gave a speech to graduates of the University of California, Berkeley. In his speech, he offered the following advice: “No matter where you work, don’t think of yourself as an employee, but rather as the owner of the company. Only you can control your own career. No matter when, in your cooperation with your boss, the ultimate beneficiary will always

be yourself.” Employees are the owners of the enterprise, and the rise and fall of the company directly affects every employee’s own direct personal interests. Therefore, once you are on the company’s ship, you must share the same breath, share the same destiny, and create the future together.