Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年10月12日
What seven corporate bosses taught NBC’s Bonnie Hammer about how to navigate change
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邦妮·哈默是“有线电视女王”,曾使多个网络盈利。她认为在频繁的企业收购中,理解每次变化的本质很关键,包括了解新规则、企业文化等。作为管理者,要将变化传达给团队。她还提到女性面对晋升失败的态度,以及媒体行业变化的看法等。

🧐邦妮·哈默是“有线电视女王”,曾让USA和SyFy等网络成为盈利中心,如今是NBC环球的副主席。她在多个公司旗下的网络工作过,深知应对变化的重要性。

🤔在频繁的企业变动中,哈默认为要理解每次变化的本质,这包括读懂企业文化、规则等。比如了解掌权者看重的是创造力还是盈利,这需要读懂肢体语言、保持灵活并知道何时妥协。

📣作为管理者,哈默认为要以恰当的方式将变化传达给团队,激励他们在理解新的评判标准的同时,发挥创造力做好本职工作。

😔哈默提到自己曾在晋升中落选,她认为男性对此可能更能承受,而女性往往会更在意并将其个人化,而不是思考下一步该怎么做。

🌊哈默认为她的职业生涯和回忆录中始终不变的是变化,当今媒体行业的变化并非比过去更动荡,关键是如何应对变化。

Called the “Queen of cable TV,” Hammer is known for turning the USA and SyFy networks into profit centers behind shows like Suits and Psych and later leading NBC’s cable division to record profits. In her time at these networks, she operated under bosses at Paramount, Time Inc., Viacom, Seagram, GE, and Comcast. Today, she’s vice chair of NBCUniversal.The key to surviving frequent corporate takeovers was taking a moment to understand the nature of each change, she told me. “What will the tone be? What are the expectations?” Hammer says she asked herself each time. “It’s beyond reading the room—it’s reading the culture.” That requires reading body language, being flexible, and knowing when to compromise.There will be new rules, and understanding them is critical. “Who has the power? Are they more impressed with ingenuity or the bottom line? Do they love creativity and get content or do they only care about money?”“15 Lies Women Are Told at Work…and The Truth We Need To Succeed” by Bonnie HammerCourtesy of Simon & SchusterAs a manager, the next step is communicating these changes to teams. “You want to put it in a way that doesn’t scare them or threaten them, but helps motivate them to do what their job is and be as creative as they can—but also understand that how they’re going to be judged may be a little different,” she says.Even so, some change will be difficult. In her book, Hammer writes of a common experience: being passed over for a promotion. In her case, she lost out on a job leading broadcast for NBC in 2007; the role went to “a guy 20 years younger with a quarter of my experience.” She later found out it was because her cable networks were making so much money, the company was scared moving her would risk the cash cow. “Guys just kind of muscle through it,” she says of being passed over. “But women take it very seriously. They personalize it instead of saying, ‘I didn’t get this. What can I get?’ Or ‘What should I do next?’”The constant through Hammer’s career, and her memoir, is change. Today’s media industry, she says, isn’t more tumultuous than it has been in the past; each change only seems like it’s worse than what’s come before, she says. “How you approach change is what matters,” she says. “Not that there is change.”Emma Hinchliffeemma.hinchliffe@fortune.comThe Broadsheet is Fortune’s newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Today’s edition was curated by Joseph Abrams. Subscribe here. ALSO IN THE HEADLINES- Nine-to-fine. A new Conference Board survey found that 60% of women report being satisfied with their jobs, marking the sixth year in a row that women’s job satisfaction has ranked below men’s. Financial compensation is the largest factor behind the disparity, though some suggest women are also disgruntled about fewer remote work opportunities. Wall Street Journal- Model behavior. Fei-Fei Li, the Stanford professor known as the “godmother of AI” for her pioneering research, is reportedly building an AI model capable of “advanced reasoning,” according to Reuters. A startup that Li reportedly founded—with backing from Andreessen Horowitz and others—is developing the model. Fortune- Sales to staffing. Lattice CEO Sarah Franklin told Fortune that she joined the HR software developer after 15 years at Salesforce because she thinks it can “do for the employee what Salesforce did for customers.” Franklin describes Lattice, valued at $3 billion, as a people-managing tool to help companies navigate AI and concerns about “employee disengagement.” Fortune- Stopping at the source. Alabama is leading U.S. efforts to completely eliminate cervical cancer by increasing vaccination rates against the human papillomavirus, the cause of 90% of cervical cancer cases. The state has the fourth highest rate of cervical cancer in the U.S. Wall Street Journal- Airwaves go silent. A union of journalists at Rai, a popular public broadcaster in Italy, went on strike on Monday, complaining of editorial interference by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. The union opposes Meloni’s claims that the broadcaster is too leftist and the presence of Meloni's government appointees on its governing board. Financial TimesMOVERS AND SHAKERS: Tropicana Brands Group appointed Olu Beck to its board of directors.ON MY RADARKaitlin Butts is leading a red dirt revolution Rolling StoneBrittney Griner's joyful next chapter The CutShe wrote the first great perimenopause novel New York TimesPARTING WORDS“I just wanted to make a statement about the fact that we don't shrivel up and die at 40.”— Robinne Lee, actress and author of The Idea of You, which is now a movie starring Anne HathawayThis is the web version of The Broadsheet, a daily newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.

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邦妮·哈默 企业变化 职场管理 媒体行业 女性职场
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