2023-08-14
31 分钟What if you could tell your co-workers what you really think of them? At one of the world’s most successful hedge funds, everyone is rated and ranked constantly – in front of everyone. They’ve figured out how to embrace negative feedback, and they swear it’s essential to their success. Adam Grant shows how you can learn to take criticism well – and get better at dishing it out. This is an episode of WorkLife with Adam Grant, another podcast in the TED Audio Collective. WorkLife's sixth season comes out September 19th. To listen to more WorkLife with Adam Grant now find and follow WorkLife wherever you're listening to this. Find the transcript for this episode at go.ted.com/worklifecriticism
TED audio collective.
Hi everyone.
Chris Duffy here.
Here is an episode of another TED audio collective podcast that I think you're going to really enjoy.
It's called work life with Adam Grant.
And on the show, organizational psychologist Adam Grant goes inside the minds of truly unusual people to rethink the way we work, create, and connect with each other.
This is a show that's full of fascinating psychological insights about how we can create real change in our lives.
And Adam is such an interesting interviewer and scholar and writer and thinker.
I think you're going to really enjoy this show, and I think you're going to particularly enjoy this episode of his show.
If you do like it, you can find and follow work life with Adam Grant.
Wherever you're listening to this, enjoy at.
Radiolab, we love nothing more than nerding out about science, neuroscience, chemistry do also like to get into other kinds of stories, stories about policing or politics, country music, hockey, sex of bugs.
Regardless of whether we're looking at science or not science, we bring a rigorous curiosity to get you the answers and hopefully make you see the world anew.
Radiolab adventures on the edge of what we think we know, wherever you get your podcasts when I was 26 years old, barely out of grad school, I was asked to come teach a half day class about motivation.
I was excited for it, and then I found out my audience would be generals and colonels in the US Air force.
I was way underqualified and I wanted to back out, but it was too late.
So I walked in and I was staring at a room full of people twice my age wearing full military garb with all their medals on display.
They had nicknames like Gunner, Striker, and stealth.
By the end of the first hour, I felt like I was bombing.
And sure enough, in the reviews they wrote after class, they bombed me.