Thread regarding Verizon Communications Inc. layoffs

CNBC: For Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg, self-reflection is serious business.

The 58-year-old kicks off every day with a self-assessment, and he’s a better boss because of it, he said on Tuesday at the Fast Company Innovation Festival 2023. Vestberg started the routine in 2009 after becoming CEO of Swedish telecommunications company Ericsson, and he’s done it “every day” since, he said.

Each morning, Vestberg ranks his mood “from 1 to 10,” he said, helping him get into the “right mood and right energy” to do his job. The numbers gauge whether he’s able to show up to the office as his best self:

1-2: He should “stay in his office” and work by himself, because he isn’t in a good headspace to collaborate with others, he said.
3-7: He’s “energized” and able to work at a high level, he said, adding that this range is “usually when I’m the best.”
8-10: Vestberg has “so much energy that people get tired of me,” he joked. He tries to dial back to the 3-7 range and prioritize his work, he said.
The routine “brings out the strength in my leadership,” said Vestberg.

He’s not alone. Jerry Colonna, an executive coach sometimes known as the “CEO whisperer,” has a similar routine called “radical self-inquiry” that he says helps him make better decisions.

“Spend a few minutes each day, but not the entire day, asking questions like how am I really feeling? What do I want to bring [to a situation]?” Colonna told CNBC Make It in March. “Radical self-inquiry is a means to unabashedly, without shame and without seeking guilt, understand who you are [and] why you do the things you do — so that you then do things out of choice, not for unconscious reasons.”

Strategies like these might feel unnatural at first, Colonna said: “We’re socialized not to look inward” because it can come across as “narcissistic or self-indulgent.” But as long as you don’t “get stuck” harping on certain character traits, you can use the practice to develop some important self-awareness.

That’s a crucial skill for professionals at every level: Self-awareness can help you show up with more confidence and creativity, according to a 2018 Harvard Business Review report. It can help you make better decisions, strengthen your relationships and protect you from work stress or burnout.

“You can have all the technical skills and charisma in the world,” Juliette Han, a Harvard-trained neuroscientist, told Make It in June. “But if you’re completely oblivious of yourself, how you come across and interact in the world, it’s a lot harder to build strong relationships, interact with your boss and co-workers and deepen the friendships you need to truly succeed.”

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Post ID: @OP+1oLHDBCq

14 replies (most recent on top)

Bring back that tu-d Lowell so he can waste another 5 BILLION...and pay for it with RIF'S

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Post ID: @3qyu+1oLHDBCq

Innovation Festival? Seriously !? This company is so far from being innovated. They literally were crying about employees working from home, still using unions, micromanagers, time clock punching and assembly line mentality, there’s no way there will ever be any innovation in this company. You can’t even figure out the operational processes you have in place now. Gtfo

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Post ID: @2ago+1oLHDBCq

I would love to do that discounted cash flow analysis! I can gurantee you that $37M buyout would be one of the absolute best investments to ever be made by the company. The returns on that to shareowners would be staggering with an immediate payback and an IRR that will wreck the model.

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Post ID: @1ciy+1oLHDBCq

Hans has a $37M buy-out if the Board fires him so when I read that article, my first thought was that he knows his days are numbered and he's negotiating another CEO role and this press is to save face in the Market. Maybe I'm off base but how much longer will the emperor have no clothes and the Board look the other way?

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Post ID: @1qxc+1oLHDBCq

HV is a globalist degenerate put in place by Blackrock and Vanguard to make Americans more like the sheeple in Europe and China. These people are in power to not only take down the company but America as well. This is why the company likes to hide behind Veterans.

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Post ID: @1gxj+1oLHDBCq

As long as he keeps settling our contracts a year early and no strikes. I don't care what he does.

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Post ID: @1yeb+1oLHDBCq

No matter what he does and how he does it it is not reflected in the stock price, some one needs to tell this unimpressive robot.(HV)!

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Post ID: @1kgz+1oLHDBCq

self right yourself right out the frekin door and take your C-suite with you and go destroy another company..

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Post ID: @1pst+1oLHDBCq

He is a corrupt CEO from Ericsson and should have never been hired by Verizon. Ever since he has been the CEO of Verizon, it has gone downhill. Even Buffett sold all his shares of Verizon. I bet you the share price will go up after he is fired or self-resigns. Everyone in the market is just waiting for him to leave. Even with 8% dividend offering, people are still not buying Verizon stock. Why? Because the CEO is a huge risk. One bad news story and not only will you lose the 8% in dividends but maybe more then 50% of the value of your shares.

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Post ID: @1yem+1oLHDBCq

It's not working dude.

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Post ID: @neg+1oLHDBCq

HV is way past self-reflection and should move on to self-flagellation.

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Post ID: @yea+1oLHDBCq

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/09/24/verizon-ceo-shares-simple-morning-routine-for-right-mood-energy.html

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Post ID: @cuo+1oLHDBCq

HV , Fall on the sword ...

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Post ID: @hhi+1oLHDBCq

I call BS! Self reflection is not working or could things be worse at VZ if he did not? Ericsson = fraud, investigation and resignation.

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Post ID: @uze+1oLHDBCq

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