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HBR IdeaCast

Resilience Strategies for a Volatile World

HBR IdeaCast

Harvard Business Review

Leadership, Entrepreneurship, Communication, Marketing, Business, Business/management, Management, Business/marketing, Business/entrepreneurship, Innovation, Hbr, Strategy, Economics, Finance, Teams, Harvard

4.41.9K Ratings

🗓️ 12 July 2012

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Andrew Zolli, director of PopTech and coauthor of "Resilience: Why Things Bounce Back."

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

If you work with early career professionals, my colleagues at

0:03.8

HPR have a great new podcast for you. It's called New Here. Think of it like the

0:08.4

Young Professional's Guide to Building a Meaningful Career on your own terms.

0:11.9

Share New Here with the Young Professionals in your life. a meaningful career on your own terms.

0:12.8

Share new here with the young professionals in your life.

0:15.9

Listen for free wherever you got your podcasts.

0:18.6

Just search new here. Welcome to the HBR Ideacast from Harvard Business Review.

0:33.1

I'm Sarah Green.

0:34.5

I'm talking today with Andrew Zolly,

0:36.4

director of Pop Check, the Global Innovation Network.

0:39.1

He is the co-author with Anne-Marie Healy of Resilience, Why Things Bounce Back.

0:44.0

Andrew, thanks so much for talking to this today.

0:46.0

It's great to be here.

0:48.0

Thanks for having it. So Andrew, I think we all have the sense that we are living in volatile times.

0:52.0

Why is that right now? What's

0:54.6

changed that leads us to feel this way? Well there's a lot of things happening

0:59.2

under the surface that lead us to a renewed appreciation for the inherent volatility of the times.

1:06.0

I, like many adults, came of age in the 1990s, and that was an era that promised great peace and tranquility, you know, now think about the

1:16.6

decade that came right after that. It's one that started in many of our minds as

1:20.6

bookmarked by an act of international terrorism on 9-11, continued through a series of

1:26.0

wars and all kinds of different ecological calamities.

1:30.9

It showed us the vulnerability of our own national systems in dealing with things like Katrina and ended with the global financial crisis.

...

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