1. Lansden's principle: When you climb up, be sure to keep the ladder neat, otherwise you may slip when you get down.
2. Luves's theorem: Modesty does not mean thinking about yourself badly, but not thinking about yourself at all.
3, Toledd theorem : Test whether a person's intelligence is superior, and only see whether the mind can accommodate two opposite ideas at the same time, without hindering his or her behavior.
4, Hedgehog Theory: Hedgehogs stay close to each other for warmth when it is cold, but keep a certain distance to avoid stabbing each other.
5. Mincchi effect: Mincchi often lives in groups because of its weak individuals, and the strong are the natural leader. After cutting off the part of the control behavior of a slightly stronger minnow behind the head, the fish loses self-control and has disordered movements, but other minnows are still blindly following them as before.
6, Leibaofu Rule : When you start building cooperation and trust, remember our language:
The most important eight words are: I admit that I have made mistakes
The most important seven words are: You did a good thing
The most important six words are: How do you think h The most important five words of tml2
are: Let’s do
The most important four words of
are: Why not try
The most important three words of
The most important two words of
The most important two words of
The most important one is: Your
The most important one is: Your
7. Lober's Theorem: For a manager, the most important thing is not what you are when you are present, but what happens when you are not present.
8. Steiner's Theorem: The less you say it, the more you hear it.
9, Fethno's theorem : People have two ears but only one mouth, which means that people should listen more and speak less.
10. Complaint effect: Anyone in a company who complains about work must be much more successful than a company that does not have such a person or has such a person and burys the complaints in their stomachs.
11. Lightning rod effect: Install a metal rod on the top of a tall building, connect it with a metal plate buried underground with metal wires, and discharge using the tip of the metal rod to gradually neutralize the electricity carried by the clouds and the electricity on the ground, thereby protecting buildings, etc. from lightning strikes.
12. Amino acid combination effect: eight amino acids that make up the human protein . As long as one of them is insufficient, the other seven cannot synthesize proteins.
13, MiG-25 effect: Many parts of the MiG-25 jet fighter developed by the former Soviet Union were behind the United States, but because the designers considered the overall performance, they were able to become world-class at that time in terms of lifting, speed, emergency response, etc.
14. Run-in effect: The newly assembled machine polishes the processing traces on the friction surface for a certain period of use and becomes more intimate.
15. Wave-specific theorem: When you suffer a lot of criticism, the subordinates often only remember some of the beginning, and don’t listen to the rest, because they are busy thinking about the arguments to refute the criticism at the beginning.
16, Linsden's Law : Working with a friend is much more interesting than working under his father.
17. Gilbert's Law: The most conclusive signal of a work crisis is that no one tells you what to do.
18. Authoritative hint effect: A chemist said that he would test the spread of a bottle of odor. After he opened the cap for 15 seconds, the students in the front row raised their hands and said that they could smell the odor, while the people in the back row raised their hands one after another, saying that they had smelled it, but in fact there was nothing in the bottle.
19. O'Neill's Theorem: All politics are local.
20. Positioning effect: Social psychologists once conducted an experiment: when convening a meeting, they first let people choose seats, then go outdoors for a while before entering the room to sit in. In this way, five to six times, they found that most people chose the seats they had sat for the first time.
21, Edgeboone's Theorem : If you meet an employee and don't recognize him or forget his name, then your company is a bit too big.
22. Giger's Theorem: Apart from life itself, there is no talent without the need for acquired training.
23. Dog Mastiff effect: When young Tibetan dogs grow teeth and can bite them, their owner will put them in a closed environment without food and water and let the puppies bite each other. Finally, there is a living dog left, which is called a mastiff. It is said that only ten dogs can produce a mastiff.
24, proximal effect : The recent or last impression has a strong impact on people's cognition.
25. The law of sprinkling wells: When recruiting workers, you should use all your skills and use various methods. It is better to make yourself a good company, so that talents will naturally gather.
26. Beauty is good effect: For a person with a handsome and beautiful appearance, people can easily mistakenly think that other aspects of him or her are also good.
27, Ogelvi's Law: If each of us hires people stronger than ourselves, we can become giant companies.
28, Pier Cardin Theorem : One plus one does not equal two in person, maybe it is equal to zero.
29, horse fly effect : No matter how lazy a horse is, as long as it has horse fly bites, it will be energetic and run quickly.
30. Inverted U-shaped hypothesis: When a person is in a mildly excited, he can do his job best. When a person is not excited at all, he will not have the motivation to do a good job; accordingly, when a person is extremely excited, the subsequent pressure may cause him to complete the work he should not complete. One of the secrets of the world's famous tennis star Becker is to prevent excessive excitement from beginning to end in the game and maintain a semi-excited state. Therefore, some people also call the inverted U-shaped hypothesis Becker realm.
31. Teber's statement: No security can be found in numbers.
32. Moscow's Theorem: The first answer you get is not necessarily the best answer.
33, Rogers Probability: A successful company will not wait for external influence to determine its own destiny, but will always look forward.
34, Sagai's Law : People wearing a watch know the exact time, and people wearing two watches are not sure what time it is.
35, Tunnel field of view effect : If a person is in a tunnel, he will only see a very narrow field of view in front and behind.
36. Buffy's specific law: If you invest in places where everyone else has invested, you will not make a fortune.
proposer: American stock god Buffett .
37. Guterrey Theorem: Each exit is the entrance to another.
38. Levin's Theorem: Those who hesitate to make plans are usually because they are not sure about their abilities.
39, Frost's rule : Before building a wall, you should know what to circle and what to circle.
40. Poker's Theorem: Only in dispute can the best ideas and best decisions be born.
41. Wedge's Theorem: Even if you already have your own opinions, if you have ten friends who have the opposite opinions of you, it will be difficult for you not to shake them.
42. Falkland's Law: When there is no need to make a decision, it is necessary not to make a decision.
43. Wang An's statement: Hesitation can certainly avoid some opportunities to do something wrong, but he also loses the opportunity to succeed.
44, Grees Theorem : Excellent strategies must be combined with outstanding execution to work.
45. Kidling's rule: Write down the problem clearly and half of it has been solved.
46. Wolson's Law: Put information and intelligence first, and money will roll in.
47. Tamara effect: Tamara is a radar invented by Czech radar expert Fopech. The biggest difference between it and other radars is that it does not emit signals but only receives signals, so it will not be discovered by the enemy's anti-radar device.
48. Xiaochi Theorem: The more you are intoxicated, the more you grasp the things in front of you.
49. Heller's rule: When people know that their work achievements are checked, they will work harder.
50. Hengshan Law: The most effective and continuous control is not forcing, but triggering the inner spontaneous control of the individual.
51, Butterfly effect : Disorders researchers say that the weak airflow caused by the occasional flapping of a butterfly in the southern hemisphere can turn into a tornado that swept across a certain part of the northern hemisphere in a few weeks. They call this phenomenon, which develops into extremely huge and complex consequences from a very small cause, after a certain period of time, under the participation of other factors, the butterfly effect.
52. Ash's Law: Acknowledging problems is the first step to solving problems.
53. Locke's advice: The regulations should be set less, and once they are set, they must be strictly followed.
54. The rules of the furnace: When a person touches a hot furnace with his hands, he will be punished by burning. It has the following three characteristics: real-time, early warning, and equality.
55. Ke Meiya's Law: There is no perfect thing in the world, so anything has room for reform.
56, Davedov's Law : A person without innovative spirit can always be an executor.
57. Self-eating cub effect: The competition among American Silicon Valley companies is so fierce that all companies are actively looking for their own fatal weaknesses. The common way for all companies to survive is: come up with better-looking products to defeat their original products. Some people call this behavior self-eating cubs.
58, Schoen's Theorem : Only when a new idea is fallen into the hands of those who truly believe in it and are fascinated by it can they bear fruit.
59. Gining's Theorem: The real mistake is to be afraid of making mistakes.
60, Kabe's theorem: Give up is the key to innovation.