Building a strong company is difficult, but staying successful indefinitely is even harder; the key lies not in specific individuals or groups, but in the entire workforce—every single cell must be full of vitality.
The "Catfish Effect"—activating everyone's vitality through internal competitive mechanisms. (According to Norwegian folklore: It is usually difficult for fishermen to bring sardines back alive. Once, they found a ship where all the sardines returned alive. The secret was a catfish in the tank; its presence caused the sardines to panic and dash around, which ironically kept them all alive).
What others lack, I have; what others have, I excel at; what others excel at, I master uniquely.
The challenges faced by customers are the research topics for our development.
There are no perfect products, but there is 100% service.
The "Eight Talents": recruiting, recognizing, tolerating, utilizing, nurturing, training, protecting, and developing talent. An enterprise must care for, understand, respect, and protect its people, treating them as human beings rather than mere resources.
No detail is too small in management. "Difficult tasks come from easy ones; great tasks come from small ones" (as Lao Tzu said). One can succeed or fail based on the details.
The Sloped Sphere Theory: A company's position in the market is like a sphere on a slope. Strong internal management is required to generate sufficient momentum; otherwise, the sphere will inevitably roll downward.
Whether the leader is present or not, the company should continue to operate healthily.