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Chen Keming, the king of noodles, shared his entrepreneurial story: What does a business have to be successful in?

author:The state of life of a crappy writer
Chen Keming, the king of noodles, shared his entrepreneurial story: What does a business have to be successful in?

Not long ago, I went to Yueyang to attend a wedding banquet for couples, and after learning that I was Chen Keming, a parent at the banquet said happily: "My children have grown up pampered and have poor ability to live independently. Unexpectedly, after working in Keming for a year, he became independent and self-reliant, as if he had changed another. The parent also said that his son sees Keming not only as a business, but also as a university.

This story made me think about the question: what does a business need to be successful in? It is certain that you want to make money by running a business, but can you say that an enterprise is successful if it makes money? I can't see it. I agree with the saying that a business should be run as a school, and that only when a business makes money and educates people can it be truly successful.

Chen Keming, the king of noodles, shared his entrepreneurial story: What does a business have to be successful in?

Konosuke Matsushita of Japan said: "Management is education, and every company is a university." I believe that an enterprise should also unite people, help people, educate people, move people, and shape people like a school. Enterprises should not only deliver wealth to the society, but also send talents to the society, not only to make their own products become excellent products, but also to make every employee a good product.

I usually attach more importance to the ideological and political work of employees within the enterprise, and I do not advocate simply pushing problematic employees to the society, but try my best to cultivate every employee. "Bosses and bosses are the best teachers", we guide employees in practical work, involving business philosophy, values, and professional skills, etc., to be honest with each other, words and deeds.

Keming's training center has more than 50 full-time and part-time internal trainers in various specialties, and has also hired experts to give lectures to the company. In addition to various trainings, the company's morning reading has been insisted on for 10 years, and the sound of books wafted out of the window every morning, and many pedestrians thought that the company was a school.

Chen Keming, the king of noodles, shared his entrepreneurial story: What does a business have to be successful in?

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