Roy Bahat and Bryn Freedman: What is the meaning of work?
Roy Bahat invests in the future of work, with a focus on automation, data, robotics, media, productivity tools and more. Full bioBryn Freedman - Editorial director and curator, TED Institute
Bryn Freedman helps those who want to give the "talk of their lives" in a clear, passionate and authentic way. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
funds these AI programs and invests.
to not have a bias
for the rest of us
and you read the newspaper
they may take all our jobs,"
focused on the future of work,
should be a focus for us.
and read that and said,
That's me who's doing that."
in which we invest struggle
that they make and buy them,
might struggle, too.
who sits here and tells you,
It's all going to work out great.
tellers in banks."
"This is going to accelerate.
there's a chance the center doesn't hold."
the answer to this;
and I went to the conferences,
100 efforts to study the future of work.
over and over again:
always said that and it turns out OK."
of your job, anyway."
and go off and have a drink.
Kabuki theater of this discussion,
and worked with in the technology world
were not speaking to them.
think tank NGO called New America
at a technology company
it was occasionally awkward --
what is it that will happen here.
on work going to be?
that there could be real change,
about teleportation or anything like that.
we're reminded of this in the world --
going to happen is hard.
there are other things you can do.
alternate possible futures,
where no job is safe.
distinct possibility we could.
and you think what should we do,
actually turn out to be the same,
10 to 20 years into the future is,
we want to act on
the future is right now.
and what does that tell us?
that we should be doing,
the problem first.
becomes more productive
become more productive,
of prime working-age men,
as many men not working.
of Walmart workers and said,
this futuristic self-checkout thing?"
you heard about the cash recycler?
installed right now,
at every Walmart right now."
understand the problem."
that were the ones that were excluded,
affected by this change.
couple of years doing that.
and Youngstown, Ohio,
trying to make it work
from New York or San Francisco
their jobs after they leave.
to ask them about the self-driving truck,
to their full-time job,
that came out loud and clear.
are less looking for more money
of the robot taking their job,
what they want out of work,
less than 150,000 dollars a year,
and secure income, on average,
across the earth who don't earn a living,
amount from month to month
a real problem on our hands."
which took us a longer time to understand,
of self-worth through work
in our conversations.
appreciate this answer.
with self-esteem.
between dignity and stability?
You need stability first.
that are happening right now
of studying guaranteed income,
health care gets provided
where we must figure that out.
after talking to people
from the beginning is understand
that gives people dignity,
that they want to live.
especially, to be honest, rich people --
and you ask them,
that your work be important to you?"
150,000 dollars a year or more
that their work be important.
"Is your work important to you?"
on the open road and it was amazing.
than people who went to college."
of their thought and say something like,
and vegetables in the morning,
to his job, was caring for his aunt.
Can't you just pay somebody to do it?"
somebody we pay for.
of being needed.
"dignity," it's fascinating.
in the English language, from antiquity.
is suitable, it's fitting,
of something greater than yourself,
who really care for people
people are finally asking the question.
we often get phone calls
and boardrooms saying,
introducing automation?"
"What do we do about self-worth?"
who work for them
to their ability to just do their job.
of just making your life work.
our culture more broadly,
is to see the magazine cover
who is the heroic caregiver.
that dramatizes the person
so we can do the things we do.
that I would binge.
of this before --
experience in the United States.
of needing one another
for how we all fit as a society.
and have people --
a tailor, worked in a mine --
for a living and say, "That's not work."
and there's no danger of getting hurt.
to imagine 100 years from now,
for each other.
just be about having a job.
you need a job to have dignity,
you say to all the parents
and all the caregivers
for what they're doing,
essential human quality.
puzzle of our time:
that stability throughout life,
how to create an inclusive,
but multigenerationally inclusive --
human experience included --
how we can be needed by one another.
RB: Thank you.
for your participation.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Roy Bahat - Venture capitalistRoy Bahat invests in the future of work, with a focus on automation, data, robotics, media, productivity tools and more.
Why you should listen
Roy Bahat invests in the future of work as a venture capitalist, with a focus on machine intelligence. Prior to his life as a VC, Bahat founded start-ups, served as a corporate executive at News Corp. and worked in government in the office of New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg.
As the head of Bloomberg Beta, an investment firm with 150 million dollars under management, Bahat and his team have invested in areas like automation, data, robotics, media, productivity tools and many others.
Fast Company named Bahat one of the Most Creative People in Business and noted "Bahat is a natural innovator ... one of the most candid people you'll ever meet (check out his LinkedIn profile)." He organized "Comeback Cities," where he leads groups of venture capitalists and members of Congress on bus tours to find the untapped beds of talent and entrepreneurship in America. He also co-chaired the Shift Commission on Work, Workers, and Technology, a partnership between Bloomberg and think-tank New America to look at automation and the future of work 10 to 20 years from now.
Bahat is on the faculty at U.C. Berkeley, where he teaches about media at the Haas School of Business. He serves on the board of the Center for Investigative Reporting, a nonprofit newsroom, and is on the steering committee of the Economic Security Project. A graduate of Harvard College, where he ran the student public service nonprofit, Bahat was also a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University. He lives in San Francisco with his wife and two kids.
Roy Bahat | Speaker | TED.com
Bryn Freedman - Editorial director and curator, TED Institute
Bryn Freedman helps those who want to give the "talk of their lives" in a clear, passionate and authentic way.
Why you should listen
Award-winning TV producer, investigative journalist and author, Bryn Freedman joined TED in 2014 as the editorial director and curator for the TED Institute. In her work with TED, Freedman creates and executes TED conference events for Fortune 500 companies, overseeing all editorial content as well as managing speaker coaches and determining both the topics for each talk and the overall conference theme. In addition to curating these events, she works as an executive speaker coach for professionals who want to give the "talk of their lives" in a clear, passionate and authentic way.
Freedman is also co-founder of Voices4Freedom, an international organization aimed at eradicating slavery through education and media.
Bryn Freedman | Speaker | TED.com