Marco Alverà: The surprising ingredient that makes businesses work better
Marco Alverà is an Italian/American businessman and CEO of Snam, Europe’s largest natural gas utility. Full bio
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to a friend's wedding.
who were going to the same wedding,
to the groom as I was ...
and Greta, it was last week.
massaging their mom's back
that the other girl had a longer go.
shouting, "That's not fair!"
had precisely one minute on the toy.
triggers us so strongly
issues of our society,
of polarization,
defensive and disengaged.
of workers in the US are disengaged,
spent on education in the US.
of a country like Austria.
and promoting fairness
Is it about systems?
interesting than rules and equality.
state-owned oil company.
the best performance
bonuses and promotions
something to worry about.
was producing some pockets of excellence,
was finding more oil and gas
to figure out how this was possible.
that became less and less likely.
that no one else had? No.
for the whole team?
really carefully.
dollars for the company,
knew what they were doing.
about short-term results.
for bad luck or for an honest mistake.
for what they were trying to do,
They were part of a community.
the company would stand by them.
the definition of fairness.
unfairness antennae, put them at rest.
which was finding oil and gas.
about company politics or greed or fear.
to take huge rewards.
behind their backs.
at the company Christmas dinner
were working in a fair system
what they felt was right
what's quick, what's convenient,
but it is also a great motivator.
who were doing the right thing.
that I hire someone internally
but he didn't finish high school,
and so we gave him the job.
for a budget to build a cheese factory
in the village.
no one ever built a cheese factory.
because the milk they had would spoil
so that's what they needed.
to take a risk and stick our head out,
and other colleagues
doing great things,
how this thing really worked,
to become a better leader.
to colleagues, to coaches,
and the way they worked
by recent brain science.
that this can work at all levels
or the stable careers.
an innate sense of fairness.
trying to struggle up a hill.
that pushes the ball up the hill,
pushes the ball back down.
a square or a triangle.
that gives us pleasure,
unfairness, we feel pain ...
as if I really hurt myself.
the primitive, reptile part of our brain,
with threats and survival,
that's all we can think about.
that we're wired this way,
of a community to survive.
until we're maybe 10 years old,
the same response
from my community.
why fairness is good
makes us really defensive,
that in a fair environment,
to be fair in turn.
contaminates the whole pool,
there's plenty of drops in that pool.
as we can from everywhere,
starting from our companies.
a team of 3,000 excellent people,
3,000 happy, motivated team workers
in my fairness crusade
out of the equation.
people who say yes
for anyone who has different ideas.
a culture of diversity of opinions
is a little more procedural.
the systems in the company,
and allocate resources,
of anything that's not very clear,
anything that's limiting
within the company.
and the motivation for the same reasons.
you look at the rules,
and we have to do that --
to get to the real essence of fairness.
requires something else.
into a spreadsheet, into an algorithm.
part of our rational decision.
we're missing key important points,
with our fairness center switched on.
the job he's really hoping to get?
so much for this product?
is the right one ...
what the answer is.
the real best out of people,
will they leave their fears behind
making it their priority?
in a company that was more fair?
colleagues and bosses
for fairness and for character
to knock on the door
but why is it not happening now?
isn't always easy.
high school was a risk.
in Ecuador was a risk.
a little bit further,
and do what's right?
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Marco Alverà - Businessman, fairness crusaderMarco Alverà is an Italian/American businessman and CEO of Snam, Europe’s largest natural gas utility.
Why you should listen
Marco Alverà has 20 years of experience in Italy's most important energy companies. He holds a degree in Philosophy and Economics from the London School of Economics and started his career working at Goldman Sachs in London.
In 2002, Alverà joined Enel as Director of Group Corporate Strategy and a member of the management committee, contributing significantly to the development of the company's gas strategy. In 2004, he became Chief Financial Officer of Wind Telecom and oversaw the sale of Wind to Orascom.
In 2005, Alverà moved to Eni where he worked for 10 years holding various positions. He joined the company as Director of Supply & Portfolio Development at the Gas & Power Division, successfully navigating the group through the gas Russia-Ukraine gas crisis in the Winter of 2006. In 2008 he moved to Eni's Exploration & Production Division as Executive Vice President for Russia, Northern Europe, and North and South America. In 2010 he was appointed Chief Executive Officer of Eni Trading and Shipping. In 2013, he took on responsibility for the Midstream business unit, which consolidates the results of Eni's Gas & Power Division and brings together all of the supply, logistics and trading activities linked to energy commodities. He was later appointed Chief Retail Market Gas & Power Officer at Eni.
Alverà is a Visiting Fellow of the University of Oxford. He currently serves as President of GasNaturally, non-executive director of S&P Global and member of the General Council of the Giorgio Cini Foundation in Venice.
Marco Alverà | Speaker | TED.com