So I got this inspiring story in my mail and decided to share it. Read and be inspired. No knowledge is lost.
It's More Important to Be Kind than Clever
One of the more 
heart-warming stories to zoom around the Internet lately involves a 
young man, his dying grandmother, and a bowl of clam chowder from Panera
 Bread. It's a little story that offers big lessons about service,
 brands, and the human side of business — a story that underscores why 
efficiency should never come at the expense of humanity.
The story, as told 
in AdWeek, goes like this: Brandon Cook, from Wilton, New Hampshire, was
 visiting his grandmother in the hospital. Terribly ill with cancer, she
 complained to her grandson that she desperately wanted
 a bowl of soup, and that the hospital's soup was inedible (she used 
saltier language). If only she could get a bowl of her favorite clam 
chowder from Panera Bread! Trouble was, Panera only sells clam chowder 
on Friday. So Brandon called the nearby Panera and
 talked to store manager Suzanne Fortier. Not only did Sue make clam 
chowder specially for Brandon's grandmother, she included a box of 
cookies as a gift from the staff.
It was a small act 
of kindness that would not normally make headlines. Except that Brandon 
told the story on his Facebook page, and Brandon's mother, Gail Cook, 
retold the story on Panera's fan page. The rest, as they
 say, is social-media history. Gail's post generated 500,000 (and 
counting) "likes" and more than 22,000 comments on Panera's Facebook 
page. Panera, meanwhile, got something that no amount of traditional 
advertising can buy — a genuine sense of affiliation
 and appreciation from customers around the world.
Marketing types have
 latched on to this story as an example of the power of social media and
 "virtual word-of-mouth" to boost a company's reputation. But I see the 
reaction to Sue Fortier's gesture as an example of something
 else — the hunger among customers, employees, and all of us to engage 
with companies on more than just dollars-and-cents terms. In a world 
that is being reshaped by the relentless advance of technology, what 
stands out are acts of compassion and connection
 that remind us what it means to be human. 
As I read the story 
of Brandon and his grandmother, I thought back to a lecture delivered 
two years ago by Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon.com, to the 
graduating seniors of my alma mater, Princeton University. Bezos
 is nothing if not a master of technology — he has built his company, 
and his fortune, on the rise of the Internet and his own intellect. But 
he spoke that day not about computing power or brainpower, but about his
 grandmother — and what he learned when he
 made her cry.
Even as a 
10-year-old boy, it turns out, Bezos had a steel-trap mind and a passion
 for crunching numbers. During a summer road trip with his grandparents,
 young Jeff got fed up with his grandmother's smoking in the car
 — and decided to do something about it. From the backseat, he 
calculated how many cigarettes per day his grandmother smoked, how many 
puffs she took per cigarette, the health risk of each puff, and 
announced to her with great fanfare, "You've taken nine years
 off your life!"
Bezos's calculations
 may have been accurate — but the reaction was not what he expected. His
 grandmother burst into tears. His grandfather pulled the car off to the
 side of the road and asked young Jeff to step out. And
 then his grandfather taught him a lesson that this now-billionaire decided 
to share with the Class of 2010: "My grandfather looked at me, and 
after a bit of silence, he gently and calmly said, 'Jeff, one day you'll
 understand that it's harder to be kind than
 clever.'" 
That's a lesson I 
wish more businesspeople understood — a lesson that is reinforced by the
 reaction to this simple act of kindness at Panera Bread. Indeed, I 
experienced something similar not so long ago, and found it
 striking enough to devote an HBR blog post to the experience. In my 
post, I told the story of my father, his search for a new car, a health 
emergency that took place in the middle of that search — and a couple of
 extraordinary (and truly human) gestures by
 an auto dealer that put him at ease and won his loyalty. 
"What is it about 
business that makes it so hard to be kind?" I asked at the time. "And 
what kind of businesspeople have we become when small acts of kindness 
feel so rare?"
That's what's really
 striking about the Panera Bread story — not that Suzanne Fortier went 
out of her way to do something nice for a sick grandmother, but that her
 simple gesture attracted such global attention and acclaim.
So by all means, 
encourage your people to embrace technology, get great at business 
analytics, and otherwise ramp up the efficiency of everything they do. 
But just make sure all their efficiency doesn't come at the expense
 of their humanity. Small gestures can send big signals about who we 
are, what we care about, and why people should want to affiliate with 
us. It's harder (and more important) to be kind than clever.
 
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