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What is partner culture?
Partner culture refers to the cultural phenomenon that young people cooperate with others to complete a task or achieve a goal.

For example, food partners, fitness partners, weight loss partners, of course, I want travel partners.

To put it bluntly, it is the relationship that everyone regularly carries out activities together. A partner is that friendship is shallower than a friend, but more important than a colleague. It focuses on the precise companionship in the vertical segmentation field, which not only meets the social needs, but also weakens the emotional cost.

As far as the workplace is concerned, how many people rely on food, words and invoices day and night? It seems that the friendship is not deep, but in fact it is inseparable from her. Chattering endlessly, Cinderella in the internet age bubbled up on time as soon as she got to work, full of humor and fun, from entertainment gossip to philosophy of life, and quickly lost contact after work.

Meal companions have the same taste and cooperate tacitly. You can read each other's hearts with one look and quickly finalize the invoice for today's food. At the end of every month, he is my brother, hand in hand, facing messy invoices and endless reimbursement forms, hoping to be a beautiful supervisor and make the workplace life colorful.

Reasons for the prevalence of partner culture

1. Learn more

By cooperating with others, young people can learn new skills and knowledge and gain more practical experience. This is very beneficial to their career and life development.

Expand your circle of friends.

Cooperation with others can expand the social network of young people. They can meet people from different industries and fields and get more opportunities.

preserve

In the era of economic enjoyment, cooperation with people can reduce costs. For example, young people can save a lot of money by enjoying housing or transportation.

Challenges brought by "partner" culture

However, the "partner" culture also brings some challenges:

1. There may be a trust problem. Because collaborators are generally strangers, there may be trust problems. This may lead to the failure of some cooperation plans.

2. There may be inconsistent cooperation goals. Cooperation with others requires * * * understanding. Inconsistent cooperation goals of partners may lead to cooperation failure.