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How To Find Ultimate Fulfilment At Work: Marcus Buckingham | E140

May 05, 202201:40:30
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could you do me a quick favor if you're listening to this please hit the follow or subscribe button it helps more than you know and we invite subscribers in
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every month to watch the show in person i lost my dad i lost my marriage i saw my company then you sort of ask yourself
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what are you doing with your life my name is marcus buckingham he's a best-selling author a rock star in
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corporate america i couldn't say my own name until i was 12. the more you try to
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fix a stammer the worse it gets from a very early age we start telling people that strength is what you're good at but
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yeah i'm good at some things i hate what's that that's a weakness i had got myself into a position where i was
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solely responsible for one huge client disney i look like i sort of feel
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confident but i had years of panic attacks it was super psychologically damaging
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to be trying to be somebody that you're not the first relationship you better have is a really good one with yourself
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the best people in any job they find love in the activities themselves love is for work and work is for love and if
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we do that it's not just individualistically satisfying it's what companies want from us
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so without further ado i'm stephen bartlett and this is the dyrova ceo usa edition i hope nobody's
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listening but if you are then please keep this yourself
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[Music]
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marcus it's uh it's a pleasure to have you here in our studio here in la another brit sir sir we've had quite a
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few brits in but um you're one that's particularly inspired me with your work when i was doing the research on you and
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reading through your book and your prior book um i i was overwhelmed with the amount of
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questions i wanted to ask you because of the the depth of knowledge but also how much the topics you talk about resonate
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with me the place i wanted to start with you though that i found particularly surprising having met you having spoken
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to you having seen how people have um become very enamored with you as a public speaker is
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you started your life with a stammer yes a really bad stammer yes how does
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someone get from and i want to talk about that but for context you went from having a stammer which was pretty
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crippling in terms of social aspects to mark french who's the us us's top
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lecturer the leader of the top lecture agency called you one of the best public speakers he's ever seen how does one go
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from having a stammer and being you know really hindered by it to that position and tell me about the stannah
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yeah so when i first started to speak and this happens for quite a lot more boys than girls actually as a hams my synapse synapses um
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didn't fire right and so you have almost immediate disfluency so my earliest memories steve
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are not being able to say my name one of my very earliest fears was not ever being able to be married because i
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couldn't say will you marry me so you start off and you start trying to communicate at three and four
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and then you realize that something's really wrong but you're so young you don't really understand what's wrong and then you get older and older you realize
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you can't you can't put words together um so for the first 12 years of my life
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not being able to speak was what i thought about every single moment of every day and everyone's got their own
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traumas and their own difficulties and i had lots of blessings in my life but
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um i couldn't speak and i had a lot to say so i would keep trying and then it wouldn't work and i didn't know why and a stem is
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a really it's a perfect metaphor for everything that parents try to do with their kids you the more
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you try to fix a stammer the worse it gets so i went to the speech pathologist and
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they did the whole peter piper picture peck of pickle peckers thing and you
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trying to sort of get them the muscles to kick in and it just got worse and worse and most of us and then
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i was one of five boys that was asked to read aloud in chapel i had kept volunteering to be in christmas plays
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and stuff and i was never picked because everyone rightly was like uh he can't talk so i'd never really spoken in front
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of anyone at all when i was talking to you like if i was seven years old and talking to you like this i couldn't say anything like i
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wouldn't i would try and then you would be like this is mortify so i'd never been asked to read
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aloud anywhere anyway that day i can start my palms are sweating even just thinking
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about it because you realize my life's over every single child in the school is
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going to see me now stand up i can't fake the words because they've got the bible study books because it was in chapel so they can see what i'm supposed
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to read so i can't i used to substitute words that i could say for words i couldn't it's an old stammers trick
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but they're like you can see what i'm going to read and girls and boys at that age as you know can be pretty cruel um so i'm like i'm
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done i'm just baked you know stick a fork in me but anyway i walk up and i turn around and i look at all the faces and i it was
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it was like a a stimulus and then my response my brain felt
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different that's all i can say about it just felt different felt warmer it felt fluid
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and i just read the whole piece with not a single stemmer really just the whole thing and what
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occurred to me was i love the eyes on me that sounds really weird
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the more people i'm talking to i'm better brain comes faster words
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come out better stories that i don't know why i didn't work at it i didn't struggle with that
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it was just that worked on me in the same way that some people over summer when they sing they don't have a stomach so i took that away i was
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blown away i didn't understand it but um then i just went you know what that
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should be an unlock for me we often go to our deep traumas to try to understand how to
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fix ourselves and if you have social anxiety or what caused it where did it start and we sort of
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we we pathologize ourselves with the best of intentions but i went the other way and i was like i know so much about
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this dance demo i've been to more speech pathology sessions and read more books and i know so much about i just
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can't fix it instead i'm going to i'm gonna decide that when i talk to one person i'll just pretend i'm talking to
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400. i'll just literally pretend i'm talking to 400. and the stammer went away in a week
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i was faking public speaking when i was just speaking and i was doing it as a coping mechanism so that i didn't
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stammer and it worked it's fascinating it's weird makes no sense
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right it's like we're mysterious and that's what i read about in the book is that i don't think we've really grabbed hold of that this
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huge variability in variety that lives in human beings we have talked about it in terms of race
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or gender or age or nationality or religion but we haven't really talked about it in terms of why are you different from your brother by the time
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you get to be about 18 19 you have a hundred trillion synaptic connections in your brain that lead you to love some
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things and load others things that shouldn't go together go together things that you lean into
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that you shouldn't lean into but you do like for me i shouldn't have loved public speaking but for some daft reason i did why no idea but we
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we have this unbelievably intricate network of synaptic connections that makes us completely different from the
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person we grew up in the same house with and what no one's ever taught us is a
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um how do you understand that uniqueness like what are the signs life is giving you and b
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how do you use it like can you rewire your brain to become someone else what happens if you put your ten thousand dollars in can you rewire your brain and
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become a different human being can you rewire that network in your brain well if you have a growth mindset
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supposedly you you should and yet actually we know that's not what happens at all you grow more synaptic
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connections in the part of your brain you have the most pre-existing synaptic connections everyone because you've got the alpha instagram
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proteins and the blood vessels and the infrastructure so actually growth for all of us is becoming actually a more
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defined version of who you are you don't rewire your brain becomes someone else the
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question in life isn't really growth or no growth it's where will you grow the most so i don't think we've ever really graph
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grappled with the 11 year old who's basically asking herself who am i
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is there a me in there and we could have 10 years of school
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yes where we learned geometry we could have 10 years going here's how to use the raw material of a week of school to
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start helping you know a little bit more about that weird massive and massively filigreed network
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in your brain and we could help you learn to have a language around that and how to describe
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it without bragging or how to be interested in other people's network
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we could do all of that and of course as you know as an entrepreneur you want to hire people like that because then they
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have mastery of themselves so when they join a team they can start going well you can lean into me for this
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and you know here's a bit where i struggle actually i need some help and here's where things come really fast and here's where i'm like a deer in the
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headlights but i know certainly in the company that i built it's like you don't hire people
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like that you tend to hire people that are completely lovely and smart but really quite inarticulate
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at describing where they find love and what they do where they're at their best and where they
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struggle we don't we just haven't grappled with the beautiful wonderful
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extensive variation of us as individuals and when you were that age when you
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weren't say 11 or 13 or 14 what was if i'd asked you what you wanted to do when you're older what would the answer have
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been i didn't if i go all the way back to 9 or ten i wouldn't have known what i
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wanted to be i did know that i started to pay attention to things that other people didn't pay attention to and that was
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interesting then at 16 i bumped into this titan of
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positive psychology his name was dr don clifton who um was the chairman of gallup but
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also his chief scientist and so at 16 he said you're going to go study psychology and
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i had chosen psychology and he was like come to lincoln nebraska and i'll say i'll teach you about positive psychology
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and studying what's right with people and i was like all right i'll do that didn't know where it would lead but knew
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that research in psychology real world observed human behavior i just was always interested in that for
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people that don't know what is gallup oh well gallup's the first company i joined after school after university
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gallup was founded by george gallup who was the inventor of polling you like polling i hate it he figured out something which was
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if you talk to 10 000 very carefully selected people your predictions of what they're going to do
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or vote for anything is more accurate than taking 100 000 people because you're 100 000
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people might be skewed but if you have what's called a representative sample in your 10 000 then you've actually can
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extrapolate from your 10 000 to 100 million um now there's subtleties around that
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but but that's where it started after george died don clifton bought the company
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and don's focus was psychometrics so how do you measure things about a human that are really really important but you
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can't count how can you measure engagement how can you measure strengths how can you measure
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resilience um talent how do you measure that could i figure out a set of questions
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that would help me discover something about you in terms of your strengths your talents your advantages
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your attributes that you don't even know yourself like i just loved that idea and so half of gallup was polling and
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half of gallup was psychometrics and so i was there for the first 17 years of my career and we built this
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this tool that 25 million people have taken called strength finder um strength finder is all about exactly what it says
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um let's try and measure you on 34 strengths and then we'll give you your top five um so that was the side that i
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spent my first 17 years of my career with is trying to measure the uniqueness of human beings
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from a top line perspective when you were in that role because i mean 17 years trying to remember to find the uniqueness in human beings and
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inventing this thing called strength finder what is what did you learn about what a strength is because when i think about
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strength i think it is um i guess just something that i'm good at yeah so
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when you dive into what a strength is what you find is it's shot through with emotion it's what you love to do what do
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you lean into what do you find yourself unable to stop doing there's a there's an obsessive
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um and joyous quality to a strength so when you push and push and push on a strength people think that a strength is what you're good at this is what you're
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bad at but actually if you push on that even just a little stevie you bump into
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people going but i'm really good at that and i hate it what's that what's it where you're really good at it even in school when you've got an a and
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you're like i'm thank goodness that classes over because i don't want to take it again but your parents go well you got an a in fact you've got an in
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biology so you might want to do medicine you should be a doctor but deep down yourself going but i don't i don't like
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sick people i actually don't like sickness at all and yet no matter as a doctor you keep curing them there's another one the next day they keep
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coming to my darn office you know i'm never done and and so we from a very early age we start telling people that strength is
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what you're good at but yet our own human experiences i'm good at some things i hate
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what's that well you push on that that's a weakness and so we should change our definition a weakness
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is any activity that weakens you any activity where before you do it you don't want to do it while you're doing it time drags on when you're done with
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it you feel drained that's a weakness i don't care how good you are at it if that's how you feel
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after it and then somebody were to say to you build your career around that that's sadistic but that's
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that's that's the proper definition of a weakness is if it weakens you definition of a strength is any activity that
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strengthens you before you do it you lean into it you sort of just can't stop yourself from volunteering while you're
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doing it time whips by and you're like you look up you thought it was an hour right it's and it's now it's it's
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you've been doing it for seven hours and you're like oh my god and then when you're done with it you're like
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i i know i feel completed or i feel like me or i feel authentic right i don't feel drained i
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might not want to do it right away again but i'm like you're from the latin right you're invigorated you're strengthened
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which of course means if a strength is what strengthens you and a weakness is what weakens you what's super cool about that is that you're the best judge of
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both no one knows better than you what we consider and what strengthens you from the nine years old we could be
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saying to people hey what strengthens you about even video games okay which video game what what about it is it
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multiplayer game as a first person shooter we could start to get people to be cultivating their own kind you know
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genius about what what are your strengths somebody else is the judge of your
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performance no question so if you say i really really love um
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remembering people's names no one can come in and say no no you don't they can't say well you should
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probably use that to um give better customer service and here's how you might want to do that but no one can come in and say you don't love that
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because if you say no no i no i do then you're the best judge of that now we might want to help you learn the
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detail of that well what do you mean by helping people what do you mean by learning their names or what bit about it so we could help you get more
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detailed around it but a strength is what strengthens you and you are the only genius when it comes to your
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strengths 17 years with gallup that's sort of the biggest takeaway and strength finder or other tools like
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that can help you sort of get in the vicinity of what are your strengths but really a strength there's an
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activity that strengthens you and and life frankly is waking up every day
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kind of putting on a show for you going what about this what about this what about this what about this um
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and yeah you're on the receiving end going hmm how about that what is it about that 17 years at gallup you know
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the other thing i was thinking about before you arrived was you must know how to ask a good question
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because that's sort of central to gallup's work is knowing how to ask the right type of question and there's so
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many questions that are trying to get to the same answer but there's various routes you can take and the divergence
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between i guess the in terms of outcome of a good question and a bad question must be quite significant like if i'm trying to find out what motivates you
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there's a number of ways that i could ask that and i think a lot of the ways that i would ask that simple question
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would actually lead me to the wrong place because they're like laced with biases and presumptions and maybe
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they're not open maybe they're too binary so how does one go about because asking good questions is so important in
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life generally whether you're trying to help a friend you're trying to hire someone you're trying to understand anything it's all about inquiry um how
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does one ask better questions is there did you learn anything about that i got it well you're right that's that's what the
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product is and you would test it out you would do what's called a concurrent validity study where you take 100 really good
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managers and 100 average ones and you try out 250 questions 250 questions and you see which
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questions elicit patterns of answers that the best people in a role do versus ones that are less successful
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and many of the questions that you thought were great questions you have to throw out because they don't work as in
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the most successful people don't answer them in any way that's similar to each other and different than these people so that's really what the business was
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trying out lots of different questions to figure out what are the best questions you can ask in this case for a particular role or
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job but in general if you wanna if you wanna ask really good questions the first thing to know
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is you should be asking open-ended questions so you're asking um what did you love most about your
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previous work um open not yes knows like just open-ended what what did you love most about that
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so the that's the it sounds like an obvious thing but it's amazing how close-ended our questions are as opposed to like what would be an example of a
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close did you love managing people are you an overachiever or an underachiever um you know or um do you like overcoming
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people's resistance to your ideas yes so you can if you're not careful you close the
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answer down best questions are always like uh tell me about a time when you uh
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when you built something you didn't expect to build it's just open hard to measure though right if it's open that's why i think people avoid open questions right
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because then because then you get such a dive like variety of answers how do you like put them in categories
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well when it comes to psychometrics you have a listen for and you code it
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plus when you hear the listen for and zero for everything else like boiling and not boiling so when you're actually
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building an instrument it's maybe too inside baseball as it were but inside cricket but that's how you do it when you're
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building an instrument so for example you take a question like um how do you know if you're doing a good job of listening
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let's say that you're trying to figure out empathy and you decide that one of the ways to
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measure empathy would be a question like how do you know if you're doing a good job of listening so you take your study
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group of highly empathetic people your contrast group of less and you experiment with a whole bunch of
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questions one of them is that one well it turns out by the way that one does have a listen for
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a really good listen for what to listen for um a pattern of responses that the most
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empathetic people all seem to share even though they don't know one another okay and the listen for if you imagine all
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the possible answers to that question how do you know if you're doing a good job of listening you could imagine somebody's saying well if i can repeat
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back to the person what they said or if i just nod or like all sorts of uh if i
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mirror their embody language turns out the most empathetic people all say the same thing
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um they don't say it in exactly the same way but they say exactly the same thing they all say i know
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i'm doing a good job of listening when the other person keeps talking
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well that's interesting because that means the empathetic person instinctively knows that the job of a listener is not to understand what the
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person's saying interestingly the job of a listener is to be however they do it in such a way that
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you keep talking the job the outcome of listening is the other person sharing
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what you realize in most interviews frankly first of all that the interview split of time is 60 40 the wrong way the
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interviewer talks for 60 of the time in the interview he talks for 40. so we've got a big imbalance and by the
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way the interviewer rates the person more highly in a job interview when the interviewer talks most there's a very
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strong voice really yeah totally when i've talked to you i rate maybe you didn't when you're
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building your company but across the board when you study this there's a positive correlation between
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amount of time the interviewer talks and the rating of the interviewee wow um but anyway the in terms of building the
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instrument once you've got oh wow all the most empathetic people say the same thing to that question how do you
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know if you're doing a good job of listening when the other person keeps talking well then that becomes a listen for and then whenever you're trying to
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measure empathy you throw that question out you shut up you let the person talk and then if you
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hear unprompted off the top of their head if they just say unprompted by you no cues from you no biases from you no
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nudging because i like the look of you when you walked in you just shut up even when the person says what do you mean by that you and by the way this is one of
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the tricks of interviewing you have to learn your parry phrases a parry phrase is like when somebody because everyone wants to
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try to narrow you down i'm sure in dragon's den you've seen this like people try to narrow you down towards getting to the place where you say yes
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and so when somebody says you know how do you know if you're doing a good job of listening the interviewee tends to say well what do you mean by that you
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mean at home or at work do you mean if i know them really well if i don't and the tendency because that's just what humans
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do is to go oh uh work or when someone you don't know what and you narrow it down so they can get the
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right answer so you have to learn a parry phrase like well i know what i mean by that but i'm interested in what you mean by that just
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to knock it back just to knock it back and then if you aren't if you ask a question like that and the person spontaneously goes
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if the other person keeps talking and then you actually code that you can score it going back to your question about how do you score it you can score
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that you didn't tell them what to say you asked an open-ended question and you knew what you were listening for and so
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you can code it in this case a plus and everything else isn't a bad answer it's just a non-predictive answer of that
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particular trait um there's a whole bunch i mean
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if you wanted to select really good sales people um here's a great question
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how do you feel when someone doubts what you have to say how do you feel open-ended how do you feel when someone doubts what you have
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to say imagine all the possible answers to that question and what you find is highly successful
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people get 100 of them less successful salespeople get 100 of them
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these people in answer to that question how do you feel when someone doubts what you have to say
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they all say it pisses me off the successful ones yes
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look don't buy from me that's all right disagree with me that's all right don't
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doubt me what we called we did call it this a negative emotional reaction
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because when you're a salesperson you're like listen i i respect the fact that you can choose what product or service you might want
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to go with don't doubt me it's like when people say with salespeople well you shouldn't take rejection personally the best salespeople are like are you
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kidding that's what i'm selling i'm me so in this case when you put the word
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doubt in there it's like it's like a bang and you're like oh uh
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uh don't doubt me so the listen for there is like very specific by the way when
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you ask great teachers that question and average teaches that question they say completely the opposite
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they say the best teachers go i love that because to them are not all teachers
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because there's a whole bunch of teachers who don't say that but you look at great teachers they go no the doubt is a student
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i want the student to be doubting that's learning and so you've got asked that for the
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great nurses average nurses the question doesn't work anymore because who doubts a nurse yeah you know
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so it's with all these things i'm sure you found with your business you can ask one question and then
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you're really just trying to pin your ears back shut the heck up and let the person ramble because it's
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so revealing even a question like what did you enjoy most about your previous work yeah i
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mean what a great question that is and again people will say well what do you mean with previous work do you mean this job but you'll go hey
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what did you enjoy most about your previous work just talk to me about it it's
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well i think it's fascinating and it's predictive like you can start to predict what people are going to do
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if you can hear what they have repeatedly done people say you know past behavior is the best predictor of future
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behavior no it isn't repeated past behavior is the best predictor of repeated future behavior so if you want
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to know repeated past behavior you ask an open-ended question and then you shut up and top of mind is what the person
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repeatedly does or thinks or feels and it's so revealing we just mostly in conversation we just
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talk at each other well i did this well i did oh you didn't fall asleep wasn't that i didn't policy loves neither you missed your plane i've missed my place
00:25:04
yeah you know it said like waiting to talk exactly in your first book um you talked a lot about employee satisfaction
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so your first book is called first break all the rules and you really highlight the importance of employee satisfaction and i think you
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know a lot of people might think oh yeah keeping employees happy is you know you know i'll we'll do our best but
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um it really is from your read from your um your work it's clear that it's central to the
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success of a company i guess my first question is then what is the single biggest predictor or
00:25:37
the unexpected predictor of employee satisfaction in the workplace because i would think it was like you know one
00:25:43
might think it would be how much you pay them or how many holiday days they get what did you find
00:25:49
out well the two biggest things from all of this research and it sort of goes full
00:25:54
circle from first break all the rules which was the first book i wrote which is based upon gallup
00:26:00
research in you know way back when but it comes all the way full circle steve to this book which
00:26:06
is all about love um when you push and push and push on your question what you bump into is an item a
00:26:12
survey item that just keeps showing up in people that are more likely to stay with you
00:26:19
more likely to be productive more likely to have fewer lost work days less likely to sue frankly if they have an accident
00:26:25
on the job like all sorts of really good predictive real world outcomes are more likely to happen when someone says
00:26:30
firstly um i have a chance to use my strengths every day or i love what i do and i'm good at
00:26:37
um there's something about person work fit person work fit this job has some big
00:26:45
bits of it that fit me now who me is is variable of course but
00:26:50
is this job in any way an alien job to me or is that actually part of me when you have that in any job
00:26:57
we were talking before about the first job i ever studied was housekeepers where we think oh you know how to keep a stupid job i mean i bet they all just
00:27:03
want to get out of it as quickly as they can but you study the world's best housekeepers and you're like oh my word there are some people that love certain
00:27:08
aspects of that role any role done at excellence has got a lot of love in it and every role done averagely is
00:27:15
loveless if you have loveless work you're a worse worker we now know all sorts of biochemical reasons why that's
00:27:21
so but it just kept showing up in survey after survey after survey work you fit however you want to talk
00:27:27
about that is huge which is why of course i'm sure when you built your company you realize this
00:27:32
teams are everything teams are everything because they make homes for unique individuals and you can start
00:27:38
going ah you're all weird but but you do this and you do this and you do this and you do this and lo and behold the team's
00:27:45
well-rounded precisely because each person on it isn't well-rounded and then the team leader of course can be really
00:27:50
creative about well which bit of it do you love and can we get you to do a bit more of that and then you can lean into this person who weirdly loves balancing
00:27:56
the books but you hate it well that's interesting they love excel you love powerpoint okay well that's it that's a team and and so that's
00:28:03
that's all about person work uh fit so that's a huge one um and then of
00:28:09
course the second one in terms of um in terms of all the discoveries around
00:28:16
engagement is um it's your manager stupid it's like
00:28:22
if you think if you don't trust your manager if your manager doesn't know you if your manager doesn't pay attention to
00:28:28
you then your whole company becomes the manager and you can actually walk around your
00:28:34
neighborhood going you know what it's a pretty good company but i freaking hate her and if you freaking hate her you leave
00:28:41
i left the company's great now if you flip that around so you can go the company's terrible like the pay is bad
00:28:47
and the and the you know the benefits package isn't really what it's cracked up but my manager steve he's i mean i would follow
00:28:54
him anywhere which by the way sometimes happens when steve moves companies so those two things of everything i'm i'm not saying
00:29:02
that pay is nothing or benefits and nothing people like those things but if you want to see where people give that discretionary effort if you want to see
00:29:08
where certain teams saw and you go why why is that team crushing it and this team's struggling which by the way you
00:29:15
go inside companies you start measuring anything uh lost work days productivity sales profitability and what you find
00:29:21
and no one talks about this but you find variation you go inside of you go inside of home depot
00:29:27
or you go inside of marx and spencer's or you go inside of goldman sachs so you go inside of tesla you go inside of
00:29:32
disney oh well disney's got this culture tesla's got that culture all of that is rubbish you go inside a company let's
00:29:38
just take tesla and you start measuring what's it like to work here what you get is range
00:29:44
what's it like to work at tesla depends massively on which bloody team you're on and if you are working on a team down
00:29:51
here that's disengaged your manager doesn't care about you're not trusted that's tesla and when you leave you're
00:29:56
leaving that now this team over here is a super engaged ship that same business card
00:30:01
tesla tesla but you i don't know you read the i don't know what you read but you read the business press it sure looks as though companies have one
00:30:07
culture rubbish they have as many cultures as they do teams they have one stock price
00:30:12
but that's a totally different ball game so in terms of what drives engagement on this team does someone really think
00:30:19
about how i can fit the work that i'm doing a lot of and then do i really trust that my team leader is out to make
00:30:25
me bigger better he's interested in that when those two things i'm not saying there are other things recognition's important
00:30:31
mission you're going to talk to simon while you're here the why is important but the why doesn't compensate for the
00:30:36
what if what you're doing on that team doesn't fit you it's like nurses
00:30:43
you know why we have such burned out nurses in the nhs and over here too their why couldn't be stronger of course
00:30:49
their why is so vivid and yet they're burning out they have higher levels of ptsd than veterans
00:30:54
that return from war zones it's like we're crushing our nurses why well one many reasons but one reason is
00:31:01
the span of control one nurse supervisor to 60 nurses which is the average over here i don't
00:31:06
know exactly what the average is in the nhs but it's really big there's no teams in hospitals hospitals aren't built
00:31:12
around teams they're built around vertical areas of expertise so if you're a nurse
00:31:17
60 of you one nurse supervisor that poor nurse supervisor can't do those two things i just mentioned he or she can't
00:31:24
get to know you in terms of where your strengths and passions lie and then they can't put you on a team to help you be collaborative with others so
00:31:30
that together you can reinforce and support one another in those areas where you don't have strength or love or whatever
00:31:36
humans have been working in teams 50 000 years and if you go to hospitals there are no teams because the structure
00:31:42
is set up to make it impossible and then we wonder we go out and we clap
00:31:48
but it's all a bit it's like hey rather than dragging people out of the river who are
00:31:53
drowning why don't we go upstream and see why they're why we're pushing
00:31:58
them in in the first place with nurses we've built a system where they don't get those two things those
00:32:06
two needs met no one's interested in who they are and what they bring and no one has enough time to pay attention to how
00:32:14
they're feeling what they're into what they're not into who could they can work with like all of that stuff that humans need
00:32:20
that particular profession doesn't get and that's the reason why in all of our studies i run the adp
00:32:26
research institute now which is a big global institute it's the least resilient profession of all even pre-pandemic it was
00:32:33
and funnily enough the second most uh burned out is teachers so the two
00:32:39
most burned out least resilient professions have the clearest why the clearest sense of purpose
00:32:45
but the reality of the work the day-to-day reality of the work is super disengaging there's no teams in schools
00:32:53
it's like wherever you see no teams you get no trust in team leader and no link between you and your work you and
00:32:58
your role you and your role it's like teams of this magic technology
00:33:04
that we discovered 50 000 years ago when we tried to bring down big game it's so
00:33:09
interesting you say that because um i've always pondered so there's so many things that i thought about there the first thing was actually how right you
00:33:14
are having seen in my own organization over the years where i would do my one-on-ones with team members and
00:33:22
if jason fisher was managing the team even though they were in the same room
00:33:28
they're all in the design department but the 15 people jason fisher was managing would have reported tremendously high
00:33:33
levels of job satisfaction a team sat next to him doing pretty much the same work would come in and i was
00:33:40
i felt like i was fighting to keep them in the company because they were managed sat next to the other team managed by a
00:33:45
different person and the crazy thing is in the second team i describes one-on-one sessions with me they would
00:33:51
ask to be managed by jason fisher they would say could we and then eventually our decision as a
00:33:57
company was to put jason fisher up above the whole design studio so he was he was in charge
00:34:03
of 40 people but then he could like oversee the team and those people were happy and then the second thing you said just at
00:34:08
the end though which really made me think was um about freelancers and about their levels of engagement and
00:34:14
motivation they are not in teams they tend to work at home alone on computers on work which actually is not connected
00:34:20
to them a different project today a different project tomorrow and i believe
00:34:25
that they mus just it's this is an anecdotal thing that i've seen in my friends that
00:34:31
freelancers i think they struggle the most in terms of fulfillment and happiness in their work generally
00:34:37
obviously there's perks but generally no you're absolutely right the data would back you up a thousand percent
00:34:42
we've just finished we did a 25 000 person 25 country study two years ago just came out of the field three days
00:34:48
ago with a 27 000 person study 27 countries the least engaged really least resilient professions are people who are
00:34:55
uh alone who are working as exactly as you said um that doesn't mean that there aren't some benefits to your point they do
00:35:01
actually like the flexibility but they only want places where it really works is where the company and there's a
00:35:07
few companies that do this actually because of the labor laws or whatever you stay fleet you know in a freelance
00:35:13
role but actually you're brought into the team you're treated like a member of the team look that
00:35:18
in 2017 i wrote about this too because i just was fascinated by the fact that the el the oldest human art we've ever found
00:35:25
like in 2017 this guy in the little island of sulawesi in indonesia he's climbing up in a limestone cave and he's
00:35:31
looking for a hand print because that's the oldest art we've ever found is like a red handprint in ochre or something
00:35:37
he's looking to see if he can find it and he comes climbs in takes his um iphone and he's got a
00:35:44
15-foot mural on the wall and the mural turns out to be 50 000 years old so it's the oldest human art
00:35:50
we've ever found well maybe sorry 44 000 years but they think it's actually conservatively it's 44 000 years old
00:35:57
and it's a painting not a hand not of a foot or a face even it's a painting of
00:36:03
a bunch of little human figures some carrying spears some carrying rope and then very clearly the local um fauna
00:36:10
so an anoa a deer uh a wild cat and clearly
00:36:16
this group of people is trying to get together to capture or kill these animals and what's cool about it is that the
00:36:22
artist and they think most artists cave artists was done by women so they think it was women
00:36:28
has drawn each human figure with an animal characteristic so one of them has the face of a lion
00:36:34
one of them has a tail of a crocodile one of them has a trunk of an oven
00:36:39
and they're called therianthropes who knows why but anthropology is called half man half animal um
00:36:46
therianthropes and what it looks as though has happened is the artist has looked across
00:36:53
the cave across the fire and going ooh she's super wily like a crocodile and
00:36:59
he's really strong so he's brave and this one and she's represented a team of differently
00:37:05
talented people so what's super cool about it i think and i could just be geeking out on it
00:37:10
but the oldest human expression of us with each other is a manifestation of how different we
00:37:16
are from one another in the cave and how acutely astute that person must
00:37:22
have been to spotted and then went hey what happens if we all came together and then we could do
00:37:28
together what we can't do alone and then everyone went all right i'll try that and then it worked and then they memorialized it on a cave and that's
00:37:33
called a team and then fast forward 50 000 years we go to schools and hospitals and we build places with no teams or call centers or
00:37:41
manufacturing facilities and it's like uh you've run a business you what you just said by the way data backs this up
00:37:47
a thousand percent too you can go into a company and you can ask a question like i trust my team leader or do i know
00:37:53
what's expected of me at work and you've got two teams in the same room and you'll have one team where ninety
00:38:00
percent of people strongly agree that i know what's expected of me and this doing the same job right next
00:38:05
door where less than 40 percent do and i remember when i was like really young in my career i'd walk back into a
00:38:10
company and the ceo would go because we did these surveys and they would go what's our culture like and i would go
00:38:16
um well uh this team everyone knows what's expected of them and then right next door there's
00:38:23
a team that doesn't has no idea what they're doing and that you could see o what what
00:38:28
because we've got policies and we've got goal setting and we a software that enables cascaded goals to hit people
00:38:33
like and you go yeah i know we've bought a new sofa for the whole lot too so they should have the and you're like i don't
00:38:39
know but there's huge variation inside that room and you in terms of your experience had that
00:38:45
ins you know every single place you looked you found variation but you don't it's funny you
00:38:51
don't really read that much about it i don't you don't you don't it's actually weirdly this is kind of the first time
00:38:57
i've really deeply pondered it i i can see it having happened in my company but i can see it happening office to office
00:39:03
so our office in manchester versus office in london eris in london was really not good good in terms of satisfaction at one point our office in
00:39:09
manchester was amazing and just yeah and i and you the real point that stuck with me is that you don't have one
00:39:15
culture i'm like that's kind of been a bit unnerving for me it's made me rethink a couple of the decisions i made but um
00:39:21
the other thing i i i know you wrote about in that before we get on to this one is you talked about
00:39:26
how great managers handle underperformers and how every team has people that
00:39:31
underperform that are for whatever reason from what you've understood
00:39:36
how do great managers handle people that aren't performing to a certain standard
00:39:42
so the first thing that we've got to remember about all managers and again we don't hear this much discussed either is
00:39:48
um like why do we all hate the performance review why do we all hate the annual performance review
00:39:54
many reasons because when i go through it and somebody says you're a four i go well i'm not a number
00:39:59
um so there's that part of it but also it's too infrequent right once a year so you go in going i've got to tell this
00:40:04
person everything i'm worried about anxious about thinking about because i'm not going to talk to them again for a year it's too infrequent the best
00:40:11
managers know that the world moves quickly there's 52
00:40:16
little sprints that's a year 52 little sprints so the best managers are checking in with each of their people really light
00:40:22
touch like 10 minutes 15 minutes but every week one-on-one every week one-on-one
00:40:28
really simple questions like would you love last week and load what are your priorities this week how can i help but like that every week little because
00:40:34
remember the goals you set the beginning of the year are irrelevant by the third week of the year i mean we're in the middle right now like also it's a global
00:40:39
conflict we didn't know that three weeks ago so we also know from data by the way people don't go back in and check their
00:40:45
goals so less than four percent of people once they set a goal at the beginning of
00:40:51
the year maybe there's a software program that records it or whatever they don't go back in and check it but we all know it changes so dramatically
00:40:57
even in the next couple of weeks so the first thing is the best managers are frequently going how was last week how
00:41:02
was next week how was it it's really this sort of that rhythm it's like 52 little sprints like that
00:41:08
and of course that means if you've got an underperformer you are hitting it really early you don't wait until
00:41:15
december and go you have had a bad year you're a two right you're hitting it every week and because
00:41:21
you're hitting it every week you've got an opportunity much earlier to start saying two things the first
00:41:26
is and this is so it sounds so obvious but for one of the questions that separates
00:41:31
a good manager from a bad manager by the way is you put this question to them you've got someone who comes into work consistently late what would you do so
00:41:38
you take a study group take a contrast group 100 great managers 100 average ones and you just throw that question
00:41:44
out you've got someone who comes into work consistently late what would you do when you again think of a million
00:41:50
different answers to that question these folks here they all stay the good ones
00:41:55
yeah the stuff we call it the study group when you're doing a concurrent validity study you take a hundred
00:42:01
great ones measurably and then 100 average i won't get into how you measure it but it's like
00:42:06
that's that's how you do it and anyway these ones here their first their top of mind response unprompted is
00:42:14
i would ask why before i do anything else i would say why are you coming in late maybe is it a
00:42:21
bus issue did you miss that you got something with your kid is it a drop-off time should i change your start time to 9 30. so you can get you can what if you
00:42:28
start by assuming this is a real human you start by assuming this person's not
00:42:34
trying to get one over on you which is kind of an interesting mindset it's like the best managers start i think douglas
00:42:40
mcgregor called it theory x you start by assuming that people want to do good work
00:42:45
and so if someone's underperforming you start by assuming there's something going on that i don't know
00:42:51
and so that's the beginning you and then because you're doing it every week it's like the person's not going wait that was
00:42:57
three months ago i fixed that now no no this is last tuesday and wednesday remember
00:43:02
15 minutes late oh well now the person may come up with an excuse but the first thing you do is you ask a question you
00:43:07
shut up you let the person define their own reality of course if you're doing that every week and you're putting together little
00:43:12
strategies to help the person in this case show up and they don't then
00:43:18
the the instinctive insight the best managers seem to have and the best coaches
00:43:23
is that your job isn't trying to put in what god left out your job is to try to draw out what god
00:43:28
left in your job as a manager is not to make someone your job as a manager is not to perfect someone your job is to go
00:43:35
who the heck are you and then can i find work or indeed a work context in which you can express you
00:43:41
and if i've consistently seen underperformance from you it's not because you're a bad human it's because for some reason i put you in the wrong
00:43:46
role in which case my caring doesn't stop my loving doesn't stop
00:43:52
i just practice sometimes tough love and i'll come in and i'll say to you quickly
00:43:57
i love you uh and you're fired and i still love you because this job i
00:44:03
i put you in it maybe and it's wrong for you i can see it you can see it we can all see it so let's move you out quickly because this job is
00:44:10
we're not going to rewire your brain so that you get to be somebody else you're you and this job doesn't fit you
00:44:15
and it it's my job again another great question this is a close ended one but ask great managers would you give people
00:44:21
what they want or do you give them what's right for them and you then you just shut up and they go with the second one you get people
00:44:27
what's right for them even if occasionally isn't what they want so
00:44:32
i mean there's more to it than that of course but but in terms of how best managers deal with poor performers frequency ask questions and shut up and
00:44:39
then stop trying to rewire people's brains most of high performance is the function
00:44:44
of talent role fit and when you get low performance is because the person's not a bad person
00:44:51
it's because they miss fit and i bet you've seen that with your people you've had a thousand so you moved i bet you moved some people
00:44:57
sometimes not always but you go from a c minus ah so frustrating and then you tweak the job even just a little and
00:45:04
you're like yeah who are you and they're extraordinary yeah that's why i always hate the stuff where people
00:45:09
go well they're an a player it's like stop categorizing people
00:45:14
a players depend upon which flipping role you put him in i could take your a player i'll make him a d
00:45:21
so don't there's no a players there's just people who really fit their role and get real joy from it and i'm have
00:45:26
mastery in it etc etc and then there's people that don't i bet you've been a b-minus in something
00:45:32
right me too put me in finance i'm at e yeah right oh he's an a player uh have
00:45:38
you seen his spreadsheets yeah like so that's that notion of like i'm not
00:45:44
trying to fix you i'm trying to see you and then find roles in which you can
00:45:50
express you as woo-woo as that sounds you and i both built businesses we know it's like no that's not we were at all
00:45:57
that's a good night's sleep that's what that is when you've got a person and a team that you go oh
00:46:03
that that's a thing of beauty one of the things you said as well was the hardest thing about being a manager
00:46:09
is realizing that your people will not do things the way that you would
00:46:15
i think everyone can resonate with that part of the part of the frustration i think of being a
00:46:21
founder as well is you because you're very often very clear on
00:46:26
the way that things you think things should be done whether that's right or wrong you just have your own subjective opinion on how it should be done
00:46:33
or how hard people should be working whatever it's sometimes difficult to appreciate that other people don't have
00:46:40
the same clarity of vision or perspective as you do i see that throughout my teams and just with managers generally they tend to be quite
00:46:47
um what's the word resentful that their their teams might
00:46:52
not be doing it the way that they would do it yes we um some of us get into management
00:46:59
because we want more control yeah and then you're like uh surprise you now have to manage by remote control
00:47:06
like you're sitting here people are doing stuff and you're not there you're here it's like ah but that's why you know we talk a lot these days about
00:47:11
feedback and of course the opposite of feedback on some level is is ignoring people and people don't want to be ignored there's no question if you
00:47:18
wanted to destroy your team just ignore them but feedback's actually pernicious the best
00:47:24
managers don't give feedback by which i mean
00:47:30
feedback meaning are you doing this wrong let me tell you how to do it right i don't mean feedback as in you got that
00:47:36
fact wrong um but in terms of me telling you this is what your performance is
00:47:43
and this is how you should do it better that's feedback well you read a lot right you'll see a lot of tools articles
00:47:51
books even on how you should learn how to give and receive feedback uh that's that's how you grow somebody tells you because
00:47:57
you're blind spots other people they know the truth about you so they're gonna tell you who you are because you
00:48:04
can't see it that's called feedback but of course what that means is that the person the manager is assuming a
00:48:11
that i do own the truth about you which they don't we have observer bias like crazy and i don't mean race gender age
00:48:17
bias i just mean idiosyncrasy in fact in psychometrics it's called the idiosyncratic rater effect which means i
00:48:24
have a unique pattern of rating that i'm unaware of and then when i'm rating you and i'm rating this person over here and this person my ratings should move
00:48:30
because i'm looking at different people they don't my pattern of ratings moves with me which means that basically all
00:48:37
ratings reflect the rater not the rate even though we end up paying or firing
00:48:42
or promoting the rate as though the ratings reflect the rate but they don't reflect the rater we've known this about
00:48:48
this in in psychometrics for years and yet in businesses today still most people
00:48:53
are rated by their manager but the other thing is in terms of learning when you give when i give you
00:48:58
feedback and i go do it my way i mean even with the best of intentions most feedback basically ends up meaning
00:49:06
you would be better if only you were more like me yeah there's a realization at some point
00:49:12
isn't there as an entrepreneur where you go i think what i really need to do
00:49:17
is actually just create the conditions in which a person can express the best of themselves
00:49:24
rather than me assuming that learning for that person is just information transfer and dumping
00:49:31
it into their blank slate like that's not at some point as a entrepreneur you
00:49:37
learn what basically brain sciences have learned for a really long time learning is insight all learning is insight it
00:49:44
comes from within the person and so all you can do as a team leader or manager is create conditions which within which a person can interact with
00:49:50
the world a client a prospect a thing they're making it and then go oh ah ooh ah
00:49:58
and then the person has the learning you're not telling them how to be when the moment you tell them how to be is
00:50:04
the moment you're assuming that they are wired like you are so trying to tell a person how to sell it's like
00:50:10
no you sell when the person believes you and the prospect believes you and everyone
00:50:17
has a different source of belief what's yours some people sell through competence some people sell through
00:50:23
relationships some people sell through impatience some people sell through being silent some peop it's like
00:50:29
everybody's source of belief and trust is totally different
00:50:35
so yes tell people your reaction as a manager like if somebody comes in late
00:50:41
you can say look when you come in late it makes me think you don't care the person can't then say well you shouldn't feel that because you go no i
00:50:46
do feel that i feel like you don't care when or in that meeting when you interrupted your colleague i felt like you weren't listening
00:50:52
because i felt that felt weird to me you shut her down that's what it felt like to me that's a reaction
00:50:58
when you then tell the person what to do differently tell the person how to change their behavior that's feedback
00:51:03
and you've basically just crossed the feedback bridge and now you're telling them how to be and how to be is how to be more like you
00:51:11
and so as we talk about in the book a lot it's like give people your reaction you own that
00:51:16
don't give people feedback and if you're on the receiving end of feedback shut it out because no one knows you
00:51:23
like you know you it's so true because yeah i mean everyone says how the importance of giving feedback and communicating and
00:51:29
the narrative i've always heard in terms of like management advice is always you know you've got to
00:51:34
give people constant feedback to help them grow yeah people don't want feedback people
00:51:40
want attention that's different if you give people no attention they'll shut down i mean loneliness is a killer
00:51:46
we knew so that's true but people don't want feedback and imagine when somebody says to you hey sit down
00:51:52
you want to have a conversation i want to give you some feedback it's like an anvil on your head your
00:51:58
brain leaves the room and all you're thinking about is how do i survive this darn thing with marcus because it's going to turn out to be marcus didn't
00:52:03
tell me something that he's got the truth about me that i don't have and then he's going to tell me a bunch of things and i'm going to have to do this
00:52:10
as he tells me a bunch of tactics and stuff that don't feel like me and and you're just trying to think how do i
00:52:15
survive this conversation here let me give you some feedback it's like ah so yeah i'm on a bit of a campaign
00:52:22
going that is so arrogant feedback is arrogance what people want is attention
00:52:28
which could be your reaction so if you said to me marcus you know halfway through that whole session that we did i
00:52:34
thought you got a bit off track i can't then go no you didn't think that
00:52:39
because you went no i was lost man well you shouldn't have been lost because i was being really clear and you go you but i was lost well that's a reaction
00:52:45
and people do want a reaction there's no question that's why once a week the managers really that's what that is is
00:52:50
that once a week check-in is like just frequent attention they don't want feedback because they're not you
00:52:56
and they don't want to be you and i know for me as an entrepreneur that was the hardest thing to learn was like
00:53:01
step back they'll show you who you are who they are and then you can
00:53:07
help kind of arrange a world in which they get to express and express and express i had a few words to say about one of my
00:53:13
sponsors on this podcast it's so crazy that in the last couple of months i've had so many people tag me on
00:53:20
instagram even on telegram and in my twitter dms in a picture of them starting their heel
00:53:25
journey and it's one of the most amazing things in my life that i get to do a podcast which of course needs money
00:53:31
to to fuel and i have a sponsor like you who i genuinely believe is going to help
00:53:36
every single person who starts their heel journey change their life because this podcast the
00:53:41
central intention of this podcast is to help people live better lives and we get to sit here and i get to promote to you
00:53:48
a product which has not only helped me change my life but it's going to help millions of people and is helping millions of people live a nutritionally
00:53:54
complete life it's so it's such an incredible product and for me the reason why it's incredible is because it gives
00:53:59
me my protein it gives me my vitamins minerals it's plant-based it's low in sugar gluten-free it does all of that in
00:54:06
a small drink that tastes good there are other products there's foods there's the hot and savory collection many other things but for me
00:54:12
this ready to drink is the absolute saviour of my diet throughout the week where i'm moving at such pace
00:54:18
look i don't want to labor the point but if you haven't tried you'll give it a try and if you do tag me instagram wherever you try it
00:54:26
give me a tag anyway back to the podcast why did you call the book love
00:54:32
and work why the word love in particular
00:54:37
well i i did it as a two reasons one the juxtaposition is
00:54:42
always interesting like one piece like love and work you just don't hear them
00:54:48
said that way um so on part of it was like it just gets your attention
00:54:53
and the other part of it from a research standpoint if you interview people that are really really good at what they do
00:54:58
and that's really been my entire career and i was talking to you before about study group contrast for 25 years that's
00:55:04
all i've been doing you take 100 great nurses 100 great teachers 100 great housekeepers 100 great lawyers
00:55:11
and you're just asking open and get ended questions you're shutting up you're tape recording the whole thing transcribing it and going hmm what's
00:55:17
there and when you do that the best people in any job they don't all love the same things but there's
00:55:23
love in what they do there's um vanishing into the activity the activity
00:55:28
isn't something they're doing it's something they're being whether it's cleaning a room and vacuuming themselves out so they can see
00:55:33
the lines and they get kicked out of the lines whether it's another housekeeper going i lie on the bed and turn on the ceiling fan
00:55:39
and i remember back then going why because that's the first thing a guest does after a long day at the theme parks
00:55:44
and i like looking at the room through the lens of the guest you're like whoa but i love looking at the room
00:55:51
that's why i sit on the toilet or i lie in the bath even though there's rules in the job description say do not lie you
00:55:56
know in the bath or sit on the toilet you're like whoa so when you look at really really good
00:56:01
people in any job they find love in the activities themselves interestingly though they don't love all
00:56:08
they do the whole cliche about find what you love and you'll never have to do a day's work in your life again
00:56:14
and i'm a bit of a data nerd so you look around and you go is that true and you study the most successful people
00:56:21
my first um master's thesis actually at school was the social and psychological issues of entrepreneurship
00:56:27
even the best entrepreneurs don't love all they do and so you go okay find what you love to do and you never have to work around your life again is there any
00:56:33
data to support that at all no none so let's stop saying that and let's rehabilitate with science the
00:56:40
word love measurably when you study highly successful people they find love in what they do they don't love all that they do
00:56:47
but they find love in what they do they find activities or moments or situations every day that they love
00:56:53
how many 100 50 20 is a really good threshold mayo clinic research shows doctors and nurses
00:57:00
who are not burned out have at least 20 of their activities be things that they love take a bunch of emergency room
00:57:06
nurses they love different things but 20 you get below 20 19 18 17 it's like you start getting
00:57:14
really dangerously psychologically damaged even if it's you know
00:57:19
21 though 27 50 it doesn't seem as though you get necessarily a massive uplift in
00:57:25
resilience it's not like you need to love all you do 20 is a threshold like get above that
00:57:32
and every day feels different every day feels different so and then of course if we dive into the
00:57:37
brain science of it you find that when people are actually in that state of the positive psychologist who we lost
00:57:43
last year mike czech shema high he called it flow okay when you get into that flow state
00:57:49
even if it's just 20 of your time if you look at someone's brain when they're in the moment in the zone in their element
00:57:55
whatever your phrases they have the same chemical cocktail in their brain as you do when you're in love with someone
00:58:01
so vasopressin oxytocin norepinephrine with the addition of this weird
00:58:07
cocktail called anandamide which is brings feelings of wonder and ore
00:58:12
but your brain on love looks at work looks a lot like your
00:58:17
brain on love with another person and when you're doing something that you love
00:58:23
you are more open measurably you perform cognitive tasks better your memories better you're more accurate in measuring
00:58:29
or identifying the emotions of other you're just better so love and work was like hey
00:58:34
if you want this is kind of when i was sitting there trying to fill the pages and thinking why are you writing this
00:58:41
on one level i mean one of those thinking my kids i want my kids to be happy in life and have joy in what they do and most people don't and i wanted to
00:58:48
have something i could go read this yeah you know um but on another level i wanted to write to ceos like you and me
00:58:55
and go listen if you want collaboration if you want innovation
00:59:01
if you want creativity if you want really authentic customer focus you can't get it without love
00:59:07
so if you feel a bash talking about love then shut up talking about these other things you won't get them
00:59:13
loveless excellence is oxymoronic and that's not just a phrase it's like
00:59:18
you look at what people look like on love at work and they're amazing
00:59:25
so if we took it seriously at work and we thought about what do you love
00:59:31
how does that turn into work and how does the work that you do inform the detail of what you love and then it becomes this wonderful infinite loop
00:59:39
of work is to help you sorry love is to help you figure out contribution
00:59:44
which then informs what you love like your life is like this you've already built a company you've sold it now
00:59:50
you're doing all this other stuff because your love leads you to turn it into contribution which required you
00:59:55
spending tens of thousands of pounds to do something and then now you're doing it and we're sitting here and there's
01:00:00
there'll be stimuli that information is going into your brain right now and it will add detail to that which you love
01:00:05
this whole thing but over here in l.a it will have a little more detail and your life will be this now listen i don't
01:00:10
know your mom and your dad but if your life was like this they would go yes i don't care how much freaking money
01:00:17
he makes if he knows that which he loves and turns into contribution then on his deathbed he'll feel like he lives a
01:00:23
first day version of his life and i've got an 18 year old and a 20 year old
01:00:28
and i just wish in every fiber of my being that they get to feel that loop
01:00:34
that's love and work love is for work and work is for love and if we do that
01:00:40
it's not just individualistically satisfying it's what companies want from us we just haven't taken it
01:00:46
we just haven't taken it seriously um you talked about which i think i don't know if this was before we start
01:00:52
recording but this the the curse of you know i remember a conversation i had with a with a young lady who was a
01:00:58
lawyer and um she was clearly dissatisfied in her job and it transpired that the reason she
01:01:04
was a lawyer is because that's what she had been good at in terms of a levels then um university and also her mum and
01:01:11
dad had said like that's a good job and she she was almost on the verge of a midlife crisis when she spoke to me
01:01:17
because she had she was so good at this thing that it kind of dragged her off into the future and she she was now that
01:01:24
that was her identity so many people listening to this now will resonate with that in various ways they would have become
01:01:29
a banker because their parents were bankers and they were really good at maths what have you found out about those
01:01:35
people their satisfaction and really what they should be doing i guess is there something else they
01:01:40
should be doing instead is should we be dragged by our our competence in something
01:01:46
well no as we talked about before i mean competence can be a a devilish curse um because you can get
01:01:53
the a's and they hate the work you can get high performance but actually hate the activities
01:01:58
um for anyone if they want a a really great career the why is important like to think about
01:02:06
do you really believe in the purpose of what you're doing that's important no question the who is important no question
01:02:12
if you hate the people you're working with that's always a bit of a problem but the what trumps the who and the i in the end like what are you actually
01:02:17
filling your days with so if your friend is a lawyer it's like which give me a day talk to me about a day
01:02:24
what's the day look like what are you doing at 10 o'clock on a monday morning what are you doing at 3 p.m on a thursday afternoon
01:02:29
that's the what what are the actual activities themselves so if anyone's the other what always trumps the who and the why
01:02:36
which is why we've got nurses and teachers who are so disengaged they believe in the why they really love the people on their
01:02:42
shift but the day-to-day reality of what they're doing doesn't fit them no one's paying attention to it there's no manager helping them there's no teams
01:02:48
all the stuff we talked about before that that goes is anyone paying attention to what i have to do every day and whether or not
01:02:53
it fits me which bits do which bits don't how do i lean into one another what is collaborate all that stuff
01:02:58
is missing so the why is there the who is there the what is wrong so if i say lawyer that could be a com that's it
01:03:06
could be an entirely different experience for you know everybody that's a lawyer so one lawyer could be doing a completely
01:03:11
different thing different working hours work from home work in a great team with you know weekly check-ins yeah and
01:03:18
another lawyer although it's the same job title could be in an awful corporate office two-hour commute every day on
01:03:24
their own in a tiny cubicle yes so to anyone watching or listening
01:03:29
the first thing to do is assess like where are you at which really means how much love do you have in a week do
01:03:36
you have a lot do you have a loveless job how would you do that well the simplest way to do it is
01:03:41
just take a blank pad around with you for a week draw a line down the middle of it put love to it at the top of one column
01:03:46
and load it on top of the other and this is easy to do most people have never done this
01:03:52
and all you're going to do is you're going to imagine that your day is made up of many many different
01:03:58
threads there's a fabric of a workday it which bit like a tapestry on a wall when
01:04:03
you're far away it looks like just a picture but when you get close there's many many many thousands of threads well the same is true of any day
01:04:09
you've got a thousand different activities moments situations context like just stuff just hits you like and it's little baby five minutes two
01:04:15
minutes seven minutes five minutes two minutes seven minutes but these are threads some of them are white some are black some of them are gray some are
01:04:20
green they lift you up a little they're down a little but some of them are red so in the book here i talk about red threads activities that when you're
01:04:27
doing them all that stuff we talked about before the flow the energy the instinctive volunteering the i'm in my
01:04:34
essence the the feeling of innate mastery the those moments there could be like two minutes here seven minutes here
01:04:39
ten minutes but there are red threads and your life is sort of putting on a show for you every day going what about this thread what about that thread what
01:04:45
about this thread what about that thread and the most successful people in any job of course they identified their red
01:04:51
threads really well and then they weave them into contribution now we can talk more about
01:04:56
how they do that but it starts by going take a black pad around with you think about the clues to your red
01:05:01
threads what are you interesting to be volunteer for while you're doing something does time fly by when you're
01:05:07
done with it you feel sort of in a sense of of mastery a sense of being up not down
01:05:13
and then take it around with you for a week and anytime you find anything that fits those criteria scribble it
01:05:18
down and any time you find the inverse before you're doing something you try to procrastinate or or hand it off to the
01:05:23
new guy because it'll be developmental you know or or you're doing it and the time drags
01:05:29
on like a snail and it's like you thought we'd be doing it for an hour but you look up it's five minutes and we've all got stuff like that it's like ah and
01:05:36
time and love have a weird relationship you know it's like when you're with someone that you love that whole day goes by in 15 minutes
01:05:42
and yet before you're with them like you time just stretches out and you're with them and whoa um same shoe with an activity that you
01:05:49
love if you you don't love it you keep trying to do this and then when you're doing it it's like how's that how was it
01:05:54
this long um scribble it down and they loathed it and so get to the end of one week just
01:05:59
one regular week and see what's in the loved it column and what's in the lowest column
01:06:04
if there's nothing in the loved it column well then you have to stop and do it again next week and pay attention and
01:06:11
if you get no red threads two weeks in a row and this is really easy to do no one's ever told people how
01:06:17
to do it but it's really easy to do you're two weeks in a row of no red threads
01:06:22
then you've got a loveless job and and the bad trade for anybody is somebody
01:06:27
going well my job doesn't have to love me back i'm making the money
01:06:33
uh i'll just stick it out i'll pay my dues or i'll earn the money for three four five years then i'll
01:06:39
you know that well five years then i'll as though you emerge the same person after five years of loveless work you
01:06:45
don't you are psychologically damn it you're a different person after five years of loveless work you're damaged
01:06:51
and the people weirdly who feel it the most are the people you're supposedly supporting at home you think the people around the dinner table don't know that
01:06:57
you come back every day on your loved it loathed it list although they wouldn't say it this way there's nothing on the loved it column
01:07:03
they know they can feel it people often worry about don't bring your personal stuff to work uh it's way more powerful
01:07:09
the other way people bring their work their emptiness their alienation at work back home so if you two weeks in a row
01:07:17
nothing then you have to stop and you have to in a sense apply the loved it loathed it to the rest of your life just
01:07:23
take that around and see whether you can find any red threads anywhere in your hobbies as a mother as a father as a
01:07:29
friend in your community in your faith what i don't know where write
01:07:34
one love note to yourself which is simply i love it when and then finish the sentence and the
01:07:40
thing after the word when has to be a verb that you're doing i love it when people praise me or something i love it when i
01:07:47
what just write one sentence it's amazing steve how many people adults
01:07:53
can't be articulate about describing something that they love i know it sounds really weird but
01:07:58
you ask people we've done this so many times you ask people you know tell me what you love or tell me your strengths are oh i love
01:08:04
people which people what are you doing with the people give me a verb any verb will do let's start
01:08:11
with a verb but we've trained people so long to be divorced from their own
01:08:17
emotion or believing that basically their emotion can be rewired if they just work at it and show enough grit or whatever and you're like no no no no
01:08:24
it's real you and your emotional reaction to things is real so i would say to people first of all do
01:08:30
that love it load it and then try to write one maybe even two
01:08:35
love it's a silly word but a love note to yourself i love it when i do what i love it when i do what
01:08:40
what many people will actually find is that if you hate lawyering it might well be that you're the wrong kind of
01:08:47
lawyer it might not be that you have to ditch your degree it might be that you can start to re-wire or re-um
01:08:54
sew re-weave your job so that it has more red threads in it
01:09:01
so if you do that for a week and you find there are a couple of things on there actually there are a couple of love bits there are a couple of specific
01:09:07
things where i'm like oh ooh well when you have that first of all pay
01:09:12
attention to it things that are not paid attention to they wither so every day wake up it's
01:09:17
the advice i would give you or you might give me every day wake up and just try to rather than what i have to get through what's the to-do list i have to
01:09:23
get through why don't you wake up every day yeah you may have a to-do list but wake up every day and go what red threads can
01:09:28
i weave today because they're going to be not 75 000 but there might be five what are the five start there
01:09:34
and then over time what you'll find is you can start to maybe go well next week actually i'm going to pick one day it's
01:09:40
going to be all red it's going to be all red one day then you might go because people start to lean into it they might
01:09:45
go could you actually do more of that for this client and this client in this client and your and then maybe you learn
01:09:50
a competency like somebody who's really good at creating emails that people open you
01:09:56
might go eloqua we'll teach you eloqua we'll teach you that competency because you've got something that you seem to be
01:10:01
able to write text that people actually open that's kind of interesting i know that's not in your job description but
01:10:07
but you seem to keep doing it and so we'll teach you now a new competency a new software program and lo and behold
01:10:12
you start doing that over time and you get to the place
01:10:17
where the most successful people get to where we look at the most successful people and we go
01:10:23
how'd they find that job seems to fit them so perfectly had they find that job and of course they know
01:10:29
they didn't find it that's totally the wrong verb they made it they took their red to use that metaphor
01:10:36
that they took their red threads seriously and then they and they didn't imagine someone could
01:10:41
read their mind and tell them what their red threads are because only you know what these things little moments situations contexts are that really lift
01:10:48
you up but then they took them seriously and and wove them ever more deeply into
01:10:53
the fabric of what they do now sometimes that might mean stop being a lawyer
01:10:58
you know what you've worked you've tried this now for six months and there's nothing there for you okay well then that's really tricky
01:11:05
now you have to change your entire focus and hopefully your loves will be your guide
01:11:10
but we actually know over here i don't know the number for the uk but 73 of americans say that they have the freedom to maneuver their job to fit themselves
01:11:17
better that's a lot of people and yet only 18 of us do because if you
01:11:23
ask people you have a chance to use your strengths every day that number's 18 so you've got 73 18
01:11:29
in psychology we call that an attitude behavior consistency problem
01:11:35
i know i can do it i don't so that's if people are watching i'm in
01:11:40
the wrong job maybe maybe you're one of the 27 percent you're in the wrong job all right before you get there though
01:11:46
try to i pick out your red threads anywhere and no one can do it for you that's the thing that it's like you want to go hey
01:11:53
nine-year-old let's start you on this life skill early because even at nine you know better than all your teachers
01:11:58
do about this part anyway about the red threads part and that way when you wake up you know
01:12:04
your mom's going to be a dentist be a dentist be a dentist and you're like mom there's a whole language actually
01:12:10
here that talks about dentistry and whether i love it or not and i'll keep walking on down that path but i'm
01:12:16
actually supposed to look really carefully about which bits of any job really lift me up and give me a sense of
01:12:21
mastery kids have more of a language as i say in the book they have more of a language about geometry than they do about this
01:12:27
thing i was just talking about so your parents are so powerful and they're so scared
01:12:33
and they want you to not be a layaband they want you to be able to get a job and they want they're so scared for you
01:12:41
but what they've not done and even the best teachers are so scared for you come on stephen you can
01:12:46
and no one really goes wait a minute how do you make sense of your own emotion in your own life what do you
01:12:51
lean into what are you not leaning to what are the words for that is there any detail around that or what do you like about people what do you like doing with the people you imagine how early you
01:12:58
could start with that and that wouldn't mean that it's pollyanna like we're still going to put people in the wrong jobs i built a
01:13:04
company that was focused entirely on people's strengths and i still put people on the wrong job because people are
01:13:09
super complicated but at least we'd have a framework and a set of shared understandings about
01:13:15
what we were even trying to do i don't know i think there's for all of us there's stuff we can do you don't
01:13:21
have to change the company you'd have to change all the hr policies you could any one of us could start right now to do what the most successful people do
01:13:28
in terms of weaving red threads into their into their work what were the in chapter 2 i know you
01:13:33
talked about having panic attacks when you're i believe at gallup what were the red threads that were missing in your
01:13:39
role then that led you to getting to a point where you were having panic attacks and how did you sort of rectify that personally
01:13:45
yeah that's you know it's funny this i've written a lot of books a lot of them have mostly been about data
01:13:52
and uh that's fine because i like i like the precision of data
01:13:57
but i felt like like many people i'm sure the pandemic the last few years have been really difficult for us and
01:14:03
you sort of ask yourself what what are you doing with your life what life you living or what
01:14:09
mark you're leaving you know i lost my dad i lost my marriage i saw my company
01:14:15
pandemic you sort of look in the mirror and you're like what am i doing so for this book i was like you know i'm
01:14:21
a repressed brit um but i'll put my own story in here
01:14:27
because i feel like it's more honest and everybody's life is a story the only one i can tell is mine
01:14:34
maybe i could share parts of it and other people could learn to tell their own story so i did put
01:14:39
things in there that i have buried buried buried and yeah 29 i was managing gallup's
01:14:47
relationship with the walt disney company so i was living down in orlando and um
01:14:53
i did start having really bad i didn't know what a panic attack was i mean as i said in the book now everyone knows all
01:14:58
about panic attacks and it's like it's like acne right everyone has them and it's great or not great but um i didn't know i
01:15:05
thought i was going mad i mean i thought it's the pre the it's the build-up as the doctor told me
01:15:11
it was like it's not that one moment that's causing the panic attack it's the build up actually of
01:15:17
again we talk about love as a force like if you don't express that which you love it's not neutral
01:15:23
it turns from a beautiful powerful force love into a really caustic
01:15:29
substance that eats away at you it's damaging so for me i had got myself into a
01:15:36
position where i was i was really solely responsible for one
01:15:42
huge client disney and i was the interface
01:15:48
between gallup with all the people on the teams and disney and i hate that
01:15:56
i hate having to be responsible for other people's emotions
01:16:02
that i can't do anything about i hated that every single day waking up and thinking
01:16:09
are the 200 people that are basically our clients at disney are they happy what are they thinking what are they wondering about what do they need do they need this did they
01:16:15
i i mean even just saying that now makes me break out in a sweat because it's like i can't do that i don't
01:16:23
i'm not a connector like that i'm not a connector i don't like reaching in going oh if i
01:16:28
say this to this person and this to this person then megan is and yet that's really what the job had become and
01:16:34
i like i mean when i think about what i love i love when i have a chance to sit down
01:16:40
and really grind on an idea or a set of data to come up with a conclusion that's based on data like i love that i love
01:16:46
trying to get up on stage and try to figure out the most evocative way to help someone realize a particular
01:16:52
insight that i've come up with like that's a love note for me and more and more and more i was doing less and less and less of that
01:16:59
and instead i was holding the emotions of the people behind me at gallup and the people in front of me at the walt
01:17:05
disney company and for me for no good reason
01:17:12
it panics me now i should have known better i guess um
01:17:17
i hadn't done the love it loaded thing back then hadn't even thought about it all the way through to the word love but
01:17:22
it was clearly a loveless existence and when anyone has loveless work that they're pat you know they believe in it
01:17:30
but the days are empty psychologically empty you don't get to express that which it's like being a loveless relationship it's like it's awful
01:17:37
even if you feel like you want to help that other person if the being of relationship with them
01:17:43
doesn't allow you to express who you are they don't see who you are they see who you are and wish you weren't that way it's awful
01:17:49
so for me that's i think what built up and up and up and up and up and in the end it was like it was super psychologically
01:17:55
damaging to be trying to be somebody that you're not
01:18:01
when you you didn't plan to be there but now everyone's counting on you
01:18:07
to be a certain way and i don't mean in a macro sense to be a certain way i mean at two o'clock on a thursday afternoon
01:18:13
you're supposed to be thinking and feeling this and it might you know nine o'clock on a monday you're supposed to be feeling all and you realize your days are filled
01:18:19
with empty minutes week after week meditation
01:18:25
yeah that became a tool for you right yes i'm a huge
01:18:31
advocate of what you can see from love and work is like the first relationship you better
01:18:36
have is a really good one with yourself and so the point of love and work on one level was to help everybody have a more
01:18:43
articulate fluency with their own language with their own reaction to the world and
01:18:48
so that begins on some level by shutting out i mean here am i chatting away like a mad prune but
01:18:54
um can you breathe in and breathe out for 15 minutes i mean that's i don't know do you do you
01:19:00
meditate i try sometimes when i'm with my partner i do we do breath work and stuff like that which is a kind of a
01:19:06
meditative practice um i do like micro meditations which is during the day if i notice that my
01:19:13
breath is incredibly shallow i'll go i'll try and do the seven second thing yeah and i try and take time to just do
01:19:19
that but i'm i've never been too good at the whole like 15 20 minutes alone thing
01:19:25
it's well again everyone's different right so who would dream of saying to you you should meditate all i know is when i had
01:19:33
a chance to try to be in sync with my own breath
01:19:40
it gave me power i felt and so when
01:19:46
the disney people were freaking out or behind me the gala people were freaking out i was like i was okay with it but as i said in the
01:19:52
book that was a coping mechanism it wasn't a flourishing mechanism i'm not saying some people can't flourish
01:19:58
through meditation they probably can't i couldn't for me it was like i got clear enough in my own head to realize
01:20:05
this isn't what i should be doing this is a big miss match between me
01:20:11
and what somehow i was getting paid to do prestige is a big thing right it's like somebody goes you want to run the disney
01:20:18
account how much money will i make what's my title oh wow oh wow yeah i'll do that
01:20:24
and so you end up in a role where you it's a i call it the book of mystery
01:20:29
i thought they're gonna say miss instinct oh yeah a miss instinct like you go y'all do that you raise your hand but you're like
01:20:35
yeah everyone has that and i when i read that i think chapter 11 everyone has that in their lives where you you're offered a
01:20:41
promotion for example and because i mean who turns down a promotion i had this
01:20:47
really interesting day in my company many years ago where i called in the head of mark the header he was the marketing manager and
01:20:54
i said you've been here four years now um we're gonna give you a promotion you're gonna become the head of marketing for the uk and the us
01:21:01
and he was like no i was like what he was like no no i'm
01:21:08
not i don't i don't want that i'm not right he was i'm not ready for it yet and he'd been there four years
01:21:13
and i don't want it and i walked out of that room and i tell you the amount of respect i had for that individual for being able to say no to a promotion
01:21:20
because they were didn't like weren't ready for that yet i just thought unbelievable this is someone that's
01:21:26
actually going to be happy in their life well and the funny thing is at work right we because we don't start really
01:21:32
early and say to people hey listen you're a totally unique human being and the way in which you respond to the activities of school is really
01:21:37
interesting and let's help you have a language for that then you get to go into a job and you don't really have a language for that and then somebody
01:21:42
comes in and says i'm gonna give you a promotion and you on some inco at level you're
01:21:48
like oh wait a minute i really really love this like i'm i'm so into the design that i'm doing i love the fact
01:21:53
that it's me doing the doing and i'm not responsible for someone else who's doing the doing i'm the one making the decisions i love the thing that i made
01:21:59
yesterday and the other thing i'm gonna make tomorrow and you and it takes such strength of character to go when
01:22:04
somebody comes in and says no we're gonna promote you out of it it's like how weird is it at work that the most creative way we've thought to reward
01:22:12
someone for being really good at a job is to move them out of it like that's bizarre they call it the peter principle
01:22:18
right that you keep playing with that you just get promoted to your level of of incompetence that's that's the peter
01:22:23
prince lawrence piece i think was the professor who came up with that it takes such strength of character for that person to go
01:22:30
wait a minute you're saying i would get to do less of all this stuff that really really invigorates me yes that's what
01:22:35
i'm saying why would i want that well it's going to come with a bigger title and more money yeah but yeah but
01:22:42
it doesn't i loved it now that's self-awareness that's self-mastery
01:22:47
obviously in the in the last or second the last chapter of the book came to our love and work organization we ought to create broader pay bans that allow
01:22:54
someone to grow in their role extend their contribution and yet not necessarily have to move out of the job
01:23:01
in order to manage other people that doesn't have to be the only way in which we help someone
01:23:07
have a career that was a really as you said i was just it just reminded me that one of the most um
01:23:13
interesting points of feedback that i got in terms of pushback when someone was getting a
01:23:18
promotion was their realization that that would change the team dynamics for them so if they were becoming a manager
01:23:24
i often heard people say things like they didn't want to become a manager or not even just in my companies but just
01:23:30
generally people message me on instagram or linkedin they're hesitant to become a manager because they feel like the
01:23:36
friendships that they have in their team would then change they then have to speak to the people in a certain way and
01:23:42
have to have this like there becomes this hierarchy which they don't actually want it's really interesting
01:23:47
one of the great questions to ask people to see if they want to move into management is simply the question would you rather do a job yourself or would
01:23:52
you rather be responsible for other people's work that's a great i know it's not an open-ended question but it actually
01:23:58
turns out to be for some crazy reason a beaut people don't lie to that question i don't know why we've asked it probably
01:24:04
50 000 times and it's as a predictor of whether somebody actually then excels as a manager there's an awful lot of people
01:24:11
who deep down you throw them that question and top of mind they go i'd rather be responsible for my own
01:24:16
work actually and there's a manager or sorry as an entrepreneur often we go well
01:24:22
you'll grow into this you will and on some deep level there's you could you could probably split the world into two
01:24:28
there are some people even though they have friendships they go i think i know how to do this
01:24:33
though i like being responsible for other people's work their choices i like being the one
01:24:40
to hold them i like even though i'm a friend and i love them i like being the one to try to help them
01:24:46
as we talk about them about what's the point of a relationship and that's by the way a super i think a super interesting question what's the
01:24:52
point of a relationship is it diversity is it protection is it complementarity
01:24:58
actually no it's just any relationship even a lover relationship is i want to make you bigger
01:25:05
i want to make you bigger i see you i don't want to try to correct you perfect you i just want to make you
01:25:11
bigger like what a beautiful relationship that is to be in where you know the person sees you
01:25:18
like shuts up and listens or watches and then you know that their intention toward you is
01:25:24
not competing with you they just want you to do this and it's like wow and for many really
01:25:30
great managers they've got friendships like you shouldn't be a friend of people you manage that's just absolutely no data on
01:25:36
that at all some managers are best friends with the people they manage but they have a relationship where that person feels
01:25:42
like that manager who's really just another human wants you to be bigger
01:25:48
and that's that's as cool as heck that is if you've got a work team
01:25:53
where people on the team feel like my manager who might well be my friend wants me
01:25:58
to expand not to become someone else like it's not like i don't see you and here's my model of who you should be and you better fit it it's more like no who
01:26:05
are you oh that's this is how that might look for you as you grow some people
01:26:11
i don't know if i'm one of them but some people are able to maintain those beautiful friendships and still
01:26:17
move into managing because they see managing in a sense as an extension of
01:26:23
what a beautiful relationship is anyway i know they always say don't get too close to your people because you might have to fly them
01:26:29
and then you ask really great managers can you ever care too much for your people every one of them goes no the best ones you can never care too much
01:26:36
now look capitalism capitalism sometimes you run out of business and our clients ditch us and we've got to downscale the company
01:26:41
yeah and that's that doesn't mean i don't care it means this is a bloody problem sometimes you get you in the wrong role as i said earlier tough love
01:26:48
but there's love there's big love there and you know people always say well too much
01:26:53
love in the workplace is soft it's like think about people you really love if they were abusing drugs
01:27:00
you would intervene you would because you would not your love would be like i can't let you keep
01:27:07
doing this not because i don't love you but because i do well at work
01:27:12
sometimes we're going to go this job is i don't know man i love the the salary is good for you i get it this job is not
01:27:18
right for you and i'm saying that to you because it's hard for me to say to you it's difficult
01:27:23
and you don't want me to say to you but i love you and this is wrong for you and if we got more of that at work
01:27:29
that's not idealistic the best managers in any company do that and that's why when they leave a
01:27:34
company all their people run with them because it's so delightful and human
01:27:40
and possible um yeah what did you learn then about you
01:27:46
referenced romantic relationships there and much of your work centers on you know the relationship of one person to
01:27:52
another and how to optimize and get the best out of it what advice would you give me on how to have a successful
01:27:58
romantic relationship in terms of principles based on all you've learned from your book love and work but also
01:28:03
all of your previous work on relationships and yeah so it's funny to write there's a whole
01:28:09
chapter here on love and work relationships particularly after the metoo movement you think well you shouldn't bring up love and work like
01:28:14
that's just that's leads to bad situations and um but the person who i'm i'm getting
01:28:20
married like the person i'm used to work for me so and depending on which data you look at between 22 and 27 percent of
01:28:25
people met their partner at work their life partner at work so clearly seeing somebody at work is kind of cool because you see all the
01:28:32
bits of them and you see them doing kind of wonderful and crazy things doesn't mean that we shouldn't have ways sort of ways in which people have relationships
01:28:38
at work but um but it's obviously the you can't really write a book about love and work and not talk about love so
01:28:47
and i'm going to sound so bloody nerdy saying this but there's actually quite a lot of
01:28:52
research on what it means to see someone with love like there's a what does it look like when you're in a
01:28:58
love relationship that works mostly of course when we study relationships we study broken ones so we study divorce to
01:29:05
learn about marriage as though you know happiness is the opposite of sadness it's like no
01:29:11
but there has been some research studying happy marriages and when you look at what characterizes a really successful relationship three things
01:29:18
stand out and they're all weird the first one is um they had couples rate each other on a
01:29:25
list of qualities and you would think that in the best relationships if i rated myself high on
01:29:31
uh impatience and low on creativity and then high on urgency and low and then my
01:29:37
partner rated me the same my our patterns matched then you think well that's a good relationship because then they your
01:29:43
partner sees you the way that you see you and love shouldn't be blind love's not blind love's like clear-eyed i mean
01:29:50
love starts blind they're amazing but then you see them and who they really are and then boom boom boom but actually
01:29:55
in the best relationships the ones that tracked over time um less conflicts uh more longing more
01:30:01
yearning for each other over time in the best relationships the other partner rates you high on everything
01:30:07
the other partner sees you with rose tinted glasses the whole time and they do that because you then why does that
01:30:13
serve the relationship well you feel uh you feel so safe and they feel so
01:30:19
confident because they see you like this so that's the first thing keep your rose tinted glasses on in a relationship the
01:30:24
second thing i would say to you is if you want to be a good partner to your partner or if you want them to be a good partner to you
01:30:32
always look for the best explanation of why they do what they do and believe it
01:30:37
there's an awful lot of reasons why you do what you do some of them are not noble some of them might be selfish 100
01:30:43
and if you're with a partner who you know they keep coming in and going what's the real reason you do you know do you know why you did that because you
01:30:49
bla if you're living with a detective oh god forbid you're living with a therapist who's like let me tell you why
01:30:55
you really said that it goes all the way back to your mom is what it does you know that's then you here's what you do you bury it
01:31:01
you you armor yourself against the detective because the detective is sometimes right
01:31:07
if you want to think about what serves a relationship it's to be in a relationship with someone who's always looking for the most generous explanation for why you do what they do
01:31:14
and then they believe it because if they believe it then they actually lean in more and you are more vulnerable because
01:31:21
you go deep down you go there's all sorts of reasons why i did that but they are looking for the most generous one
01:31:27
that doesn't mean they let you off the hook if you let them down i'm not saying that but as you look at what the best couples do they look for the of all the
01:31:34
reasons why you do something and it's never one reason there's a lot of different ones they look for the most generous one and then they believe it
01:31:40
and then the third thing in in really great relationships is that you never in
01:31:45
a relationship balance out um well he's impatient
01:31:52
but at least he's creative i mean he is so disorganized but at least he's charming
01:32:00
like if if you have that kind of detail about your weaknesses and you know your
01:32:05
partner knows these really really well even though they love you for this they go no but he's just awful at this this
01:32:10
is like a villain that sits off in the wings and you know when you're arguing your partner whenever they want they can
01:32:16
just pull out the card and play the villain card and go see this is you and you know this person knows you better than anyone else in the world has 17 000
01:32:23
examples of why that villain is real and lives in you that means you do this you
01:32:28
just keep leaning back and back and every argument you're like when are they going to play the card when are they going to play the card hurts the relationship in the best relationships
01:32:35
turns out ev your partner looks at you everything they see about you
01:32:40
they weave it into i'm sorry this is going to sound so soft but they weave it into a red thread
01:32:47
so they know that this isn't an aspect of something over here that's separate it's part of what you contribute to the
01:32:54
world and the example i gave in here my shell my fiance is oh gosh we are not an example but i mean
01:33:00
we're an example just of ourselves so we you know we argue and we're up and down so but one of the beautiful things about
01:33:06
my relationship with her is is i i have immediate rejection syndrome
01:33:12
where because i like to really noodle on an idea when people come to me with ideas sometimes if my mental brain is
01:33:17
full i go no like it's an immediate rejection syndrome which she called immediate rejection syndrome as a joke
01:33:24
and rather than saying putting it over here it's a villain she's in our relationship it works such that
01:33:30
she knows that this is a part of me wanting to get to the core of an idea so that i can actually push it all
01:33:37
the way through to what i consider to be something really deep or wise or true and and like if i
01:33:43
can't get there yet because i'm still grinding on it then it turns out to be immediate rejection syndrome but but if
01:33:50
you try to un weave that you would unravel all of this
01:33:55
which is the only good i'm ever going to do in the world is this so i'm with a partner who's like i get and by the way
01:34:01
sometimes marcus is bloody annoying but i get that it's a part of this it doesn't excuse it like should i not
01:34:07
be blunt when i go no um yeah but i know that she knows that i know that she knows that i know that she
01:34:13
knows that i know that this is a part of me doing anything good she's not
01:34:19
putting the villain over here he rejects ideas it's like oh no he needs to grind on him
01:34:25
and sometimes that manifests in this and that's the acceptance piece which i think everybody and being seen and being
01:34:32
seen so it's like you can't love what you can't see and so in a relationship if you're in a really good relationship with your
01:34:37
partner you will feel seen and then intelligently you will see that person go oh that's
01:34:44
why he does what he does and then you know that they're looking at you with those beautiful rose tinted glasses on
01:34:51
not to pat you on the head but to have really beautiful and powerful expectations of you based upon
01:34:57
what they see now that's a relationship and that doesn't mean you don't argue
01:35:02
but it means you're in the hands of somebody who wants you who wants you to be this like that's intoxicating and super sexy
01:35:11
we have a closing tradition on this podcast oh the previous guest writes a question for the next guest and they don't know who they're writing it for
01:35:17
and we'll ask you to do the same as well um the previous guest who sat here yesterday wrote a question for you not
01:35:23
knowing who you were and they said okay tell me something about yourself
01:35:31
that no one knows and would be surprised to know about you oh i like that one
01:35:37
that is a stitch up [Laughter] well the challenge there is i wrote
01:35:42
about some things that i've never written about in love and work that i've never shared so
01:35:49
i now have shared that i couldn't say my own name until i was 12.
01:35:54
which i don't think anyone would really have known given what i do um
01:36:00
i look like i sort of feel confident but i had years of panic attacks so
01:36:06
those are now shared and for me we're like really um
01:36:12
really hard um and i think the other thing when i wrote about my children and i we didn't get into it
01:36:20
but the whole like college cheating scandal thing for me was really difficult to see my the world
01:36:26
reach into your kids so the panic that you feel when you realize the world i mean you're a social media expert right
01:36:32
you know how porous the world is um and so inside of this person is a
01:36:40
is a person who is now forever fearful of how the world can
01:36:45
reach into your life and completely mess it up
01:36:51
and the struggle that i probably have that doesn't people don't know is how do you ensure that you aren't cynical
01:36:57
how do you ensure that you retain some of the joy and the ore like we didn't meet before like i've loved this
01:37:04
and i've probably talk too much but yeah it's an awe-inspiring thing to me another human and i want to be able to
01:37:11
retain all of that openness in this in the face of a world that's sometimes really
01:37:16
uh dangerous it's a challenge right yeah yeah cynicism's the death of love
01:37:23
thank you so much marcus honestly um it's really astounding that there was a point in this human being's life where
01:37:29
you couldn't speak because you were one of the most eloquent powerful engaging speakers i think i've ever had on this
01:37:34
podcast and um you know you talk about it in the book when when time flies you know you've been enjoying it and time is
01:37:39
certainly fun we've been here for more than two hours now so yeah and it feels like 10 minutes and i mean
01:37:45
i don't need to to evangelize about the quality of the book you've written because i think everyone that's just
01:37:52
listened to this conversation can understand the wisdom and the value of this book just by listening to our
01:37:57
conversation but i will anyway it really is a brilliant book and there's certain books that i come across sometimes that are written in such a way that time does
01:38:03
fly as you're reading them and you come away with a real profile almost like you'd been through a um
01:38:10
almost a cathartic therapeutic journey and i ha from this conversation but also from this book i have a very long list
01:38:17
of things that i immediately think i need to do differently in my life that i think will lead to better outcomes um
01:38:22
and the way that you deliver the message on this podcast but also in the book is in a as a helpful friend that's guiding
01:38:29
me there as opposed to a preacher that knows best and and that's why this book is so important so thank you it's my
01:38:35
pleasure it's been a real pleasure and um we're going to do this again soon sometime because you really are a special orator and communicator and well
01:38:43
i really appreciate it i uh yeah i'm in the war of anybody who's done what you've done frankly who
01:38:49
started businesses and built businesses and and gone across town as it were stopped like to stop late to stop like making it up and now you're doing this
01:38:54
so it was a real honor to be invited on i've and yeah time has time has flown by
01:39:00
quick one as you might know crafted are one of the sponsors of this podcast and they make really meaningful pieces of
01:39:06
jewellery this lion piece they've made i wear all the time along with the little timepiece the sand timer that i wear
01:39:13
often and the line piece you might have seen conor mcgregor has a similar piece which was custom made for him for me it
01:39:19
represents courage and if you walk through my house the house that i'm in right now if you walk six feet in that
01:39:26
direction you'll see a huge lion portrait if you go upstairs you'll see a lion portrait if you look behind me on
01:39:31
the shelf near the top there you'll see a line as well the reason my house and my life is surrounded by lions is
01:39:36
because they represent courage calmness and that tenacity that i've applied to my business success to my
01:39:43
professional life into everything in between for me the lion has always been an animal that can be almost a bit of a contradiction they are so loving and so
01:39:50
caring of their own and can be powerful and courageous when necessary in order
01:39:55
to achieve what they want to achieve so if you like me are a big fan of courage bravery ambition while also being
01:40:02
calm and composed check out this line piece and let me know if you get it [Music]
01:40:14
[Music]
01:40:19
[Music]
01:40:25
[Music] you

Podspun Insights

In this captivating episode, Marcus Buckingham, a renowned author and speaker, shares his deeply personal journey from struggling with a stammer to becoming a celebrated public speaker. He reflects on the challenges he faced, including panic attacks and the pressure of managing high-profile clients like Disney, revealing how these experiences shaped his understanding of love and work.

As he engages in a thought-provoking conversation with Stephen Bartlett, they explore the importance of self-awareness, the significance of finding joy in one's work, and the power of relationships in the workplace. Buckingham emphasizes that true strengths are not just what you excel at, but what invigorates you, urging listeners to identify their 'red threads'—the activities that bring them joy and fulfillment.

With a blend of humor and vulnerability, Buckingham discusses the need for organizations to recognize the individuality of their employees and to create environments where people can thrive. He challenges conventional notions of success, advocating for a more compassionate approach to management and personal growth. This episode is a rich tapestry of insights that encourages listeners to embrace their uniqueness and cultivate love in their professional lives.

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Episode Highlights

  • Marcus Buckingham's Journey
    From a stammer to a top public speaker, Marcus shares his inspiring journey.
    “I couldn't say my name until I was 12.”
    @ 00m 18s
    May 05, 2022
  • Redefining Strengths and Weaknesses
    Marcus challenges the traditional definitions of strengths and weaknesses in our lives.
    “A weakness is any activity that weakens you.”
    @ 13m 14s
    May 05, 2022
  • The Importance of Listening
    Listening is key to empathy and understanding in interviews. 'Shut up and let the person ramble.'
    “Shut up and let the person ramble.”
    @ 24m 03s
    May 05, 2022
  • Employee Satisfaction Predictors
    The biggest predictors of employee satisfaction are person-work fit and effective management. 'It's your manager, stupid!'
    “It's your manager, stupid!”
    @ 28m 16s
    May 05, 2022
  • The Power of Teams
    Teams foster collaboration and trust, essential for engagement and productivity. 'Humans have been working in teams for 50,000 years.'
    “Humans have been working in teams for 50,000 years.”
    @ 33m 04s
    May 05, 2022
  • The Importance of Asking 'Why'
    Good managers ask why employees are underperforming instead of jumping to conclusions. 'I would ask why before I do anything else.'
    “I would ask why before I do anything else.”
    @ 42m 14s
    May 05, 2022
  • Love and Work
    Finding love in what you do is crucial for happiness and success. 'Love is for work and work is for love.'
    “Love is for work and work is for love.”
    @ 01h 00m 40s
    May 05, 2022
  • The Importance of 'Why' in Your Career
    Understanding the purpose behind your work is crucial for satisfaction. 'The why is important.'
    “The why is important, no question.”
    @ 01h 01m 53s
    May 05, 2022
  • Identifying Your 'Red Threads'
    Discover activities that energize you and weave them into your work. 'What are the five red threads I can weave today?'
    “What red threads can I weave today?”
    @ 01h 09m 28s
    May 05, 2022
  • The Peter Principle
    Promotions often move talented individuals away from what they love, a concept known as the Peter Principle.
    “It's bizarre that the most creative way to reward someone is to move them out of it.”
    @ 01h 22m 12s
    May 05, 2022
  • Strength of Character
    It takes immense strength to prioritize passion over titles and money in one's career.
    “Self-awareness and self-mastery are crucial in career decisions.”
    @ 01h 22m 42s
    May 05, 2022
  • The Role of Love in Work
    Love and work intersect significantly, impacting team dynamics and personal relationships.
    “You can't write a book about love and work without discussing love.”
    @ 01h 28m 47s
    May 05, 2022

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Interview Techniques22:42
  • Team Dynamics27:32
  • Employee Engagement28:22
  • Love in Work1:00:46
  • Competence Curse1:01:46
  • Loveless Work1:06:45
  • Career Choices1:21:59
  • Management Hesitation1:23:36

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown