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World Leading Psychologist: How To Succeed In Life & World: Jamil Qureshi

December 21, 2020 / 01:05:26

This episode features performance coach Jamil Qureshi discussing mindset, ambition, and the importance of self-investment for success. Key topics include the difference between intention and action, the role of purpose in motivation, and how to foster a growth mindset.

Jamil Qureshi shares insights from his experience working with high-performing individuals and teams, emphasizing that everyone has the potential to improve. He explains that success requires not just talent but also the willingness to practice and self-invest, drawing parallels with well-known figures like Tiger Woods and Warren Buffett.

The conversation highlights the significance of changing thoughts to drive actions, with Qureshi noting that purpose is attained daily rather than being a fixed destination. He also discusses the challenges of motivating others and the necessity of personal introspection.

Qureshi argues that consistency of thought leads to consistency of action, suggesting that small, incremental changes can lead to significant improvements over time. He also addresses the importance of taking responsibility for one's circumstances and the impact of childhood experiences on adult behavior.

Finally, the episode touches on the distractions of modern life, particularly social media, and how to cultivate focus and creativity in a world filled with interruptions.

TL;DR

Jamil Qureshi discusses mindset, ambition, and self-investment for success, emphasizing purpose and consistency in actions and thoughts.

Video

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and this is why tiger woods keeps
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working this is why warren buffett keeps
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working it's why richard branson keeps
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working
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the only way in which businesses or
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people will become successful
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and truly perform to their optimum this
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amazing question
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is probably the best question i've ever
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been asked
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[Music]
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camille thank you for joining me today
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it's a pleasure to have you here so
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early in the morning i
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i typically on this podcast will won't
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introduce people because
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um i i'll do a little bit of a
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pre-introduction but your
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your background and the work you've done
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specifically with high performance
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people and successful people
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is so compelling and fascinating that i
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feel like
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i want you to introduce yourself and
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i've read through your bio multiple
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times
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it was deeply inspiring and i think
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without an introduction everything we
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talk about from here
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without the perfect introduction which i
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feel like only you'll give
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everything we talk about from here on um
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might not have the
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the context it needs to have so who is
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jamil creation
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i'm a performance coach and psychologist
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so i've
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spent my time working with some very
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good sports teams some very good
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business teams
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some successful people and i guess what
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i do is i help people cultivate a
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mindset for success
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so i always say that for us to act
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differently we need to think differently
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i'm going to create different behaviors
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different actions this is about creating
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different
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thoughts first so i guess what i do more
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than anything else is help people change
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their mind
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so i said there's new new opportunities
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new possibilities that will come from
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new perspectives
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so a lot of my time is spent working
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with people not to give them new skills
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but more to allow them to understand the
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skills that they've already got
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and then create a perspective for them
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to use it differently
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so um as a performance coach i think
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everyone can be better
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everyone can perform better at terms as
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a matter of i guess trying to create the
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mindset the attitude um i guess some of
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the precursors to those
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to the performance which are which are
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beneficiary which have benefit to them
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and so you said that everybody has the
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skills and i i you know
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i i see that in a lot of my friends i
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see that they have a lot more sort of um
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natural capabilities than they've
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managed to sort of give the world
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through
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their actions if someone has an ambition
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to be something
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if they have the ambition to be you know
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a sports
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uh star and you've worked with a lot of
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athletes and you've worked with business
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people or they want to start a business
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what you tend to see it and what i tend
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to see in my inbox is
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a lot of people with intention but there
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seems to be something preventing that
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intention from turning into
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action or like behavior into an
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achievement yeah
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yeah and i think you know turning
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ambition into achievement
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is the key because most people will have
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good intentions most people will be
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wishing and hoping to be better
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there's a big difference between wishing
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and hoping and believing and executing
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upon it
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so i think that the people who genuinely
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execute on it
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probably want it more for a start at a
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monastic key no one's ever wandered
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around the bottom of a mountain
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and then simply found themselves at the
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top and it does take that determination
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the resilience it does take the ability
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to
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execute upon ideas to drive success
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so i think the key is the desire which
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is fueled by having a
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purpose a mission a vision towards what
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that end goal should look like
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a lot of people um can't quite
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they say one thing they say that their
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their purpose is to
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go to the gym yeah for example we all
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say one thing and do the other
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yeah and why is that like because it's
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sometimes hard to distinguish with
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someone
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whether that's their real sort of desire
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or whether they're kind of like
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virtue signaling to themselves if they
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want to be something
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or you know they want to start that
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business or become an entrepreneur be
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you know get a six-pack but then their
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actions show that
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quite a different story so i always
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wondered that with my some of my friends
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always think are they
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do they actually want that or they just
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it's very easy
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to say that this is what i'm after and
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much harder to do it
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and i think one of the reasons why is
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because um we have to invest we
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self-invest
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so we probably all know these um kids at
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school who are great footballers at 14
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15. you think you know what they're
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gonna make it they're just brilliant
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they're gonna make it
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um or great track athletes at 12 and you
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know and you just think
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they're special but they don't make it
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and the reason why they don't make it is
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they don't self-invest
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so the people who make it are the ones
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who
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um will get up on a rainy friday morning
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and rainy saturday morning to
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go and practice whilst their mates are
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in bed the ones who will
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practice on a friday night when their
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mates are out drinking
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and so talent is not enough you need
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talent plus teachability
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so talent plus the ability to be
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open-minded agile in our thinking
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to commit to practice and turn that
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practice into something which develops
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our talent even further
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so there's lots of people with talent
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and business lots of people with talent
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and sport
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um but i guess that we need to be
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open-minded enough to invest
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in how we practice our talent to become
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successful
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so you know there's no there's no
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substitute for practice i get lots of
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golfers who say to me that yeah can you
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make me better
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yeah and yeah the number one golfer in
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the world will practice
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more than any any amateur you know and
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you know their lies the truth
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but you know we need to we need to apply
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ourselves in a particular manner and so
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we need to be practical about how we
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exercise our talent
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you create good feedback loops to
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understand what we're doing
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gain better personal introspection and
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self-awareness
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to allow us to use our talents
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differently how do you give someone that
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purpose though like i'm trying to think
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like
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so we know we know practice is like so
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incredibly important to master something
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but my
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i guess my question is um how would you
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give someone
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that motivation because i i i guess
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you can't give someone purpose a lot of
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us spend so much of our lives trying to
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to motivate people right
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to motivate friends families you know
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siblings whatever it might be
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i'm wondering if there's a thing we can
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do as like loving
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friends or whatever to to give someone
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that kick yeah so i mean a couple of
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points i guess on that in regard to
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discovering purpose
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um it can't be done for someone so
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i always said purpose is never achieved
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it's attained on a daily basis
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so the mistake that people make with
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purpose is they confuse it with an end
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goal
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so here's my purpose and have this
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vision statement of what they're seeking
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to
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you know achieve or create whatever it
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might be and get practical and tangible
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about it
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but purpose isn't that purpose is
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achieved on a daily basis that
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um sorry purpose is never achieved it's
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attained on a daily basis
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and this is why tiger woods keeps
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working this is why warren buffett keeps
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working it's why richard branson keeps
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working it's because it's
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never achieved it's attained on a daily
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basis so i think that you know
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we need to find something which is
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purposeful to us
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um and then we need to lose ourselves to
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it on a regular basis
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so once we start to become more purpose
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driven and express ourselves in a
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particular way
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obviously being a good colleague being a
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good business leader been a good sports
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person is not seeking to impress
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it's about seeking to express and be
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ourselves in the context of our work
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so once people can find that um
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within themselves um then i think they
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can direct their energy and their focus
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in a particular way
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and become much more purpose driven in
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how they go about their daily activities
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but you can't give someone that purpose
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it has to be theirs
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and i think life is about timing i think
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some people find that very late some
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people find that very early
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and um and it makes no difference we're
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all individuals in regard to
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helping other people make change we're
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almost too
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quick to go towards behaviors so we tell
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people to be different all the time tell
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our team members you should be more
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collaborative guys
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i don't guys need to be more innovative
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and tell our children to
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keep their rooms tidy so we're
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constantly talking to people about
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behaviors
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say to our friends that you should give
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up smoking or eat healthier whatever it
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might be
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the only way in which you change actions
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is by changing thoughts
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so we think and then we feel and then we
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act that's how we work
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so if you're constantly working on
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actions we're telling people to be
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different and this is why new year's
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resolutions fail
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from tomorrow i'll be different start
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doing this i'm going to stop doing that
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and we start talking about actions and
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behaviors
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um we need to go back to the um granted
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a precursor of all our
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actions which is our thoughts so the
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only way in which you genuinely drive
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commitment rather than compliance when
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it comes to change in your team in your
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friends you know and yourself
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is by changing the words and pictures in
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your head or their head to drive
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different feelings and then different
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actions there's um
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a little tip which i sometimes give
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leaders and so i said leaders never say
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to your team you're gonna make a change
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you say to your team you're gonna make a
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change they won't like it um say to your
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team
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i'd like to try and experiment they'll
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they'll be on board with it and um we'll
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give that a go that's okay
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so even just a difference in language to
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allow someone to think differently or
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make them feel differently and hopefully
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therefore
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choose to act in a different manner and
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how how would i get someone to change
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their thoughts
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you know i think um i think the best way
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is gamification
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um what holds people in place is what
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they believe to be true
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and then so um so people will sit around
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a boardroom table
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and i'll discuss strategy and i'll say
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you know look you know we can do this
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but we can't do that
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and they'll have a viewpoint on budgets
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on consumer buying behaviors
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on on compliance and governance and
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that's what holds this in place
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so what we need to do is break free of
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some of the parameters that we think
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are in the way so if we got people
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around the boardroom table
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and said look guys let's just this
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strategy piece that we're going to talk
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about let's imagine we got an unlimited
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marketing budget for it
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if we had an unlimited marketing budget
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for it i know we haven't but if we had
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what would we be doing how would we be
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doing it um you know if we had no
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marketing budget
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what would we be doing now what we're
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doing here is that we are helping people
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to move outside of the mental tram lines
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that we all operate under
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and under habitual thinking so let's ask
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some what if questions
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can you imagine that you know a life if
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you weren't smoking
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i told what it looked like i don't know
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what you'd be doing today if you weren't
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smoking what'd you spend your money on
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that you saved on cigarettes
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just played the game of what if so let's
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break free of some of the things which
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are holding
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people in place by um not by conflict
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not by arguing and and debate in a
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confrontational manner
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but finding some common ground and
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working from there and the common ground
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is
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let's play a game and you you said that
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you know about
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people finding that purpose um in their
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lives you we hear this
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uh phrase um a lot which is
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find your passion yeah and i almost feel
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that it's it's
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in many respects quite harmful because
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it that question is kind of loaded it it
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assumes a singular passion for a star it
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sounds that you can
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discover it like an easter egg and then
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and also
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um the the context in which that
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question usually sits in it implies that
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once you find it
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then it's you know then it's the the the
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it's a can of unlimited like happiness
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and
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orientation forever and then that's
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yours and it
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i just feel like sometimes language can
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be harmful because it
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it simplifies very complex things and
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sometimes multifaceted
00:11:33
plural things you know so i wondered if
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that you know that phrase
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uh find your per find your passion was
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something you um
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you felt similar about or yeah i do i
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mean yeah it's true that passion can be
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a
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significant multiplier of human
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potential
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so you know if people are passionate and
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engaged in a business
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they can direct their energy in a in a
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worthwhile meaningful manner
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so so so it's it's worthwhile but you're
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right and um that you know there's a big
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difference between
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passion big difference between happiness
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and joy
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um some are in the moment at home i
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think joy is in the moment and
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i think happiness is something um that
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we continually continually
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adjust towards um your passion can be a
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significant multiplier of human
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potential
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particularly in the workplace so it does
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have a
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place it is something which is useful to
00:12:21
understand and then ultimately
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it always comes down to personal
00:12:25
introspection and self-awareness for me
00:12:27
and i think that um we need to work
00:12:30
harder at understanding ourselves
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and when we are constructing a mindset
00:12:34
which is conducive to performance
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so we optimize our potential when we're
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in a particular state of mind
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and that state of mind might be passion
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it might be relaxation
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it might be enthusiasm might be
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enjoyment but we need to almost get to
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know ourselves
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and know that um there are certain
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things which enable us to do others
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and once we work backwards and
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understand what that looks like maybe we
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can gain some more consistency
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i say to a lot of sports people and to a
00:13:01
lot of business people that
00:13:03
consistency of mind gives you
00:13:05
consistency of play
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and i'm convinced of it and the more
00:13:08
consistent we can be in our thinking
00:13:10
we understand um the building blocks the
00:13:13
component parts to success
00:13:15
yeah the more success we can have and
00:13:17
how does one establish consistency of
00:13:18
thought
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because i completely agree with that i
00:13:20
completely agree i've seen that in my
00:13:22
own life when i've been
00:13:23
consistent with my thinking i've managed
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to you know
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perform the same habits every day um but
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then sometimes
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i'll lose consistency in my thoughts
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because i lose um
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[Music]
00:13:35
i lose i guess i lose attachment or sort
00:13:38
of my anchor with my my why
00:13:40
yeah and i talk a lot i've talked a lot
00:13:41
in this podcast over the last couple of
00:13:42
weeks about
00:13:43
this realization i've had this year with
00:13:45
the gym which was every year
00:13:47
february march i was incredibly
00:13:49
motivated to go
00:13:51
fired up trying to look good for summer
00:13:53
yeah
00:13:54
and then obviously once you look good
00:13:56
and summer has ended
00:13:57
it's almost like you've lost your anchor
00:14:00
right so you get into
00:14:01
september and the why which made you go
00:14:03
and to think consistently every day
00:14:06
has been is evaporated and i'm tr i
00:14:08
can't get myself to go to the gym in
00:14:09
october
00:14:10
right you look in great shape for it
00:14:12
this was the other
00:14:13
video i realized so this was the year i
00:14:16
realized that this is the year i booked
00:14:17
the trend for the first time in my life
00:14:18
because i realized that i thought to
00:14:20
myself every single year
00:14:22
i i do it for this period and then i
00:14:24
stop and
00:14:25
they're two different people august
00:14:27
steve and october steve don't know each
00:14:28
other they're like you know what i mean
00:14:30
they're like twins that were separated
00:14:32
at birth and so this was the year where
00:14:34
i realized what i was doing and why
00:14:36
i was losing my motivation so i thought
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[ __ ] it you know i'm gonna anchor my why
00:14:40
to something a bit more uh long term
00:14:43
and without a timeline so i said to
00:14:45
myself listen i persuaded myself of all
00:14:47
the reasons
00:14:48
why i want to be healthy and view my
00:14:51
life as one season
00:14:53
and that's what's allowed me to
00:14:55
persevere and also i got a bit pissed
00:14:57
off with myself i thought
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you're really like that like like
00:15:01
you're that vain and you're like you
00:15:02
know but so yeah do you know i mean i
00:15:05
always think that
00:15:05
consistency of mind comes from
00:15:08
understanding the intrinsic quality of
00:15:10
our decision-making processes
00:15:12
and i say that a lot to people in sport
00:15:14
and in business so
00:15:16
yeah you can make a good decision and
00:15:18
have a really bad outcome
00:15:19
you can make a bad decision have a good
00:15:21
outcome and this is why i've worked with
00:15:22
leadership teams who have confused luck
00:15:24
for genius
00:15:26
and really bad decisions with a great
00:15:27
outcome you know markets have changed
00:15:29
competition's done something something's
00:15:30
just worked in their favor
00:15:32
um so um so it's really important for us
00:15:35
to
00:15:35
not judge our decision making by our
00:15:37
outcomes
00:15:39
and we often do so we'll say this is a
00:15:41
good decision because it resulted in
00:15:42
this
00:15:43
or this is a bad decision it resulted in
00:15:45
that
00:15:46
and we can only understand the outcome
00:15:48
retrospectively
00:15:49
so it's wrong to measure our decisions
00:15:51
by the outcomes and
00:15:52
we need to go back to how we made a
00:15:54
decision in the first place and once we
00:15:56
start to understand the intrinsic
00:15:57
quality of our decision making process
00:15:59
we can become more consistent in how we
00:16:01
make decisions
00:16:03
and therefore have more control over
00:16:04
those outcomes so i think that you know
00:16:07
two things i don't i think that and then
00:16:09
we'll use you as the example here steve
00:16:11
um that consistency of mind will come
00:16:14
from knowing how we make decisions okay
00:16:16
i understand that we put
00:16:18
our weight into evidence how much we use
00:16:20
prejudice and bias and opinion whatever
00:16:22
it might be
00:16:22
but let's understand how we make
00:16:24
decisions and in that way we can be
00:16:25
consistent
00:16:26
in um how we apply our logic and
00:16:29
thinking and feeling
00:16:30
try and determine some best outcomes and
00:16:32
then the other thing and um
00:16:33
as you've just positioned is reframing
00:16:36
let's stand back and create some time
00:16:38
and space
00:16:39
to understand and um you know why we do
00:16:41
things and why we don't do things
00:16:43
now i always say that um the people are
00:16:46
most successful and i've had a pleasure
00:16:48
working with six sports people who got
00:16:49
to number one in the world
00:16:50
i can guarantee you one thing i had in
00:16:53
common was that
00:16:54
um um they um they never made big
00:16:57
changes
00:16:58
and um it was small changes so i'm a big
00:17:01
big believer in the one degree of change
00:17:03
if you take two parallel lines and you
00:17:04
move one by one degree it may not seem
00:17:06
much at first
00:17:07
but it's a really big difference between
00:17:09
where you start and where you end up
00:17:11
so um everyone's trying to you know make
00:17:14
a dramatic change and see change from
00:17:16
tomorrow i'm going to be different
00:17:17
i think it's about doing something a
00:17:19
little bit more than what we've been
00:17:20
doing it matan a bit more consistently
00:17:22
and then the other thing with these
00:17:24
people who obtained you know what i call
00:17:26
um super achievements at home so they
00:17:28
did really really well
00:17:30
um is that they actually worked on their
00:17:31
strengths they started to understand
00:17:33
what was good about them
00:17:34
and do that some more so we think to be
00:17:37
better
00:17:37
as human beings i'm gonna be better as a
00:17:40
business or a team of people we need to
00:17:42
fix our weaknesses
00:17:43
um i'm not sure that's true i actually
00:17:45
think it's more about understanding our
00:17:47
strengths and playing to them
00:17:48
so um i've actually worked with teams
00:17:50
before in business and in sport
00:17:53
who have actually weakened the strength
00:17:55
by trying to strengthen a weakness
00:17:57
if you think about it it's ridiculous
00:17:58
and actually weaken the strength by
00:18:00
trying to strengthen the weakness we
00:18:01
need to be careful
00:18:02
so i think understanding what's good
00:18:04
about us understanding you know
00:18:05
where our behaviors come from in regard
00:18:08
to the thinking before it
00:18:10
and then reframing some of those words
00:18:12
and pictures and i guess that's what
00:18:13
you've done with your gym
00:18:14
example because i guess change some of
00:18:15
the words and pictures in your head
00:18:17
to therefore feel differently which has
00:18:19
resulted you and acting differently
00:18:21
yeah and i really you know i was i was
00:18:23
valuing intensity over consistency and
00:18:26
intensity wasn't sustainable right so i
00:18:28
was going through the summer like
00:18:29
to the gym two times a day i was
00:18:30
starving myself like eating things that
00:18:32
i
00:18:33
i didn't want to necessarily eat yeah
00:18:35
and the the consistency came from being
00:18:37
a bit more um
00:18:38
realistic with myself being yeah you
00:18:40
know if you missed the day of gym it
00:18:41
doesn't matter you don't have to
00:18:42
perspective
00:18:43
yes perspective isn't it yeah and i
00:18:45
think do you know it's funny because
00:18:46
again
00:18:46
something so many sports people have
00:18:47
worked with and business people who
00:18:50
will lose perspective they'll lose the
00:18:52
tournament and it's dreadful you know
00:18:53
win a tournament i've made it you know
00:18:55
this is it this is
00:18:56
turning point for me now they win a big
00:18:58
contract you know in business
00:19:00
and you know this is us now we're set up
00:19:02
you know or they lose a contract
00:19:04
and um and life has never been so
00:19:05
dreadful um but i think that we need a
00:19:08
better perspective on things so their
00:19:10
ability to think more long term
00:19:12
term to be more forgiving you know to
00:19:13
understand with more
00:19:15
um reality at uh what's good and what's
00:19:18
not so good
00:19:19
is probably the way forwards and in
00:19:22
terms of responsibility
00:19:23
it's a it's a topic that's fast
00:19:25
consistency is a topic i've been so
00:19:27
fascinated about over the last year
00:19:28
as i've reflected and done has been sort
00:19:30
of introspective about the things i've
00:19:32
been able to achieve
00:19:33
whether it's getting millions of
00:19:34
followers on social media whether it's
00:19:36
growing my business or
00:19:37
going to the gym it seems that the the
00:19:39
very
00:19:40
ironically consistent theme across all
00:19:42
of them was consistency it was being
00:19:44
able to do
00:19:45
perform x habit for a long period of
00:19:47
time and then you have that
00:19:48
the eighth wonder of the world shows up
00:19:50
and things start compounding in your
00:19:51
favor
00:19:52
very quickly usually um but the other
00:19:54
term that i've been fascinated with
00:19:56
is responsibility and as i've
00:19:59
i started out as an 18 year old kid
00:20:01
dropped out of university
00:20:02
disowned by my parents no money at all
00:20:05
and
00:20:06
the one of the things that i noticed as
00:20:09
i look back on 18 year old steve
00:20:11
versus a lot of other people that i see
00:20:12
that that are living in the same
00:20:14
[ __ ] area i was living in and
00:20:16
stealing pizzas like i was stealing them
00:20:18
um was they don't take responsibility
00:20:20
for their situation
00:20:22
they kind of see themselves as a a
00:20:24
victim of the situation they're in
00:20:26
whereas when i was in that situation not
00:20:28
only did i not view it as my destination
00:20:30
i was literally taking photos of the the
00:20:32
nothingness in my fridge
00:20:34
and the how dire my life was because in
00:20:37
my mind and i
00:20:37
started keeping this diary on facebook
00:20:39
which i really randomly
00:20:41
wrote in my diary that a tv company had
00:20:43
asked me to keep this
00:20:44
because i didn't actually know how to
00:20:45
tell my own diary right that i thought i
00:20:47
was gonna
00:20:48
show the world this someday um i
00:20:51
i didn't see it as my destination and i
00:20:53
took full responsibility of my
00:20:54
circumstance it wasn't anyone's fault
00:20:56
but my own and i was gonna change it
00:20:57
but then one of the things that makes me
00:20:59
concerned um about our generation and
00:21:02
about
00:21:03
certain political narratives and certain
00:21:05
themes i see on the internet
00:21:06
is like a an avoidance of responsibility
00:21:10
for your life and the the default to
00:21:12
blame someone else
00:21:13
and i'll be honest it's something i see
00:21:15
more in the western world than i do
00:21:17
in the african village i was born in
00:21:19
yeah you know so
00:21:21
i wanted to know if really from you like
00:21:22
what role responsibility plays in
00:21:24
people's outcomes
00:21:26
okay that's a big one yeah um
00:21:29
you promised me some easy questions um
00:21:32
no
00:21:32
so um responsibility is huge it's just
00:21:34
massive it's um
00:21:36
it's it's one of the pre it's one of the
00:21:38
predetermined
00:21:39
of successful outcomes is our ability to
00:21:41
take ownership and accountability so
00:21:44
circumstance and situation push and pull
00:21:46
us in different directions on a daily
00:21:48
basis the world is complex it's
00:21:50
uncertain it's unpredictable
00:21:52
all of those things the people who
00:21:54
perform best have huge levels of
00:21:56
responsibility
00:21:57
and ability to respond to those
00:21:59
circumstances and situation no matter
00:22:01
what they are
00:22:02
to drive the best outcomes or
00:22:03
opportunities so i always said there's a
00:22:06
circle of concern
00:22:08
water cooler conversations the stuff
00:22:09
that's going on you know around us
00:22:11
circumstance situation incidents and
00:22:14
accidents
00:22:15
then there's a circle of influence and
00:22:17
the circle of influence is where we make
00:22:18
choice that's what it's about
00:22:20
so responsibility is all about choice
00:22:22
for me i
00:22:23
absolutely guarantee you now that the
00:22:26
circumstance the situation is not a
00:22:29
predictor of success
00:22:30
and um because we know of people who
00:22:32
were born into privilege
00:22:33
their great role models had good access
00:22:35
to opportunity to wealth
00:22:37
they had good guidance and good support
00:22:40
and they ended up dying
00:22:41
heroin addicts in prison we know some
00:22:43
people born with a physical disadvantage
00:22:45
now a lack of good role models now the
00:22:47
lack of guidance lack of support lack of
00:22:49
opportunity
00:22:50
they grew up to be some of the most
00:22:51
successful people who have ever walked
00:22:53
this earth
00:22:54
so it proves beyond doubt that attitude
00:22:56
is more important than intelligence or
00:22:58
facts
00:22:59
and i genuinely believe that to be true
00:23:00
in all areas of high performance that
00:23:02
attitude is more important than
00:23:03
intelligence or facts
00:23:05
i always say give me i will over iq any
00:23:08
one of my teams i'd rather if i will
00:23:09
over iq because high technical expertise
00:23:12
and talk about the western world at the
00:23:13
moment high technical expertise is no
00:23:15
longer as valuable as it used to be
00:23:18
and the reason why high technical
00:23:20
expertise is no longer as valuable as it
00:23:21
used to be
00:23:22
it's because we can google things that's
00:23:24
why so knowing a lot
00:23:26
isn't where your success is going to
00:23:27
come from yeah it's not what you know
00:23:30
which is important
00:23:31
it's how you think about what you know
00:23:33
and how you bring it to life with your
00:23:35
character and personality
00:23:36
to determine the best outcomes or
00:23:38
opportunities
00:23:39
so you know i genuinely believe that the
00:23:42
only way in which
00:23:43
businesses or people will become
00:23:45
successful and truly perform to their
00:23:47
optimum
00:23:48
is taking full accountability and
00:23:50
ownership we need to almost move away
00:23:52
from circumstance and situation which is
00:23:54
a distraction
00:23:56
so um the more that we realize that our
00:23:58
success is dependent upon us
00:24:00
and not on situation the better and
00:24:02
because the world is so unpredictable
00:24:04
i need to simply learn to dance on a
00:24:06
shifting carpet
00:24:08
not see the rug being pulled from under
00:24:09
our feet you know life is a game of
00:24:12
continual adjustment
00:24:13
and it doesn't matter what happens it's
00:24:15
how we react and respond to it to
00:24:17
determine those best opportunities or
00:24:18
outcomes
00:24:19
and i think that you know it's funny
00:24:21
because initially i'm working a lot of
00:24:22
businesses
00:24:23
and um on culture on team
00:24:26
um people strategies and the focus on
00:24:29
responsibility has never been higher
00:24:32
mainly because we've been asked to stay
00:24:33
apart people are having to determine
00:24:35
their own work schedules people have to
00:24:37
determine their own working week and um
00:24:40
they're going to have to
00:24:41
take responsibility for driving the best
00:24:43
outcomes and
00:24:44
whilst they're not surrounded by team or
00:24:46
working with directly with a leader
00:24:48
so it's been a greater call for
00:24:50
responsibility i wonder whether
00:24:52
in answer to your question i don't know
00:24:53
the answer to this
00:24:55
um i wonder whether we'll see a better
00:24:58
shift or greater shift towards more
00:25:00
responsibility in the western world
00:25:02
because i agree with you i think that
00:25:04
many of us will see ourselves as a
00:25:05
victim of circumstance and situation
00:25:08
and not necessarily see the beauty in
00:25:10
the chaos because of it
00:25:12
you talk there about the the internet as
00:25:14
well in the power of the internet and
00:25:15
how that's been a bit of a leveler
00:25:17
which is yeah which is a really
00:25:18
wonderful thing i think um
00:25:21
what how important is it do you do you
00:25:23
think when you think about the
00:25:24
successful people you've worked with
00:25:26
to be a sort of self-driven
00:25:29
learner beyond school um
00:25:32
did you see in the specifically in the
00:25:34
sort of upper echelons of like business
00:25:35
the ones that are the people that are
00:25:37
most successful are
00:25:38
proactive sort of self-driven yeah i
00:25:41
think
00:25:41
i think it's true i think that um i've
00:25:43
said that our only
00:25:44
sustainable competitive advantage is to
00:25:47
learn faster and better than your
00:25:49
competitors
00:25:50
so you know and you think about that for
00:25:52
a business you think about that for a
00:25:53
leader you know you think about as a
00:25:55
sportsman it's probably true isn't it
00:25:57
you know our only sort of
00:25:58
sustainable competitive advantage is
00:26:00
just learn faster and better than anyone
00:26:01
else
00:26:02
two powerline lines yeah yeah and i
00:26:04
think that you know and i think that
00:26:06
i think that how can we learn faster and
00:26:08
better
00:26:09
yeah if we're not proactive lifelong
00:26:12
learners
00:26:13
and so you know and i think that you
00:26:14
know learning isn't necessarily about
00:26:16
being
00:26:16
taught um we don't necessarily need
00:26:19
teachers
00:26:19
um it's a strive for greater curiosity
00:26:22
you know i think curiosity is worth
00:26:24
more than creativity at the moment but
00:26:25
it's a strive for greater curiosity it's
00:26:27
a matter of being
00:26:28
massive being open-minded it's a matter
00:26:30
of being um
00:26:31
agile in our thinking so we can deploy
00:26:33
resourced of opportunity as it becomes
00:26:35
visible
00:26:36
um it's about um it's about
00:26:38
self-discovery
00:26:40
so it's about a variety of things which
00:26:42
are based not necessarily upon
00:26:43
traditional learning
00:26:45
but more in a way in which we can open
00:26:47
our mind up to
00:26:49
experimentation and feedback you know
00:26:51
and
00:26:52
understanding ourselves differently and
00:26:54
i think the best
00:26:55
leaders um you know have this ability to
00:26:58
you know reimagine repurpose reinvent
00:27:01
i don't think they're beholden to a
00:27:03
particular or wedded to a particular
00:27:04
mindset
00:27:06
but that's for a lot of people that's
00:27:07
terrifying the thought of
00:27:09
experimentation and being agile and
00:27:11
reinvention
00:27:12
i've seen that in my own business i've
00:27:14
seen over the years i was um
00:27:16
i was known as being the guy that would
00:27:17
walk in i think a lot of
00:27:19
business leaders are walking in the
00:27:20
morning and be like we're going in a
00:27:21
different direction everyone come in
00:27:22
this room we're going to launch this
00:27:23
part of our business and we're going to
00:27:24
take it
00:27:25
we're going to experiment and i i would
00:27:27
often say to our team that
00:27:28
experimentation is like at the heart of
00:27:30
all of our strategy it's like why
00:27:31
especially as a social media company
00:27:33
where our platforms
00:27:35
social media changes every day there's
00:27:37
new updates pushed by facebook and
00:27:38
instagram every day
00:27:40
um so our company slogan was keeping
00:27:42
keeping brands at the forefront of
00:27:43
what's possible
00:27:44
which meant that we had to be agile but
00:27:46
i'd often see people in my organization
00:27:47
that were
00:27:49
really against change fearful of it
00:27:52
they would take you know they would
00:27:54
resist it
00:27:55
yeah you know uh and i i i am
00:27:58
i wonder how you if it's i always
00:28:00
wondered why it was i think some of them
00:28:02
had
00:28:02
levels of imposter syndrome so they were
00:28:05
you know
00:28:06
they were just uh just trying to get a
00:28:08
hang of the role they were in and not do
00:28:10
more that
00:28:11
you know they were already you know but
00:28:13
i wonder what your thoughts were on that
00:28:14
i think i think people don't like change
00:28:16
because they don't know what it results
00:28:17
in
00:28:17
and that's one of the things so let's
00:28:19
take um
00:28:21
let's take uh moving your desk yeah
00:28:23
someone sat at our desk for ten years in
00:28:25
a particular office he said you know
00:28:26
what you need to you need to move down
00:28:28
the corridor
00:28:29
i'm going to make a move but uh people
00:28:31
weren't like the slightest
00:28:33
um if you said to them that you know you
00:28:34
need to move down the corridor you know
00:28:36
we really appreciate the move we're
00:28:37
going to give you a million pounds at
00:28:39
the end of the year because of it
00:28:41
they'll be trotting off with their
00:28:42
potted plant in hand i guarantee it
00:28:44
so i think that because people don't
00:28:46
necessarily know what it results in
00:28:49
why should we invest in doing something
00:28:51
different which is uncomfortable because
00:28:53
it goes against our mental tram lines
00:28:54
our habitual thinking
00:28:56
so now you're asking me to compromise my
00:28:58
patterns
00:28:59
and i don't know what for and i know
00:29:02
what's going to result in
00:29:03
um it could be good it could be bad so
00:29:05
therefore i'm not sure i want to go to
00:29:07
the trouble
00:29:07
without investing in this change when i
00:29:10
haven't determined you know the result
00:29:12
of it
00:29:13
as human beings we like patterns um
00:29:15
that's good and it's bad
00:29:17
and um it works in our favor sometimes
00:29:19
sometimes it doesn't
00:29:20
so we like patterns and so we like
00:29:22
consistency
00:29:23
and we compartmentalize and how am i
00:29:25
getting a viewpoint on the world and in
00:29:26
fact if you look at um
00:29:28
the office is a good example the office
00:29:30
is a great example of keeping people in
00:29:31
patterns you've got your phone on your
00:29:33
desk here
00:29:33
your computer there come in at a certain
00:29:36
time working a certain way take your
00:29:38
lunch at a certain time
00:29:39
so we're conditioned to work in a way
00:29:41
which is reflective of the consistency
00:29:44
which takes out variance in business so
00:29:47
you think that
00:29:47
management has been around for about 100
00:29:49
years and the reason why management's
00:29:51
been around for about 100 years
00:29:53
is to reduce variance at time because
00:29:55
then you can guess then you can scale
00:29:57
so businesses got bigger a lot bigger
00:30:00
100 years ago
00:30:01
and um because of the ability to keep
00:30:03
people
00:30:04
habitual so um so because we've become
00:30:07
conditioned to do this
00:30:09
and everything around us keeps us in in
00:30:11
in a pattern that we quite like being in
00:30:14
as soon as we start to move outside of
00:30:15
that there's a level of discomfort
00:30:17
so i guess leaders can allow people to
00:30:19
make change atta and embrace
00:30:21
change um i guess there's a few points
00:30:24
one
00:30:24
it's always best if it's co-authored and
00:30:26
co-created right
00:30:27
um so let's involve people in what that
00:30:29
change looks like
00:30:30
um it's always best if um
00:30:34
we look at our organizations or teams as
00:30:36
a community
00:30:37
instead of as a team or an organization
00:30:39
at the moment communities are
00:30:41
outperforming bureaucracies and
00:30:42
hierarchies when it comes to maximizing
00:30:44
human talent
00:30:45
so let's try and form a community and um
00:30:46
let's co-author and co-create
00:30:48
and and then um let's have a look at um
00:30:51
peer recognition peer coaching peer
00:30:53
challenge
00:30:54
it doesn't need to be a top down thing
00:30:56
done to people it can be something which
00:30:58
can
00:30:58
happen from the inside out you know it's
00:31:01
meaningful when
00:31:02
when something is endorsed by others
00:31:05
that that you know you are
00:31:06
that you feel an affinity with sure what
00:31:09
when you read about the steve jobs of
00:31:11
the world and the elon musk's of the
00:31:12
world they seem to buck
00:31:13
all of the a lot of the trends that you
00:31:15
hear in like management coaching they
00:31:17
seem to be
00:31:18
very authoritarian you know i was
00:31:20
reading about from i was reading steve
00:31:22
elon musk's biography and there's
00:31:24
stories of him just like
00:31:26
calling someone into the office and
00:31:27
saying how much does it cost to do this
00:31:28
they'll say 10 million he'll say do it
00:31:30
for
00:31:30
5 and do it within 30 days and they'll
00:31:33
go away feeling puzzled but they'll get
00:31:35
it done
00:31:36
yeah he has this culture of like
00:31:37
intensity and when you start he says to
00:31:40
the teams that this will be the hardest
00:31:42
you've ever worked in your life
00:31:43
but it'll be the most worthwhile but
00:31:44
it'd be the hardest you've ever worked
00:31:46
and
00:31:47
and i you know and then steve jobs as
00:31:48
well i've heard the stories of how he
00:31:49
was
00:31:50
you know how he built the company at
00:31:51
medlo park and um
00:31:53
he seemed like the antithesis of what
00:31:55
you would read about in a business book
00:31:57
but obviously these are two of the most
00:31:58
successful entrepreneurs
00:31:59
the world has ever you know seen so i
00:32:02
wondered if there's a
00:32:04
i'm trying to appreciate the like
00:32:07
how they've achieved their success by
00:32:09
being so different from what all the
00:32:10
business books say
00:32:11
from all accounts they're you know what
00:32:14
i mean
00:32:14
yeah i mean i think a couple of things i
00:32:17
guess that you know you find what works
00:32:19
for you
00:32:20
um i think what they have on their side
00:32:22
is they have a really big
00:32:24
purpose statement it's a really big
00:32:26
mission so there are lots of companies
00:32:29
with
00:32:29
mission statements but very few on a
00:32:31
mission and i guess that when it comes
00:32:34
back to
00:32:34
um the point i made earlier that passion
00:32:37
been a significant multiplier
00:32:39
of human potential i guess that these
00:32:41
people have the ability to engage people
00:32:44
so to tell a story attempt to inspire
00:32:47
and motivate
00:32:48
so i guess that you know there is a
00:32:50
there's no doubt lots of logic
00:32:52
and time there is no doubt lots of
00:32:54
rationality which is used in their
00:32:56
management leadership style
00:32:58
you know but what you're describing to
00:32:59
me in the people that you're describing
00:33:02
i think you can really get behind
00:33:03
something that someone passionately
00:33:05
believes in
00:33:06
and is something which is worthwhile and
00:33:08
purposeful
00:33:09
yeah on such a grand scale so i think
00:33:12
when they're talking about
00:33:13
um and things which will change humanity
00:33:16
um i think it's possible for
00:33:18
you know us to be swept along at him on
00:33:20
that particular vision and
00:33:21
so maybe it does mobilize people in a
00:33:23
different manner because of who they are
00:33:25
what they believe in and what they're
00:33:26
trying to achieve yeah no that's
00:33:29
probably true i mean yeah you think
00:33:30
about i
00:33:30
mean the example i'll give you is jfk
00:33:35
well yeah i mean i mean jfk do you think
00:33:37
that jfk's speech about putting man on
00:33:39
the moon
00:33:39
you should read it actually rather than
00:33:41
look at it um
00:33:43
it's a rubbish speech when you read it
00:33:45
the term and the reason
00:33:46
and the reason why is that there's no
00:33:48
logic to it until there's no rationality
00:33:50
so he says we put a man on the moon and
00:33:52
the reason why he gives that
00:33:53
we should put a man on the moon is
00:33:55
because it's it's hard and not easy
00:33:57
which is a rubbish reason to do anything
00:34:00
it's hard
00:34:01
that's why we're gonna do it yeah so um
00:34:03
but not only did
00:34:04
they end up doing this it mobilized the
00:34:07
whole nation
00:34:08
behind the space race and the whole
00:34:10
nation behind science in fact
00:34:12
um the reason why was that because logic
00:34:14
was low
00:34:15
inspiration was high it was such a
00:34:18
um it was such a literally a moonshot it
00:34:21
was literally such a big goal
00:34:23
and so ambitious so expansive you know
00:34:26
that people bought into the dream
00:34:28
and i wonder whether and i don't know
00:34:31
you know
00:34:32
the examples you gave at steve jobs and
00:34:33
elon musk whether whether people just
00:34:35
buy into that dream and they buy into
00:34:37
what they not necessarily what they're
00:34:39
seeking to do but what they're seeking
00:34:40
to create
00:34:41
and maybe there's a lesson for all of us
00:34:43
who manage and manage teams that
00:34:45
maybe it's not about trying to you know
00:34:46
get people to do stuff it's about people
00:34:48
to
00:34:48
you know to create stuff is that you
00:34:50
know my time to be
00:34:52
part of something which is worthwhile
00:34:54
and meaningful and
00:34:56
sell a big vision and tell the right
00:34:58
story
00:34:59
and you know engage people emotionally
00:35:01
you know all of this stuff about
00:35:03
psychology i know a lot of stuff
00:35:04
i read a few books yeah you've read a
00:35:06
few books about a few books a week last
00:35:07
tuesday
00:35:08
yeah you know don't tell my clients
00:35:14
um you know when people
00:35:18
come across people like you they think
00:35:19
that you've got all the answers and
00:35:21
because you've got all the answers or at
00:35:22
least an answer to most things
00:35:24
um they think that you must live
00:35:27
a life of sort of perfect
00:35:29
decision-making
00:35:32
couples children have the worst worn
00:35:33
shoes yeah exactly
00:35:35
um so yeah what what do you like at
00:35:38
living these things that you're aware of
00:35:41
speaking of performance one of the
00:35:42
things that's integral to performing at
00:35:44
the highest level is nutrition it's
00:35:45
something that i
00:35:46
i guess i took a a long time to finally
00:35:49
believe
00:35:49
but that is why having hewlett's
00:35:52
response for this podcast is such a
00:35:53
privilege because
00:35:54
there was a time in my life especially
00:35:56
when i was early in my business career
00:35:57
where i wasn't getting the vitamins the
00:35:59
minerals and i wasn't having a sort of
00:36:00
nutritionally complete diet i was
00:36:02
if you look at some of my old photos i
00:36:04
was definitely lacking protein as well
00:36:06
and a lot of that maybe it was an excuse
00:36:08
was because
00:36:09
i was um i was busy and
00:36:12
when i discovered huel when a guy called
00:36:14
mike walked past me in the office
00:36:15
wearing a heel t-shirt and shaking a
00:36:17
little bottle and
00:36:18
you know upon my curiosity of asking
00:36:20
what was in that and why he was drinking
00:36:21
it
00:36:22
it really really did change my life and
00:36:24
so here's what i want to do
00:36:25
you know this particular podcast today
00:36:27
has been about high performance and
00:36:28
mindset and how we
00:36:29
how we become our best selves and how we
00:36:31
teach our teams to become our best
00:36:33
selves
00:36:34
i'm going to give away this week five
00:36:37
boxes of your big boxes right
00:36:41
all you've got to do if you want one of
00:36:42
those boxes is hit the subscribe button
00:36:44
on this podcast wherever you're
00:36:45
listening whether you're on youtube
00:36:46
or whether you're on the the podcast or
00:36:48
wherever you might be and leave
00:36:49
a review if you leave a review on the
00:36:51
podcast or just keep your instagram
00:36:53
handle or your twitter handle in there
00:36:54
so i can find you
00:36:56
but if you're listening on youtube then
00:36:57
please um just leave a comment down
00:36:59
below
00:37:00
and any comment you leave enters you
00:37:02
into the competition
00:37:03
and i want to know what you think of
00:37:04
huel so um it's as i say i say it with
00:37:07
full honesty it's changed my life and i
00:37:09
really believe that those of you who
00:37:10
aren't getting your sort of
00:37:11
um all your minerals and proteins and
00:37:13
all the good stuff i think it can change
00:37:15
yours too
00:37:16
what do you like at living these things
00:37:18
that you're aware of
00:37:20
yeah i'm rubbish next question
00:37:26
and the reason why is that two things
00:37:28
that one um
00:37:30
we're all human because we're all human
00:37:33
you know we're all
00:37:34
prone to make mistakes in our doing and
00:37:36
our thinking
00:37:37
um and i think that being you know
00:37:39
better never stops
00:37:40
so therefore we've got to continually
00:37:42
adjust you know we don't
00:37:43
find hints tips gimmicks that make us
00:37:46
better
00:37:47
and then we just apply them regularly
00:37:49
and it works
00:37:50
so i guess there's a level of
00:37:52
inconsistency
00:37:54
which is reflective of the fact that you
00:37:56
know that
00:37:57
i'm a human being who tries to do better
00:37:59
you know give me an exam on a regular
00:38:01
basis
00:38:02
on an example well you're aware of the
00:38:04
truth but you're just
00:38:05
not oh you might you know on the amount
00:38:06
of time so as you know i've been a
00:38:08
guest speaker for 10 years now so when
00:38:10
the world is normal and sane
00:38:13
you know i would um go off four days a
00:38:15
week
00:38:16
anywhere in the world so twice a week i
00:38:18
was abroad
00:38:19
and i'd speak to a few hundred people
00:38:21
i'd stand on stage i'd do an hour's talk
00:38:23
about
00:38:23
performance psychology and i'd come off
00:38:26
um
00:38:26
so i did that for ten years four times a
00:38:28
week and um but
00:38:30
um but i'd often come off and think
00:38:34
cause any good i say to the stake at
00:38:36
stake i would come up to me and say that
00:38:38
you know
00:38:38
that was really brilliant this is
00:38:39
exactly what we're after it's perfect
00:38:41
are you happy
00:38:42
oh yeah it's exactly what we're after
00:38:43
but you sort of covered the brief yeah
00:38:45
yes yeah absolutely it's exactly what it
00:38:46
was
00:38:48
send me an email let me know the
00:38:49
feedback and then
00:38:52
you get you know maybe even get some
00:38:53
feedback which is like you know you get
00:38:55
sort of scored out of five
00:38:56
it's almost like 97 percent five and um
00:38:59
i'd be scouring for the threes and twos
00:39:01
and think that you know there's like you
00:39:02
know 500 people there's that sort of
00:39:04
five people who put two
00:39:05
and so it was all right i just think
00:39:07
[ __ ]
00:39:09
but um but uh but i'd be wondering why
00:39:12
what did i do wrong what was real and
00:39:13
it's
00:39:14
unbelievable it's unbelievable the
00:39:15
amount of times i've sat in front of an
00:39:16
audience
00:39:17
and um and you know maybe 300 people
00:39:19
there there's someone with their arms
00:39:21
folded like that
00:39:22
and they're just like i think he doesn't
00:39:24
look engaged
00:39:25
you know and so out of friend of people
00:39:27
there's something there's most people
00:39:28
writing down things or nodding or
00:39:29
smiling or whatever it is
00:39:31
it's amazing how many times i can pick
00:39:33
out the one person who doesn't seem to
00:39:34
be enjoying
00:39:35
it so i think i think look i think it's
00:39:38
a couple of things
00:39:38
that i'm i'm always prone to you know we
00:39:41
actually
00:39:42
we wait quite highly stuff which we
00:39:44
think we're not doing well
00:39:46
you know we're trying to fix what's not
00:39:47
right about us what's not good you know
00:39:49
you know what we should have done and um
00:39:51
what we could be doing um i think i'm
00:39:53
still prone to that
00:39:54
rather than sort of enjoying the you
00:39:56
know the success that i've had really
00:39:57
what about things in your personal life
00:39:59
in terms of like
00:40:00
like you know health and like being a
00:40:03
parent
00:40:04
and like yeah pursuing goals and
00:40:07
ambitions you have in your personal life
00:40:09
what about those things
00:40:10
yeah i think that you know um
00:40:12
health-wise i need to take some advice
00:40:13
from you
00:40:14
we should i'll lie down and tell you all
00:40:15
about it i keep i keep meaning to
00:40:18
i keep meaning to run more and get to
00:40:20
the gym more there's always an excuse
00:40:22
um so you know i'm the most demotivated
00:40:25
motivational spooky
00:40:28
life's pretty [ __ ] and um so um
00:40:31
so yeah so i think i need to work out
00:40:33
more um i'll tell you the one thing that
00:40:35
gets me
00:40:35
and um i've got three children i got
00:40:37
sort of um four four-year-old twin girls
00:40:39
and a nine-year-old boy um is that you
00:40:42
know as a psychologist
00:40:44
and um yeah i'm pretty good at i've sat
00:40:46
in front of some sort of pretty
00:40:47
difficult clients
00:40:48
some really difficult clients you know
00:40:50
some people at the absolute top of their
00:40:51
profession
00:40:52
and um and they're they're [ __ ]
00:40:54
screwed in their thinking
00:40:56
and um and you know and you know i've
00:40:58
dealt with it
00:40:59
four-year-olds and nine-year-olds just
00:41:01
do me i can't you know i just
00:41:03
you try and apply psychology to it it
00:41:04
doesn't work so the level of frustration
00:41:07
that comes about in regard to being a
00:41:08
parent again this is my point that you
00:41:10
know all human beings
00:41:11
and um so um so you know you try
00:41:14
you try all the influence persuasion and
00:41:16
negotiation
00:41:18
and all the psychology and all the
00:41:19
techniques that you know that um it
00:41:21
doesn't work on four-year-olds
00:41:22
it doesn't work it's so funny the guest
00:41:24
that was here yesterday joe wicks are
00:41:25
the exact same thing he said i'm like a
00:41:27
you know calm guy but he just said you
00:41:28
know
00:41:28
when i my daughter i'll tell her that i
00:41:30
want to just put her down so i can clean
00:41:32
the counter and she just won't be
00:41:33
the irrationality of it is what it does
00:41:35
yeah and um so
00:41:37
you know you know it's funny because um
00:41:41
i've had some really good sports people
00:41:42
sit in front of me and say
00:41:44
you know give me you know you've got
00:41:45
something that makes me better then
00:41:47
and then you give them something and
00:41:49
they go away they come back a week later
00:41:51
and they say i tried that it doesn't
00:41:52
work have you got anything else it's a
00:41:54
bit like going to the gym
00:41:55
working out for half an hour going home
00:41:57
looking in the mirror and says yo let's
00:41:58
crap that
00:41:59
i don't like the gym film refrigerator
00:42:02
um and so
00:42:03
and this is my point that that you know
00:42:05
it's not about tools gimmicks and hints
00:42:07
it's about striving every day to be
00:42:09
better than what you were yesterday
00:42:12
um i worked with a golfer it was very
00:42:14
very good
00:42:15
really good um and you know literally
00:42:18
top 10 in the world
00:42:19
it's about a whole year and uh with just
00:42:23
a piece of paper in his pocket
00:42:24
and he used to play with his piece of
00:42:25
paper in his pocket um and it used to
00:42:27
just say
00:42:28
um what did i enjoy today and what did i
00:42:30
learn today
00:42:31
2 questions on it and then in the
00:42:33
evening he just answered those questions
00:42:35
so that whole year forget the numbers
00:42:36
i'm not going to look at numbers i'm
00:42:38
just going to answer this question
00:42:39
so i've had a good day i've had a bad
00:42:41
day doesn't make any difference i'll
00:42:42
just answer that question
00:42:44
these questions what did i enjoy today
00:42:45
and what did i learn today had the best
00:42:47
year we ever had and i'm just answering
00:42:48
those questions
00:42:50
yeah and in a way there almost needs to
00:42:51
be more simplicity to not using tools
00:42:54
and techniques not to try and apply
00:42:55
psychology to a four-year-old you know
00:42:58
but to just try and consistently enjoy
00:43:00
and learn on a daily basis
00:43:02
so i guess in regard to like you know
00:43:04
yeah i'm still prone to say
00:43:06
god i need to get running okay i've been
00:43:09
drinking all week i need to do some
00:43:10
exercise at the weekend
00:43:12
um and you know again it's falling into
00:43:15
the trap of the
00:43:16
i've been at the mercy of the shoulds
00:43:18
and musks rather than
00:43:20
thinking about at um you know what am i
00:43:22
enjoying what am i learning
00:43:24
what surprised me this week um
00:43:27
you know where am i experimenting and
00:43:29
what have i discovered you know this
00:43:30
week about myself and then once we start
00:43:32
to talk like that
00:43:33
maybe we can so i guess apply more
00:43:35
consistent thinking
00:43:37
and therefore change our doing so you
00:43:39
want to run let's use that as an example
00:43:41
yeah i need to run more definitely i
00:43:42
need to run more why do you need to run
00:43:44
more
00:43:44
and um do you know because i want to
00:43:46
improve my heart and lung health i think
00:43:48
i think i've got tonight it's all right
00:43:49
for you because you're young and fit and
00:43:51
um
00:43:52
but um but i think i've got to an age
00:43:54
now where i realized there's more of an
00:43:55
importance on
00:43:56
exercise so you know before i could just
00:43:59
i'll just do it anyway you know
00:44:00
pick up running every now and then i'll
00:44:02
be able to run i go to the gym every now
00:44:03
and then i'll
00:44:04
have a great time at the gym for a
00:44:05
couple of weeks and then i'll skip it
00:44:07
um yeah but now you know but now it's
00:44:10
it's different a term you know now i
00:44:11
sort of feel
00:44:12
at them as though you know i could be
00:44:14
fitter it should be i think this year
00:44:15
has also
00:44:16
sort of illuminated that for everybody
00:44:17
at the importance of health i think
00:44:19
it's made us all well it has for me made
00:44:20
me think about my health a lot more
00:44:22
no not for the vain reasons that you
00:44:25
know young guy would think about their
00:44:26
health because they're trying to
00:44:27
trying to get laid or something but
00:44:28
because you know i i want to live longer
00:44:31
and i want to have more memories than
00:44:32
those kind of things
00:44:33
did you know near ielts he wrote a book
00:44:34
called indistractible i know yeah i'm
00:44:36
not familiar with i've read it
00:44:38
you're probably familiar with the book
00:44:39
yeah i know the name but i am yeah he
00:44:41
said this quote to me which really
00:44:42
changed my life and i think about it all
00:44:44
the time okay when i find myself
00:44:45
procrastinating from doing something or
00:44:47
whatever he said that typically we think
00:44:49
we're humans that are seeking
00:44:50
pleasure but we're actually living in
00:44:53
the avoidance of discomfort
00:44:55
and when i think about the things that i
00:44:56
procrastinate against or whether you
00:44:58
know we're at six
00:44:58
seven o'clock in the evening you think i
00:45:00
can't be bothered to go whatever it does
00:45:02
ring true to me that i'm actually
00:45:04
avoiding some kind of psychological
00:45:05
discomfort
00:45:06
yes and so i now whenever i feel myself
00:45:09
like this weekend i had
00:45:10
had this big project to do i also had
00:45:11
this talk that i had to do
00:45:13
um for my manager dom and i found myself
00:45:16
like
00:45:16
and then i've got the book my book which
00:45:18
i had to do go through the whole book
00:45:19
from start to finish in a day
00:45:23
and i'm like low-key finding myself oh
00:45:25
just clean the countertop because that's
00:45:27
important
00:45:29
and i said i stopped myself i thought
00:45:30
you're avoiding the discomfort
00:45:32
associated with
00:45:33
sitting down for nine hours until six am
00:45:35
in the morning
00:45:36
and doing the book and it wasn't until i
00:45:38
realized why
00:45:39
you know what i started that term has
00:45:42
been like this flashlight that i shine
00:45:44
in like the corner of the room we're
00:45:46
after hiding the you know the thing that
00:45:47
i don't want to do now
00:45:49
so i wondered if it was you know for
00:45:50
some in in regards to your running
00:45:52
if it's in some respects similar like
00:45:54
you're avoiding some kind of discomfort
00:45:55
where you think
00:45:56
i'd rather play i'm convinced of it
00:45:58
because running such an unpleasant
00:45:59
experience
00:46:00
for me it's a really good example i
00:46:02
can't stand it
00:46:04
so but you're absolutely right that uh
00:46:07
that
00:46:07
you know i totally agree with you that
00:46:09
you know we we do sort of go about our
00:46:11
lives trying to seek
00:46:13
moving out of that space of you know of
00:46:15
of being uncomfortable
00:46:16
this is why we don't have conflict
00:46:18
conversations in the workplace this is
00:46:20
why we don't challenge our own thinking
00:46:21
this is why we don't like change and uh
00:46:24
you know we like we like to operate from
00:46:25
a comfort zone that's what we do
00:46:27
um so yeah no i agree with you i think i
00:46:29
think because running is such an
00:46:30
unpleasant experience for me that's
00:46:32
absolutely awful um i'm probably
00:46:34
avoiding it
00:46:35
because i just don't want the experience
00:46:37
whereas riding a bike
00:46:39
isn't so bad for me um so so yeah so
00:46:42
maybe therefore but
00:46:43
um instead of sat there at four five
00:46:45
o'clock thinking god i need to go
00:46:47
running in an hour
00:46:48
and i really don't want to i'll go
00:46:50
tomorrow
00:46:51
maybe maybe what i should be saying is i
00:46:53
need to go running no you don't um
00:46:56
why don't you ride the bike why didn't
00:46:58
you yeah why don't you just have stairs
00:47:00
um okay well i'll have a go on it after
00:47:03
this
00:47:04
but um we should have done a whole
00:47:06
interview on that i'm gonna kill two
00:47:08
birds with one stone
00:47:09
i hate running as well it's like i hate
00:47:11
the impact on my knees yeah just
00:47:12
i don't want to be outside yeah that'll
00:47:14
be swerving past people so
00:47:16
i got the peloton um it's low resistance
00:47:18
it's
00:47:19
fun super engaging and gamified because
00:47:21
you see the data you see everyone in the
00:47:23
world and where they're placing you see
00:47:24
jenny
00:47:25
55 in north carolina's beating you yeah
00:47:27
make me feel bad
00:47:30
i hate jenny forever that just makes me
00:47:33
realize how unfit i am and how much i
00:47:35
hate other people who are fitter than me
00:47:36
but i mean interestingly it proves how
00:47:38
fit you are because you said you don't
00:47:39
like running because of your knees and
00:47:41
swerving past people
00:47:42
i don't like running because i can't
00:47:43
breathe so you're already winning
00:47:47
chicken egg that'll be cured if you
00:47:50
start running
00:47:50
um but but on that point of um of
00:47:54
psychological discomfort um
00:47:56
how does somebody in your opinion
00:48:01
face a challenge that they know is
00:48:03
uncomfortable like
00:48:04
you know to be honest i don't i don't
00:48:07
want to go to the gym or do all these
00:48:11
zoom calls all the time it's not like
00:48:12
you know i'm not getting comfort or in
00:48:15
pleasure out of doing
00:48:16
two hours zoom calls at the moment about
00:48:18
like you know biotech or whatever it is
00:48:21
the thing that i'm involved in
00:48:23
but i'm doing it and i wanted to know in
00:48:25
your case what what does it take someone
00:48:27
who like doesn't want to do something
00:48:30
because they know it's uncomfortable to
00:48:31
say do you know what [ __ ] it i'm gonna
00:48:34
do it today
00:48:35
yeah and is it does that go back to that
00:48:37
point of of having that like
00:48:38
long anchor purpose yeah i think it does
00:48:41
i mean
00:48:43
mohammed ali said i've i've hated every
00:48:45
moment in the gym but i did it so i
00:48:46
could live the rest of my life
00:48:48
like a champion yeah and it's in in a
00:48:50
way it's true isn't it that
00:48:51
that you know there are there are
00:48:53
component parts
00:48:54
to success um and i think the
00:48:57
two of the interesting one is and the
00:49:00
one that most people probably relate to
00:49:02
is failure
00:49:03
so people don't like to experience
00:49:05
failure but you know for example
00:49:07
failure is part payment towards success
00:49:10
so the price of success
00:49:11
is always paid in full and in advance
00:49:14
the price of success is always paid in
00:49:16
full and in advance you can't be
00:49:18
successful and you start making mistakes
00:49:19
you can't be successful and start having
00:49:21
your two hours zoom calls but uh you
00:49:23
know in a way you
00:49:24
need to fail we need to have these awful
00:49:26
conversations we need to kiss lots of
00:49:28
frogs we need to
00:49:29
you know do deals which don't work but i
00:49:31
mean you do all these things to enable
00:49:32
you to be super successful
00:49:34
so um there's lots of things that um
00:49:37
again it comes back to reframing if we
00:49:38
see it as part and parcel a stepping
00:49:40
stone towards a greater advancement
00:49:42
they're probably more likely to do it
00:49:44
you know if you see failure as something
00:49:46
which is
00:49:47
we're trying to avoid and it's just
00:49:48
awful and you know and it screams to me
00:49:51
that i'm useless
00:49:52
um then we're probably going to stay
00:49:54
within a comfort zone you know
00:49:55
if we embrace failure then we see it as
00:49:57
part payment towards success
00:49:59
until we see it as something which is um
00:50:01
an active contribution a stepping stone
00:50:04
towards
00:50:04
you know being better maybe we're more
00:50:06
likely to indulge in it and not have the
00:50:08
discomfort
00:50:09
that we associate with it so now i feel
00:50:12
that
00:50:13
um it is always good to think about you
00:50:15
know what you think about that end goal
00:50:17
have that purpose that
00:50:18
vision the mission you know what you're
00:50:20
seeking to achieve and create
00:50:22
um and then think about what those
00:50:24
building blocks look like
00:50:25
because you know all great achievements
00:50:27
are the result of many small
00:50:28
achievements
00:50:29
um you know you had joe wicks here
00:50:31
yesterday he wasn't super successful
00:50:33
overnight
00:50:34
and he probably kissed a lot of frogs
00:50:36
i'm sure you talked about it you know
00:50:38
um know his business and korean personal
00:50:41
life went in all sorts of different
00:50:42
directions like ours
00:50:44
at um and you know it's not necessarily
00:50:47
as we said earlier it's not necessarily
00:50:49
what what happens it's
00:50:51
it's our interpretation of what's
00:50:52
happening which will then enable us to
00:50:54
use that as feedback towards something
00:50:56
better
00:50:57
and do you find with a lot of the high
00:50:58
performance people you've worked with
00:51:00
that their childhood is a definitive
00:51:05
reason as to why they are the way they
00:51:08
are today i'm going to try and
00:51:09
articulate this if i can
00:51:11
but i've i from speaking to guests on
00:51:12
this podcast and also from a bit of
00:51:14
introspection to be honest
00:51:16
i tend to think a lot of people that
00:51:18
have
00:51:19
extraordinary outcomes have often had
00:51:23
some kind of extraordinary early
00:51:26
experience and i'll give you a couple of
00:51:28
examples
00:51:29
the a lot of the billionaires that i
00:51:30
know are really really successful people
00:51:32
that i know
00:51:33
um cite their father's disapproval
00:51:37
as the reason why they've always had a
00:51:38
chip on their shoulder and they've
00:51:40
always strived
00:51:41
obsessively to be enough right because
00:51:44
their father told them they weren't
00:51:45
enough
00:51:46
yeah um have you seen that in successful
00:51:48
people that there's the
00:51:50
the thing that makes them just a bit
00:51:52
[ __ ] weird
00:51:53
is often a you know i think one
00:51:56
particular
00:51:57
instance with a friend of mine a comment
00:51:59
their mother made when they were four
00:52:00
that they just can't shake
00:52:01
yeah yeah yeah yeah i mean i i'm not a
00:52:04
psychiatrist so i don't delve into
00:52:07
backgrounds in the way that maybe
00:52:08
someone involved in psychiatry would
00:52:10
yes as a performance coach i tend to
00:52:12
work with how people are now
00:52:13
basically and um tell me about what
00:52:15
you're thinking and doing what you're
00:52:16
trying to achieve
00:52:18
and more so than to try and deconstruct
00:52:20
you know or analyze
00:52:22
some of the you know the earlier
00:52:23
experiences um so that's not my thing
00:52:26
having said that though you're
00:52:27
absolutely right there seems to be some
00:52:29
sort of correlation between
00:52:31
extreme experiences and then how people
00:52:33
interpret or translate them
00:52:35
and in fact you know as you're talking i
00:52:36
was trying to think of the book i can't
00:52:37
think of a book i wish i
00:52:39
could now and they talk about in this
00:52:41
book the fact that so many super
00:52:43
successful people
00:52:44
politicians actors um business people
00:52:48
lost parents when they were young and
00:52:50
there's a
00:52:51
direct correlation believe it or not
00:52:52
it's a direct correlation between
00:52:55
people losing parents when they were
00:52:56
young and then becoming super performers
00:52:59
be incredibly successful
00:53:00
um and the psychology behind it was that
00:53:02
you learn independence
00:53:04
and um it's almost easy if you've got
00:53:06
these loving fabulous parents who
00:53:08
you know hopefully you know many people
00:53:10
have got um
00:53:11
you're not as independent you know
00:53:13
whereas you know if you lose a parent
00:53:14
young you
00:53:15
end up sort of doing things for yourself
00:53:17
a little bit earlier
00:53:19
and so maybe that going back to that
00:53:20
responsibility the ownership piece and
00:53:22
i'm having to sort yourself out
00:53:24
and um you know means that people learn
00:53:26
some of the skills which enable their
00:53:28
talent
00:53:28
to then be used differently in the
00:53:30
future but there is a direct correlation
00:53:32
believe it or not i wish i could tell
00:53:33
it's like
00:53:34
the real psychology in the actual
00:53:35
article in the actual piece in the book
00:53:38
um but you just reminded me when you're
00:53:39
talking about it so i do think that some
00:53:42
people do have these extreme experiences
00:53:44
and i think that um it's almost easier
00:53:47
to
00:53:47
get to know ourselves and get to think
00:53:50
about life
00:53:51
and contextualize things um you know if
00:53:54
we're experiencing things which are
00:53:56
outside of our
00:53:57
i guess our normal field of vision i i
00:54:00
resonate a lot with that i um
00:54:02
you said you know lose a parent but the
00:54:04
reason i resonated with that is because
00:54:06
i've said multiple times on this podcast
00:54:07
again
00:54:08
um that when people have asked me why
00:54:10
why i was successful i i cite that when
00:54:13
i was younger my parents weren't ever in
00:54:14
the house
00:54:15
and that made meant that i had to find a
00:54:18
way to make money to feed myself or
00:54:20
you know my mum was never in the house
00:54:21
when i went to bed and she was never
00:54:22
there when i woke up because she was
00:54:23
just
00:54:24
she slept at her shop sometimes my dad
00:54:25
worked in london for six days a week
00:54:27
which was four hours away and i and it
00:54:30
was only
00:54:30
of the four of us in our my family the
00:54:32
four siblings
00:54:34
that wasn't the case for my older
00:54:35
siblings when they were
00:54:37
younger or when they were my age my mom
00:54:39
and dad were in the house every day
00:54:40
doing date nights
00:54:41
together and then when i grew up by the
00:54:43
age of 10 i could leave the house for
00:54:44
three days or two days
00:54:46
and they wouldn't actually know that i'd
00:54:47
gone and so that meant that i became
00:54:50
like this sort of self-autonomous kid at
00:54:51
like
00:54:52
12 13 14 50. and then started businesses
00:54:54
at 14 and then you know
00:54:55
went off but you could have gone the
00:54:56
other way as well couldn't you oh
00:54:59
you know with 100 you know with that
00:55:01
level of freedom and autonomy
00:55:03
but not the maturity and you know to
00:55:05
deal with that freedom
00:55:06
um my friend my best friend said to you
00:55:08
and i'll never forget where i stood when
00:55:10
he said it in this takeaway shop he said
00:55:11
stephen
00:55:12
you're either going to be a criminal or
00:55:14
a millionaire
00:55:15
and it was because i had that my
00:55:18
independence created this connection
00:55:19
where
00:55:20
i knew that my outcomes were going to be
00:55:22
a direct result
00:55:23
of my behavior i always think of like
00:55:25
school dinners as the perfect example
00:55:28
for a lot of my childhood maybe up until
00:55:30
the age of about nine my there was
00:55:31
always like two quid on the counter
00:55:33
which is like okay you take that to
00:55:34
school and then by ten the two quid
00:55:36
wasn't there anymore
00:55:36
yeah so it was like waking up in the
00:55:38
morning and being like how am i gonna
00:55:39
eat today i'd have to find a way so i'd
00:55:41
go and sell cigarettes
00:55:42
or you know i'd like i knew that there
00:55:44
were cigarettes in this this room
00:55:45
upstairs which my mum had got from
00:55:46
nigeria one one year
00:55:48
so i just went to school and i was just
00:55:50
shopping cigarettes or chewing gum and
00:55:51
it was that that connection i made super
00:55:53
early that
00:55:54
my outcomes are a direct and only
00:55:56
correlation of sort of
00:55:57
connected to my behavior um
00:56:00
so i resonate with that a lot and it
00:56:02
kind of explains the difference between
00:56:03
four kids that grew up in the same
00:56:04
household
00:56:05
and one the three of them went to
00:56:07
university llc cambridge whatever and
00:56:08
one of them dropped out of everything
00:56:09
got kicked out of school and became an
00:56:10
entrepreneur
00:56:12
it's true isn't it so it's not
00:56:14
necessarily the um
00:56:16
yeah the experience is how we translate
00:56:18
that experience and exactly how we
00:56:19
channel our feeling into something which
00:56:22
could be productive or destructive
00:56:24
you could have become a criminal and a
00:56:25
millionaire and got a job at this tory
00:56:26
government
00:56:28
you could be
00:56:36
yeah but the last thing i really wanted
00:56:38
to ask you about was um
00:56:40
you know this idea of distractions
00:56:42
social media is uh
00:56:43
made it incredibly easy to distract
00:56:45
ourselves and you see you know teams
00:56:47
becoming
00:56:48
much more distracted at work because of
00:56:50
all these screens and you know the
00:56:51
digitalization of the world and
00:56:53
individuals and
00:56:54
what are what's your thoughts on on why
00:56:56
we're so distracted and how to overcome
00:56:58
it
00:56:59
yeah um it's true that we are distracted
00:57:01
i think focus and concentration
00:57:03
have to be practiced so many things can
00:57:06
be improved
00:57:07
so um whether it's resilience whether
00:57:10
it's concentration
00:57:11
whether it's courage all these things
00:57:12
can be practiced so many think courage
00:57:14
for example i say courage is like a
00:57:16
muscle the more you exercise it the
00:57:18
stronger it gets
00:57:19
so it's possible to exercise all these
00:57:21
things and be better at them
00:57:22
and i think that um it's fine to be
00:57:24
distracted because it's actually quite
00:57:26
nice
00:57:26
to have different stimuli and different
00:57:28
um provocation
00:57:31
and so we just need to choose when it's
00:57:33
good to have that provocation
00:57:35
and change and when we need to
00:57:38
concentrate we need to practice both
00:57:40
now um uh here's the thing for you adam
00:57:43
is that
00:57:44
as human beings we don't multitask so
00:57:46
multitasking is a lie
00:57:48
so for all the um all the girls and all
00:57:50
the women watching this
00:57:52
and um oh listening to this um
00:57:55
i'm sorry to tell you it's not true you
00:57:57
don't multitask better than men
00:57:59
it's true amen it doesn't happen we're
00:58:02
both equally as bad now we're both
00:58:04
useless at it so what we do is we do
00:58:06
rapid switching
00:58:07
so we don't multitask we just want to
00:58:08
talk about exactly um this is why
00:58:10
actually
00:58:11
um i can't remember it was a couple of
00:58:12
years ago that the um
00:58:14
the blackberry network went down in abu
00:58:16
dhabi for a weekend from friday to
00:58:18
monday
00:58:19
had a 48 decrease in car accidents that
00:58:21
we get
00:58:22
really because as human beings we don't
00:58:24
multitask you don't
00:58:25
like check your text and drive well it
00:58:27
doesn't work
00:58:29
so um so i think that we are living in
00:58:31
an age where it's easy to be distracted
00:58:33
and some of these distractions are
00:58:35
incredibly useful um
00:58:37
we need to come back to greater
00:58:38
responsibility and choice
00:58:40
and um let's choose at home you know
00:58:42
when it's fine to do that and
00:58:43
it's fine not to be and um and practice
00:58:46
you know these levels of concentration
00:58:48
of focus that we may need for certain
00:58:49
tasks
00:58:50
but we may not for another so i quite
00:58:53
like
00:58:54
times when i can sit down and read a
00:58:56
book or absorb something or think about
00:58:58
something
00:58:58
and narrow my focus sometimes i quite
00:59:02
like
00:59:02
sort of tv being on music being on at um
00:59:05
phone next to me on the computer because
00:59:07
actually um i'm sometimes picking up on
00:59:09
certain things
00:59:10
which um for a level of creativity can
00:59:13
be quite useful and
00:59:14
a bit of provocation a bit of a bit of
00:59:17
changeability in my thinking because i
00:59:19
get distracted by something and come
00:59:21
back to it
00:59:22
i find that as well i find them for some
00:59:24
bizarre reason if i
00:59:26
if i go for a walk or if i go to the gym
00:59:29
uh inspiration floods into me but when
00:59:31
i'm stood sat in my office
00:59:33
trying to think of stuff it's yeah
00:59:34
almost impossible the shower is another
00:59:36
weird place where my ideas seem to
00:59:38
show up all at once and it's like i'm
00:59:40
not like this isn't hyperbole i'm not
00:59:42
exaggerating at all like if i
00:59:44
if i'm sat here and i'm trying to think
00:59:45
of something to write or whatever yeah
00:59:47
i go for a walk and sometimes i put my
00:59:49
my music in
00:59:51
it's like non-stop and i find that quite
00:59:54
you know
00:59:55
interesting yeah teams are often trying
00:59:57
to think of ideas and creativity and
01:00:00
if you say to people where do you have
01:00:01
your best ideas and have
01:00:03
asked people that question whatever your
01:00:04
best ideas do you know what they'll say
01:00:05
well i'm walking the dog
01:00:06
and when i'm in the shower just about to
01:00:08
fall off the sleep
01:00:10
um on the commute over breakfast uh you
01:00:14
know
01:00:14
um they'll they'll they'll come up with
01:00:16
all some recreational drugs they'll come
01:00:17
up with all sorts of stuff
01:00:19
but no one will ever say in a boardroom
01:00:22
with some mints on the table and a jug
01:00:23
of water
01:00:24
no one will ever say that but but where
01:00:26
do we where do we
01:00:28
um you know try and create ideas in the
01:00:30
business at all we get them around this
01:00:31
boardroom table
01:00:33
no one ever said don't get me wrong you
01:00:35
can't get your team in the shower with
01:00:36
you
01:00:36
maybe you've tried i don't know what
01:00:37
it's like around here maybe you've tried
01:00:38
i don't know yourself
01:00:40
better but um but yeah maybe
01:00:44
yeah maybe we can't do that but we've
01:00:45
got to find a way of trying to
01:00:47
you know uh create a more natural
01:00:49
environment for people to flourish
01:00:51
and i do say to you many organizations i
01:00:53
say to them that you know you're
01:00:54
too quick to train the people rather
01:00:56
than fix the environment
01:00:58
you know people say oh i need more
01:00:59
innovative people they don't um you know
01:01:01
we need to train them on innovation
01:01:03
no you don't let's try and create a
01:01:04
culture an environment where people
01:01:06
are free to express themselves the
01:01:09
problem we've got is that you know we're
01:01:10
so
01:01:10
we're so convergent in our thinking and
01:01:13
uh you know
01:01:14
we start off as divergent thinkers we
01:01:16
start off making really weird
01:01:17
connections
01:01:18
um i had a six-year-old once um asked me
01:01:21
what does the number nine smell like
01:01:23
amazing question i think that's probably
01:01:25
the best question i've ever been asked
01:01:27
well do you respect the interviewer
01:01:28
today i was going to say that but um but
01:01:30
you know what's the number nine smell
01:01:31
like it's a great question
01:01:33
um yeah was the last time you heard a
01:01:34
ceo ask that question they don't
01:01:37
um you know children ask these divergent
01:01:39
questions because they make the
01:01:40
connection between two things
01:01:41
usually unconnected um and then you go
01:01:44
to school and the school says
01:01:46
why are you asking that we're doing
01:01:47
numbers today just concentrate on the
01:01:48
numbers
01:01:49
um and then we go from divergent
01:01:51
thinkers to convergent thinkers
01:01:53
and our careers get better because of it
01:01:55
our businesses get better because of it
01:01:58
and making simple connections you know
01:01:59
margins down okay we need to do this you
01:02:01
know revenue's down okay we need to do
01:02:03
that
01:02:03
um but what do we need in today's
01:02:06
society in today's world
01:02:08
and um i think we need convergent
01:02:10
thinking i think we need to move back
01:02:12
and and get into that divergent space
01:02:14
again
01:02:15
and yeah who are the most successful
01:02:16
people you know at the moment and people
01:02:18
are making really weird connections
01:02:20
people who this is where uber and airbnb
01:02:21
and all these things come from
01:02:23
it's from people who are making a
01:02:25
connection between two things previously
01:02:26
unconnected because they're still
01:02:28
divergent
01:02:29
so let's try and create some
01:02:31
environments where
01:02:32
people are free to explore experiment
01:02:35
free to
01:02:36
break some of the rules and to talk
01:02:38
about things which are
01:02:39
um which are not easily put together and
01:02:42
i think that that's the best way in
01:02:43
which we can
01:02:44
see the opportunity and possibilities in
01:02:47
in this changing world in which we live
01:02:48
in
01:02:49
how do people find you what's the best
01:02:51
uh yeah i think i mean
01:02:52
uh twitter or linkedin really i don't
01:02:54
use anything i don't use facebook or
01:02:56
anything like that so um for your
01:02:57
website
01:02:58
so you're on my website into me people
01:03:00
contact me through my website but i used
01:03:02
uh i started using twitter again and but
01:03:04
linkedin is great for me
01:03:05
i can imagine there are about 30 000
01:03:07
people on linkedin and that's really
01:03:08
where
01:03:09
where i sort of communicate have you um
01:03:12
how do you find social media just out of
01:03:14
interest in terms of life
01:03:16
i'm a bit like an alcoholic who can't
01:03:17
get the top of the bottle
01:03:19
yeah i mean i mean i love the idea of it
01:03:22
but um you know i am you know i i think
01:03:24
oh god i should be doing more
01:03:26
um but um but i but i just don't
01:03:30
people say that you should if it's not
01:03:31
you should you should do yeah well
01:03:33
but you know what it's funny one of the
01:03:34
advices that i give people at the moment
01:03:36
if it ain't broke you should break it
01:03:38
because um you know we almost need to
01:03:40
give up what's allowing us to be
01:03:41
successful
01:03:42
to allow us to be successful and um you
01:03:45
know i know it's a counterintuitive
01:03:46
argument it makes perfect sense to be
01:03:48
honest i mean that's the
01:03:48
definition what innovation is right yeah
01:03:50
it's breaking the blueprint so
01:03:52
so i think that you know and again look
01:03:54
it's probably my running isn't it it's
01:03:55
one of those things which are
01:03:56
uncomfortable so i probably don't do it
01:03:58
so um so what i should do is is
01:04:01
try and find out more about you know
01:04:03
social media and then
01:04:04
i'll have a look at your social channels
01:04:05
after and obviously we've got a lot of
01:04:06
content from this so
01:04:07
we can send it to you in a way that will
01:04:09
do perform well if you post it so listen
01:04:11
thank you for your time
01:04:12
today thank you very very generous and
01:04:13
it's a really inspiring conversation
01:04:14
that's uh
01:04:15
i actually want to read it's one of the
01:04:16
few conversations where i'm like i
01:04:17
really need to re-listen to this again
01:04:19
and maybe with my notepad out and really
01:04:21
take notes because there's so many
01:04:23
ideas that are really really profound at
01:04:26
times that i'm like i'm trying to hold
01:04:28
on to and then
01:04:28
because you're because you're full of
01:04:30
them i'm i'm going back i'm thinking
01:04:32
you know what i mean because there's so
01:04:33
much intelligence condensed in such a
01:04:35
short period of time very kind
01:04:37
no i really mean that as well yeah
01:04:42
sometimes i have experts on that have
01:04:44
really well studied in their field
01:04:46
and the things you say as someone who's
01:04:48
ran a multinational business with 700
01:04:50
employees for the last 10 years of my
01:04:51
life
01:04:52
i'm like perfect sense and i i really
01:04:55
want to i could unpack all of those
01:04:56
individual topics more but yeah
01:04:58
thank you such a pleasure to have you
01:04:59
thank you thank you for inviting me
01:05:15
[Music]

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 70
    Most inspiring
  • 70
    Best performance
  • 60
    Most quotable
  • 60
    Best concept / idea

Episode Highlights

  • From Intention to Action
    Transforming ambition into achievement requires determination and execution.
    “There's a big difference between wishing and executing.”
    @ 02m 54s
    December 21, 2020
  • The Power of Purpose
    Purpose isn't a destination; it's a daily journey that drives success.
    “Purpose is never achieved, it's attained on a daily basis.”
    @ 06m 43s
    December 21, 2020
  • The Power of Strengths
    Understanding our strengths can lead to better outcomes than focusing on weaknesses.
    “Understanding our strengths is key to success.”
    @ 17m 45s
    December 21, 2020
  • The Importance of Attitude
    Attitude can outweigh intelligence in achieving high performance.
    “Attitude is more important than intelligence or facts.”
    @ 22m 56s
    December 21, 2020
  • Embracing Change
    Life requires continual adjustment to thrive in unpredictable circumstances.
    “Life is a game of continual adjustment.”
    @ 24m 12s
    December 21, 2020
  • Curiosity Over Creativity
    Curiosity drives innovation and learning more than creativity alone.
    “Curiosity is worth more than creativity.”
    @ 26m 24s
    December 21, 2020
  • The Power of a Dream
    People bought into the dream of putting a man on the moon, driven by high inspiration.
    “It was literally such a big goal that people bought into the dream.”
    @ 34m 23s
    December 21, 2020
  • Facing Discomfort
    Embracing discomfort is essential for growth and success, as highlighted by Muhammad Ali's quote.
    “I've hated every moment in the gym but I did it so I could live like a champion.”
    @ 48m 45s
    December 21, 2020
  • Embracing Failure
    Seeing failure as a stepping stone can lead to greater success.
    “If we embrace failure, we see it as part payment towards success.”
    @ 49m 55s
    December 21, 2020
  • The Impact of Early Experiences
    Extraordinary outcomes often stem from extraordinary early experiences.
    @ 51m 23s
    December 21, 2020
  • The Power of Courage
    Courage can be developed like a muscle through practice and experience.
    “Courage is like a muscle; the more you exercise it, the stronger it gets.”
    @ 57m 16s
    December 21, 2020
  • Distractions and Focus
    In a distracted world, practicing focus is essential for success.
    “We need to practice both distraction and concentration.”
    @ 57m 24s
    December 21, 2020

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Intention vs Action02:54
  • Daily Purpose06:43
  • Understanding Strengths17:45
  • Value of Curiosity26:24
  • Rubbish Speech33:43
  • Emotional Engagement34:58
  • Success and Failure49:03
  • Courage as a Muscle57:16

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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