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Growth Personal Development

Are You Aligning Your Training Goals with Your Business Goals? 

Note from Evan Hackel: Today I am pleased to share this article from my partner and colleague Cordell Riley, Founder and President of Tortal Training.

Are You Aligning Your Training Goals with Your Business Goals? 

Four Keys to Establish Congruency  

 

By Cordell Riley 

 

There are really two types of training. The first and most basic centers on teaching employees to improve their performance of required skills and tasks. The second type does that too, but produces far more transformational results, because it also teaches skills and behaviors that align with larger company initiatives and goals.  

A way to illustrate this point is to envision a golf caddy as a trainer. That caddy can walk the course and hand his golfer one club at a time and say, “This is the best club for this shot.” That might improve the golfer’s game. But what if the caddy added a higher level of information by giving perspective on the overall layout of the hole, the potential hazards in the path, and even a strategy for playing the entire course?  

Similar lessons apply in many settings. Do you want your son or daughter’s piano teacher to only teach the mechanics of pushing down a key, or to give an overview of a piece of music? If you are hiring a landscaper for your yard, do you want to discuss only one plant, or do you want to collaborate on an overall, transformational plan? 

Given choices like those, of course, you prefer the bigger picture. But how do you do that in planning your company’s training process? Here are four important steps to take.

Define and Keep Your Most Important Objectives in Mind

 Are you striving to create a company known for delivering superlative customer satisfaction? That is a great objective, but reaching it means defining specifics that can get you therewhat you would like your training to achieve.  

 For example, you could plan to train your phone reps to resolve 90% of all complaints during customers’ first callsOr you could focus on training those reps to deliver the kind of care that gets 90% of callers to report that they are “extremely satisfied” on post-call surveys. When you define goals, you can design training that achieves them.   

 Another way of stating this principle is, “begin with the end in mind.” That means understanding the bigger vision of what you would like your organization to become, then defining specific training steps that can get you there.  

 Break Down the Silo Walls

 Trainers are often brought into different company sectors and encouraged to stay in them. They might teach only skills for servicing or installing products, providing customer service, preparing food, or selling on the retail floor. But what if your trainers thought outside the silos and delivered valuable things that result in improvements across your entire organization?  

 One way to reach this objective is to initiate discussions between your training team and the people who create marketing and advertising, manage your supply chain, oversee your online presence, and more. The more disciplines you invite into the process, the more likely your training team will find ways to make the training process more encompassing and effective.  

 Don’t Create Training in a Vacuum

 Whether your training team works inhouse or you use an outside training development company, make sure to engage them in conversations regarding company collateral. This should include everything from company quarterly reports, relevant trade publications, news stories about your organization, press releases, and all other pertinent documents you can provide. Do all those materials suggest any untapped opportunities to align your training specifics with larger trends, goals and initiatives? 

Tie Your Training to Measurable Metrics 

It is essential to develop a set of clear metrics to measure before and after training. It is the only way to understand what your training has accomplished and how much closer you are to meeting your goals.  

Here are some suggestions for developing metrics that don’t just gather data, but reveal deeper progress: 

  • If your vision is to become a leader in customer service and retention, you can survey customers before and after your employees have gone through the training program. You should ask them about their overall satisfaction with their last purchase, the likelihood they will recommend you to other customers, and other factors.  

 

  • If you want to gain maximum value from a limitedtime offer and offer training to support that goal, your goal could be a certain percentage of sales improvement among employees who took the training.  Measure and report on those results after the training has been delivered. 

 

  • If you are implementing HR training in an effort to increase employee retention and become an “employer of choice” for job-seekers, you can measure retention rates before and after training and survey employees on metrics like, “I see a clear career path if I remain employed here” or, “I understand the criteria that my supervisor and company use to evaluate my performance and progress in the company.” 

 In Conclusion . . .  

If you ask a group of businesspeople to define what training is, chances are that most of them will say something like, “Training is a process that teaches people the skills they need to do their jobs better.” Of course, that is true. But if you then go on to ask a series of deeper questions like, “Wouldn’t you like your training to build a workforce that builds your brand . . . helps your company achieve its mission . . . and communicates what you stand for to the world?”, I believe that all those business people will enthusiastically reply, “Yes, we would!” 

As you launch new training initiatives or refine those you already have, I urge you to keep those larger issues in mind. The better you can align training with them, the more successful you can become.  

 About the Author 

 Cordell Riley is the founder and president of Tortal Training, a leading provider of training solutions in the franchise industry. Cordell is a 20-year franchise veteran and a Certified Franchise Executive. Before joining Tortal, Cordell was with Driven Brands in various Operations and Training roles with increasing levels of responsibility.  He currently serves on the Educational Foundation for the International Franchise Association. For more information on Cordell Riley, please visit www.Tortal.net 

 

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Best Practices Entrepreneurship Human Resources Management Negotiations Sales Skills Women In Business

“7 Reasons To Be Careful Negotiating On Social Media” – Negotiation Tip of the Week

“Just because reasoning lost its battle, doesn’t mean you have to lose yours.” -Greg Williams, The Master Negotiator & Body Language Expert  (Click to Tweet)

Click here to get the book!

 

“7 Reasons To Be Careful Negotiating On Social Media”

 

People don’t realize; they’re always negotiating.

Some people consider negotiations to be a formal process. In reality, you’re always negotiating, even when you’re on social media. Most people don’t recognize that fact. And social media can have a profound impact on negotiations and your life. That’s why you should be careful about the content you place on social media and its effects on your future negotiation sessions.

Negotiating on social media can stretch across any platform, and it can encompass different media (e.g., tweets, videos). Observe the following seven reasons why you should be careful negotiating on social media, especially if a video component is absent. And consider how your negotiation efforts become challenged as the result of dealing on social media.

Click here to continue!

Remember, you’re always negotiating!

 

Listen to Greg’s podcast at https://c-suitenetwork.com/radio/shows/greg-williams-the-master-negotiator-and-body-language-expert-podcast/

 

After reading this article, what are you thinking? I’d like to know. Reach me at Greg@TheMasterNegotiator.com

 

To receive Greg’s free “Negotiation Tip of the Week” and the “Negotiation Insight,” click here https://themasternegotiator.com/greg-williams/

 

#SocialMedia #negotiations #BodyLanguageSecrets #csuitenetwork #thoughtcouncil #Negotiator #NegotiatingWithABully #Bodylanguage #readingbodylanguage #Negotiation #NegotiationStrategies #NegotiationProcess #NegotiationSkillsTraining #NegotiationExamples #NegotiationTypes #negotiationPsychology #HowToNegotiateBetter #ReadingBodyLanguage #BodyLanguage #Nonverbal #Negotiate #Business #SmallBusiness #Power #Perception #emotionalcontrol #relationships #BodyLanguageExpert #CSuite #TheMasterNegotiator #ControlEmotions #GregWilliams #success #Howtowinmore #self-improvement #howtodealwithdifficultpeople #Self-development #Control #Conversations #Howtocontrolanegotiation #howtobesuccessful #HowToImproveyourself

 

 

 

Categories
Growth News and Politics Personal Development

Dinosaurs are Running Free and Most are in DC

Just when we thought dinosaurs are extinct, we find that to be false. Theories point to the weather being too hot or too cold, or the sea level dropped, or a large asteroid was the cause of their demise some 65 million years ago. However, we are now aware that dinosaurs are alive, running free, and most of them are in DC.

There is a considerable chance you already guessed that I’m referring to the members of the Senate and the House of Representatives. However, you may not agree with my correlation. I’ll walk you through my thought process.

Dinosaurs Aren’t Just Large Reptiles

Ordinarily, the word dinosaur immediately prompts images of large reptiles like Tyrannosaurs, Sauropods, Triceratops, Raptors, etc. The definition of dinosaur is more than that.

There are two definitions of the word dinosaur, the second being; “something that is unwieldy in size, anachronistically outmoded, or unable to adapt to change.” That’s a mouthful so it requires a breakdown in order to fully understand what it states.

The term unwieldy is defined as; unmanageable, uncontrollable, burdensome. Apply that to our senators and representatives. Through their actions, they repeatedly show how they focus on their agenda without taking into account the needs of the people they represent. In their mind, they have a plan and will not listen to other reasoning.

Running Free

The definition of anachronistically is; “something or someone that is not in its correct historical or chronological time, especially a thing or person that belongs to an earlier time.” Members of the house and senate are not able to react quickly to current needs as they assert tactics to get their agendas pushed through.

An approval for say funding for COVID-19 medicine makes it to the floor. One party wants a school funding clause added to it in order for them to vote yes. This fictional example shows what needs to be addressed immediately is hampered by what was their quest before. Dinosaurs are more interested in their overall plan than react to current issues.

Senators and Representatives

This slight exaggeration reveals how both Congress and the House of Representatives are unmanageable, uncontrollable, focused on the past, and disconnected from the needs of the people. That is the definition of a dinosaur.

Most are in DC

Now you understand how I arrived at the statement that dinosaurs are running free and most of them are in DC, let’s check the statistics.  I created two charts; one is the current list of US Senators and the other is the current list of the House of Representatives from Wikipedia.org.

The lists contain the member’s name, the date they assumed the office, and the number of years they have served. I created these charts with only that information since this is not about who people like or dislike, democrats or republicans, not even what state they are from. This is in reference to the amount of time each member has been in office.

Is there a correlation between the amount of time served in an office to the creation of a dinosaur? The charts are shocking as to the number of years some members have served; 19 years, 29 years, 39 years, even 47 years.

The List Reveals Dinosaurs

I scrolled down the list and saw the extended length of service of some in office. This led me to deduce that dinosaurs are running free and most are in DC. Read down the chart and ask yourself, how far down the list do you get before becoming comfortable with the amount of time someone has been in office?

List of US Senators

List of US House of Representatives

Categories
Best Practices Growth Personal Development

TOP 9 TACTICS EXPERTS USE TO GROW A PODCAST AUDIENCE

 

  1. Promote your show on other podcasts

Reach out to be on other podcasts (especially in your network). Here’s how.

 

  1. Publish Expert Articles

Summarize the best of your interviews,  the top lessons you learned from ___(Insert Major Guest name here)

Publish the article and share on social media (remember to tag your guest) and enable your guest to share the episode to their audience

 

  1. Repurpose Your Amazing Content

Leverage services like Repurpose House to triple the exposure of the insights from the interviews you worked hard to produce

 

  1. Engage Your Audience

Create anticipation for future episodes by asking your social followers who and what they would like to hear from in the next episodes. Creating content your current audience wants will keep them coming back for more.

 

  1. Network, Network, and More Networking

Reach out to others in your community, business groups, and networking events. Tap into your available contacts, invite them to be on your show and cross promote to their audiences.

 

  1. Create Media Worthy Headlines

Help your content get discovered by creating media worth headlines that make people curious about. Don’t have a team of journalists to write a buzzworthy headline for your next episode? Don’t sweat it. Use headline generator tool like Headline Generator to create 700 newsworthy headlines with one simple click. Just add the subject of the interview. Best of all, it’s free.

 

  1. Increase Your Discoverability

Adults are consuming 11 hours of content every single day. Go to where they are searching for content by getting your podcasts on all the podcast directories and consider joining a podcast network. One of the big advantages of being on an established network is being able to leverage their domain authority to let Google’s algorithm know you exist.

 

  1. Create a Clear Brand Message:

Think of your podcast as starting a movement. What will your podcast solve your audience? Why should they tune in every week? Communicate about your podcast as the bridge to get your audience to where they ultimately want to go? If they don’t immediately know why your podcast is relevant to them, they wont engage.

 

  1. Don’t Neglect Your Call to Action!

Did you know that 96% of the overall most-dedicated podcast subscribers recommend the content to their family and friends? Passive listeners are not the ones who will create word of mouth. WOM comes from your subscribers. Make it easy for people to subscribe by telling them where to do so. While podcasting is widely available it’s still new to most people. Give them the action steps for where to subscribe for more amazing content.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

Categories
Best Practices Entrepreneurship Human Resources Management Negotiations Sales Skills Women In Business

“This Is How To Avoid Trickery In A Negotiation” – Negotiation Insight

Trickery can cause you to rewrite your history or be the source of your forestalled future. In a negotiation, it can be the difference between a sad and smiley face outcome. That’s the con that it perpetrates on one’s mind. And while playful trickery can be a delight, residing in the funhouse of your imagination, when someone delivers it with sinister intent, it can distort your reality as though you were viewing it through a mirror that deforms your mind. Good negotiators, like magicians, know how to ply the trades of trickery. They do so to get you thinking of one thing while keeping you engaged long enough with distractions, to extract deals that under other circumstances you’d never accept. And that’s why you need to be wary of the negotiator that uses trickery against you. He can make your otherwise positive outcomes disappear.

In the right environment, trickery fills you with delight. But in a negotiation, trickery can deliver you to fright. Learn how to distinguish the difference between the two, before trickery hurts you. bit.ly/3cYeVWG

Remember, you’re always negotiating!

 

Listen to Greg’s podcast at https://c-suitenetwork.com/radio/shows/greg-williams-the-master-negotiator-and-body-language-expert-podcast/

 

After reading this article, what are you thinking? I’d like to know. Reach me at Greg@TheMasterNegotiator.com

 

To receive Greg’s free “Negotiation Tip of the Week” and the “Negotiation Insight,” click here https://themasternegotiator.com/greg-williams/

 

 

Categories
Best Practices Growth Management Personal Development

The Mind-Body Connection: Body Before Mind

mind-body connection

As I think about the mind-body connection, I remember a friend of mine that told me about the advice he got when he first entered therapy. After filling out the usual forms, the doctor turned to him and asked, “How may I help you?” My friend replied, “I don’t know where to begin.” And the doctor wisely said, “Pull any loose thread—it’s all one knot.”

The mind-body connection started as a survival tool. And as his doctor suggested, you can use it today in your work. Your personal life. Your relationships. Not just to survive, but to thrive.

There is a real mind-body connection. And it happens in that order. Body sensations come first. Then our minds follow. Humans have had thousands of generations to get it right. Is that shadow in the bushes a threat? Think first and your late great-great-great-uncle probably became a saber-toothed tiger’s lunch. Our ancestors learned to “run first, think second.”

Our mind-body connection continues today. But we forget the body part of the relationship. Seven hours of classroom learning a day. Five days a week. Just 45 minutes of gym twice a week. No wonder we’ve forgotten there is a mind-body connection. So here is my tip: Are you confused, upset, distressed, annoyed, or any of a hundred different emotions? Tune into your body. What are you feeling and where are you feeling it?

Is there a knot in your stomach? Do not avoid the sensation. Focus on it. What does that knot look like? Where is it located? Is it deep in your gut—or closer to your heart? Talk to it. (Seriously.) Ask it why it is there. You will be surprised how often an answer will pop into your head.

Can you breathe into it? Take a deep breath and picture the air you inhale going right to the knot. Notice the knot loosen. And notice your mind calm down as well. Most of us who work in an office have spent our lives training our brains…and have ignored the role our bodies play in the process. If you start to tune into that body-mind connection, you will change the way you think and feel.

The Fight-or-Flight Response

You’ve heard many people talk about the “fight or flight response.” We are hard-wired to look for danger and threats. Anything that sets off an alarm in our lizard brain will trigger a physical reaction. And given the body-mind connection, it will trigger an emotional reaction, as well. Except for monks, none of us works in a monastery. We see the emotional reactions of people around us all the time. We probably notice our own emotional reactions, as well. Even if we don’t like to admit it.

There is nothing to be ashamed or afraid of. It is all part of being human. But the people we most admire have the ability to manage the emotions and physical sensations at the moment. We can frequently get lost in the flood of negativity that takes us down a nasty spiral. When we spiral, not only do we feel bad about ourselves, we also get further away from our goals.

One of my pleasures is working with top athletes on the mental side of their game. I love helping them defeat the hardest opponent they meet: Themselves. Time and again I have seen top athletes sabotage themselves with their own thoughts and doubts. But the very elite performers have one indispensable skill: They have learned how to let it go.

Do world-class athletes lose their tempers? All the time. In every sport. Whether it’s a tennis racquet smashed on the net or a baseball bat was thrown in disgust, we have all witnessed the best players lose their cool. But by the next point or their next at-bat, it’s as if it never happened. The best performers learn how to let it go in the moment.

Body-Mind-Spirit

There is more to the body-mind connection. It includes the spirit, as well. I do not mean that in a “California woo-woo” sense. I mean your mood. Your attitude. The way you relate to and treat other people. Think about people you know who are successful and accomplished. Think about people who are loved and respected by their peers and their teammates. One thing you will notice about them is they have nurtured all three aspects of their well-being. Their minds. Their bodies. And their moods (or spirit).

There is nothing new in what I’m telling you. It is interesting to note how different “experts” or “masters” come at the body-mind connection from different directions. Yoga instructors tell you to work on the body in order to heal the mind and the spirit. Some therapists will tell you to work on your mind to heal your body and your spirits. Religious leaders say caring for your spirit will heal your body and mind. If you go to a spiritual healer, chances are their practice focuses on one of those three doors to your entire well-being.

When you put it all together, I am talking about your personal road map to becoming the best person you can be. In every aspect of your life. You can be a better manager. You can be a better teammate—at work and at sports. And it can make you a better parent or spouse. The “it” is your own ability to manage your own body-mind connection. So what are you waiting for?

How is your mastery under pressure? Take the QUIZ to find out now…

Categories
Body Language Entrepreneurship Human Resources Management Negotiations Sales Skills Women In Business

“This Is How To Avoid Harmful Lies In A Negotiation” – Negotiation Tip of the Week

Lies can be insidious, harmful, and mentally debilitating. They’re also more mentally strangling when delivered from a supposed trusted source. Thus, the intent of a lie’s purpose determines its deceit threshold and the mental harm derived from it. A lie can extend calamitous damage into a negotiation, and unfortunately, it can do the same when you’re engaged in other aspects of your life. That’s why you must arm yourself with the insight needed to gauge when someone is lying, the reason they’re doing so, and what their intent is. By having that knowledge, you’ll be more capable of protecting yourself from those that openly lie to you. Even more important, you’ll be able to shield yourself from more harmful lies in your negotiation and other areas of your life. And here’s how to do that.

 

Click here to discover how you can better spot and stop liars from lying to you. 

 

Remember, you’re always negotiating!

 

Listen to Greg’s podcast at https://c-suitenetwork.com/radio/shows/greg-williams-the-master-negotiator-and-body-language-expert-podcast/

 

After reading this article, what are you thinking? I’d like to know. Reach me at Greg@TheMasterNegotiator.com

 

To receive Greg’s free “Negotiation Tip of the Week” and the “Negotiation Insight,” click here https://themasternegotiator.com/greg-williams/

 

 

#Lies #Liars #negotiations #BodyLanguageSecrets #csuitenetwork #thoughtcouncil #Negotiator #NegotiatingWithABully #Bodylanguage #readingbodylanguage #Negotiation #NegotiationStrategies #NegotiationProcess #NegotiationSkillsTraining #NegotiationExamples #NegotiationTypes #negotiationPsychology #HowToNegotiateBetter #ReadingBodyLanguage #BodyLanguage #Nonverbal #Negotiate #Business #SmallBusiness #Power #Perception #emotionalcontrol #relationships #BodyLanguageExpert #CSuite #TheMasterNegotiator #ControlEmotions #GregWilliams #success #Howtowinmore #self-improvement #howtodealwithdifficultpeople #Self-development #Control #Conversations #Howtocontrolanegotiation #howtobesuccessful #HowToImproveyourself

 

 

Categories
Marketing Personal Development Sales

How to gain Pricing Power

Taste the word “pricing power.” Does it not taste really good? Believe it or not, your pricing gives you power. But what is pricing power? Well, Warren Buffet summarized pricing power very well. He said:

“Pricing power is the most important criterion for investing in a business. Pricing power is the ability to increase prices and not lose sales volume.”

Pretty powerful stuff, don’t you think? When one of the world’s most famous investor and self-made multi-billionaire, says that pricing and, in particular, pricing power is essential, then these are words we need to take on board for our businesses. If Warren Buffet made his money (current net worth $82 billion) from zero, by finding and investing in companies who did not realize their pricing power, we should take notice, and executives should carefully examine whether in their company, in fact, does have pricing power for its products or services. As the consequence of having unrealized pricing power is the same as leaving money on the table, and in some cases, a lot of money is left on the table unnecessarily. 

Almost all companies, especially if they have been in business for some time, have products or services that have some kind of uniqueness, have some products or services that are entirely commodities, and some products that are in-between unique and a commodity. Many companies, for most of the time, have a pricing strategy that deals with these three categories of products or services in the same way. It can be that they use the same markup from cost, or that they try to find comparable products or services from the competition (hard to do when a product or service is unique!) and set the same price as them. This often leads to a situation where the unique products are underpriced, and the commodity products are overpriced, and the company ends up leaving money on the table for the unique products or services and do not have enough sales volume of the commodity products. This is not a good situation to find yourself in!

But the solution to this problem is often quite simple. The first steps are just to identify what products or services are unique, what products or services are commodities, and what products or services are somewhere in-between. Meaning they may have some aspects that are unique but may also have elements that are more of a commodity. 

Once this categorization is done, the time has come to implement a different pricing strategy for the various categories of products or services that you offer to your customers. 

Products or services that are unique have, by definition, tangible pricing power. Customers have no or few alternatives to the unique products or services in the marketplace. Therefore, discounting on those unique products and services should stop, or at least be reduced to the bare minimum. Discounting to close sales is merely unnecessary – albeit some salespeople want to give discounts because they feel good doing so and because the customer feels good receiving it. But it may not be necessary at all to close a deal for a unique product or service. 

Secondly, prices on those unique products or services should increase. The amount of the increase should preferably come from a measurement and model how price affects sales volume so that the price that yields the higher sales volume and the price that generates the highest revenue can be identified and then set for each unique product or service. It is also very important to determine at what price there are price walls (psychological price points where small changes in price cause substantial changes in sales volume). Armed with this information, companies can set the right price for these unique products or services. The “right” price may differ based on the company’s strategic goals – it may be set for maximum revenue, maximum profits, or for maximum sales volume. Or for a combination of all of these. 

A completely different strategy needs to be used when it comes to commodity products or services. Commodities are sold by price alone, (i.e., there is nothing that differentiates those products or services compared with the competition). Commodities are lacking any kind of pricing power, except for price and brand. 

The first thing that needs to happen when commodity products or services have been identified is for the company to ask itself a few measured questions. Such questions that need to be asked for each individual product or service, like the following:

Is this a product or service that generates any kind of contribution margin? If not, is this a product or service that we really need to sell? Does it add value to unique products or services? Do we have to sell this in order to deliver a complete product or service to our clients? Do our clients expect to buy this from us? 

If the answers to any of these questions are “no,” discontinue the product or service. It is a distraction for your company. If the answers to any of these questions are “yes,” there are two possible actions to take. First, work relentlessly taking cost out of the product or service – but be incredibly careful not to reduce the quality or the benefit it provides your customers. Secondly, strengthening the brand as a stronger brand will lead to a higher sales volume of commodity products or services. A strong brand leads to some level of pricing power, even for commodity products and services. Thus, a strong brand allows companies to increase the price even for those, even if it is just by a little. 

So, now we come to the strategy for those products or services that are classed as “in-between.” These are the products or services that are not truly unique but may have some unique aspects to them. You have the options to either make the product or service unique, or increase its “uniqueness.” At the same time, the questions mentioned earlier are highly applicable again to be answered. 

In closing – do I say that gaining pricing power is easy? Not at all. But what I’m saying is that executives need to be fully aware that there is something called “pricing power.” The fact that it exists, means that you can, relatively easily, put in place the process I suggest above. If your company has a dozen, or so of products or services, this is a quick process. If it has 10,000 SKUs and dozens of services, this, however, is a process that will take a long time, but the earlier you start, the earlier you will reap the benefits of gaining “pricing power” for your products or services. Since the market is in constant change, this is an ongoing process, not a “set and forget.” It is a process that needs to be regularly evaluated and re-evaluated according to the climate in the marketplace, sales volume targets, the competitions’ products and services, etc. 

So, now it is up to you, the reader, to gain pricing power. Be confident; you can do it!

Per Sjöfors
Founder
Sjöfors & Partners
www.sjofors.com

Categories
Growth Personal Development

Training Your Mind for Success

I recently interviewed Dr. Michael Gervais, a high-performance psychologist who works with everyone from Olympians to Fortune 100 CEOs. Dr. Gervais was a special guest during the C-Suite Network Digital Discussion titled, Power Thinking & Peak Performance: What Athletes, Musical Prodigies & CEOs Have in Common.

(Questions and answers edited for clarity)

Jeffrey Hayzlett: Let me ask this question. I can drink Scotch and get up in the morning. I can actually drink Scotch right before my podcast and probably do the podcast. I’m just joking about that. Nonetheless, I can still go perform. Isn’t it also about finding that talent that matches your skillset, or develop the skill set with the talent to do that you can really excel above other people?

Dr. Michael Gervais: There’s a tripwire here that we’re playing with, and that tripwire is how am I defining high performance and how am I defining success in life. If you happen to be 6’8″, 42″ vertical, big brain but you don’t like shooting the basketball. So, you’re built like Lebron James, but you don’t like it, at some point that’s going to become problematic. I think as a sense of fulfillment in life. I would suggest, based on my understanding of being around world-class world leaders. Is that the best of the best, there is a love for getting better in the thing that they’re trying to get better at. It’s an unlocking, and without unlocking we can become absorbed in the nuances of the craft, and that really is the path of mastery.

So, there are some nuances here to pay attention to. Do you just want to do what you’re good at, or do you want to have a sense of fulfillment and purpose in life?

If you can figure that out and sort that out and then layer on top of it, what you like getting better at there’s something really important. Now, that being said, if you want to be the number one best in the world. That’s an interesting framework because what I’ve noticed is that there’s two approaches: to be the best or to be your best. There is a cost and benefit analysis to do for both of them. And what I’m seeing right now across multiple sports and multiple domains of performance is that, again, the tip of the arrow or decoupling, what they do from who they are.

So many of us have swallowed this idea that I am what I do. Why else would your heart thump like it was a survival mechanism as you go on stage for a keynote? Why would that be? Because you have fused what you do with who you are, and the great fear in modern times is not the saber-tooth (tiger). It is what other people think of us.

We call that FOPO: fear of people’s opinions, as one of the great constructors for human potential.

I shared this mechanism with you because I think that we’ve got to sort out, how do you want to live your life? Do you want to be the best or your best and understand the costs and benefits of both? And if you can pull apart that doing from the being.

It’s a big deal now, and the best in the world are saying, “Okay, here’s what I’m trying to do. I’m trying to be more rather than do more. I’m trying to be more grounded, more authentic, more present, more creative, more expressive, more talented. Be more here.”

Now for other people, because no one does the extraordinary alone. Jeff, as you would recognize, it’s too complicated too big and then so from that state of being. They let the doing flow. From there, the output is tenfold.

 

Jeffrey Hayzlett: It sounds so much to being in mindfulness practice, or is it the same?   Is that part of this now?

Michael Gervais: Okay, so the short answer is yes. We’ve built a model that has five main pillars and I want to explain how mindfulness sits in there.

The first pillar is self-discovery. Get to know who you are. Investigate the darker areas of who you are and really understand what makes you work. What are you afraid of? What are your strengths and assets? What are your guiding principles?

I mean, that’s a really big question. What are the principles that will help guide your thoughts, your words, and your actions? And I’ll tell you what when people know that with great certainty. Nobody can take that away from you, that’s a very powerful place to be.

The second pillar is mental skills.

It’s a skill to know how to become confident. It’s a skill to know how to become calm and intense in the same moment. It’s a skill to know how to focus in the present moment.

Number three is psychological framework. We found that optimism is at the center of mental toughness.

So, optimism is the general belief that the future is going to work out. So, when you’re getting kicked in the stomach or punched in the mouth, metaphorically or in actuality, this fundamental belief that you know what it’s going to work. Let’s stay. Let’s keep going. Let’s grind. Let’s go. That is optimism.

But you know what? If left untrained, the brain will win, and the brain wants you to play it safe and small, and that is a psychological framework for Pessimism and cynicism.

And Jeff, I haven’t met a world leader in a discipline that is a pessimist. So, the opposite of that is optimism, and that’s a trainable skill.

The fourth is recovery, and the fifth is mindfulness.

The practice of mindfulness is the golden thread that runs through any psychological dynamic, progressive growth arc.

If you ask the best in the world. How important is the mental part of the game in any discipline, They nod and say, “yeah.” It’s a separator now. Mindfulness is the golden thread that runs through it.

If you’d like to hear the entire interview, listen here. Events like these is what make the C-Suite Network a trusted source to connect and collaborate with some of the best and brightest minds in business. Learn more about the C-Suite Network here.

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Entrepreneurship Personal Development

From Game Maker to Game Changer – What Pictionary Can Teach Us About Business

You’ve probably heard that there’s an inner artist inside us all. Whether that’s true or not is debatable.

I’m a businessman, not an artist, but I have been known to play a bit of Pictionary from time to time. Recently, Rob Angel, who invented Pictionary, joined me for an episode of All Business with Jeffrey Hayzlett. Even Rob admits he can’t draw, but he knows why millions are drawn to the game.

“The thing about Pictionary is the brand isn’t the drawing. It isn’t the name. The brand really is the excitement and the fun that you have,” he said. “If you can’t draw or you can’t sketch, it doesn’t matter. It’s like a rock concert. You know everybody’s engaged. You remember those moments.”

He added, “All your senses are alive, so drawing is not paramount to winning or playing, you’re having a good time.”

What impresses me the most about the game is the premise is very simple. At its core, it’s a piece of paper and a pencil. Things we all have lying around our house right now! However, none of us invented a product that sold more than 30 million units in 60 countries. So how did Rob do it?

In 1982, he graduated from college and moved in with some friends. One of the roommates introduced him to a game called Trades on Paper. At the time, board games like Trivial Pursuit and Risk were popular ways to pass the time. Rob and his friends would talk about making Trades on Paper into a board game, but the idea never got off the ground.

“I got inside my head,” he recalled. “I can’t do it. I’m just a waiter. All this negative self-talk and limiting beliefs totally took over for two years. I had to stop. I had to stop doing that.”

So, Rob and his buddies set off to make a game.

“We had no business being in the game business,” Rob said. “I didn’t have a plan. Why ruin a good business with a plan?”

While he couldn’t wrap his head around creating a business plan, Robert knew he had to come up with something. He went to the back yard, opened up the dictionary, and started building a word list.

“I opened (the dictionary) up and wrote down the first word that made sense, aardvark,” Rob said. “That’s why I called the whole thing, finding your aardvark. That changed everything. That changed my mindset from ‘I’m a waiter’ to ‘I’m a game inventor. It took two years to write aardvark. It took 30 seconds to write the second word. It just got faster. By the time I was done, I was a game inventor.”

Soon Rob had a yellow legal pad filled with more than 5,000 words. About half made it into the first version of Pictionary. By the way, Robert still has that legal pad today.

By now, they had come up with a straightforward business plan.

“Our business plan was written, I swear, on the back of a cocktail napkin that my partner took from under my beer,” Robert remembers. “He writes down: make games, sell games. That’s it.”

The original plan was to produce 1,000 games, by hand, at their apartment.

Robert said their ambition was matched by their inexperience in business. He doesn’t think they would have been as successful if they actually understood the game business.

“If we had known what we’re doing. I wouldn’t be sitting here,” Rob said. “We did everything by intuition, by gut. There was no internet to say, ‘How do you market a game?’ Without question, too much information would have stymied us because we just had to make choices. Right, wrong or indifferent and live with them.”

Rob said they came up with the name Pictionary right away, but there was a slight hiccup. There was a game already on the market called Fictionary, so their original trademark application was denied. Instead of getting lawyers involved, Robert called the trademark owners and got the OK to move ahead with Pictionary.

“Our intention was always to create a game that people would love. The graphics were important, the rules were important, but the ultimate deal of the game was to have fun,” Rob said.

With that in mind, Rob said the company began listening to consumers early on. It helped shape some of the game’s rules. Doing this allowed the founders to realize they didn’t know everything and stayed true to the game’s vision and purpose.

That lesson came in handy a few years later when game giant, Milton Bradley, came knocking on their door, offering millions for Pictionary’s rights. Rob said they turned it down after Milton Bradley refused to commit to keeping Pictionary’s rules, graphics, or packaging intact. Rob said he didn’t want his financial future tied up with Milton Bradley’s vision of Pictionary.

“We had no plan B. We were willing to go back to waiting tables and stay waiting tables than compromise our vision and our dream,” he recalls. “We stayed with it for 16 more years, we weren’t going to walk away…There was a lot of money to be made. I called (Pictionary) my 17-year start-up.”

Rob said they could walk away from the Milton Bradley deal and remain friends with his partners to this day because of one key thing: shared values.

“We all have integrity. That’s what’s important to me,” Rob said. “When the chips were down, and they were, we had each other’s back. We could trust each other.”

He added that they learned that lesson early on, during one of their first runs. A manufacturing glitch had Rob and his partners sorting through a half-million game cards. It tested his fear of failure.

“But guess what? When we were done, my two partners and I did it together. We bonded,” he remembered. “We understood we had each other’s back. It created this connection that we didn’t have because we had this shared enemy to fight against. That set up on the path of the next 15 years of this beautiful friendship and connection.”

In 2001, Rob and his crew found the perfect partner in toy giant Mattel. While everyone is happy with the deal, Rob did confess something during the interview.

“I would have gotten out earlier,” Rob said. “The last five years, it was a job. I’d lost my passion.”

Since selling Pictionary, Rob did non-profit work and wrote a book. Now he’s getting his creative juices flowing again, working on ideas for new games, a possible TV show, and other endeavors.

He said a lot about the game industry has changed since his buddies came up with Pictionary in the 1980s. For one, the barrier to enter the business is a lot lower because of the internet and crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter, but he does offer a word of warning.

“What’s your intention for this,” Rob said. “if their idea is, they’re going to make a lot of money, it’s really difficult because there’s so many (games). You better rethink that.”

I had a great time talking to Rob. So many business lessons to learn from and I felt like we just hit the tip of the iceberg.

We covered much more during our episode about the business of Pictionary and Rob’s advice to young entrepreneurs. You can listen to the full episode here.