4.7 • 870 Ratings
🗓️ 12 February 2015
⏱️ 25 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
The fact that soldiers came out of retirement to follow General McChrystal back into a very challenging war in Iraq speaks to his effectiveness as a leader. He knows a thing or two about motivation and how to bring out the best in people. McChrystal has adapted this gift to start up a consulting firm. His facility to raise expectations and adapt in the most trying of circumstances has served his clients well in the equally competitive corporate world. McChrystal posits that adaptability is the new efficiency.
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Lessons:
1. Performance usually rises and falls according to expectations.
2. What got you to the first success will not necessarily take you any further.
3. Adaptability is the new efficiency.
Panel Notes:
Joe Desena: Talk about a no-nonsense guy that can teach us about success. You don't just get handed four stars when you become a general. You earn them and he did. He is all business and has been getting the job done throughout all the modern wars we have been alive for. He knows what makes great warriors and what makes successful missions and organizations.
Col. Nye: Grit, success, self discipline can be taught. Surrounding yourself with exceptional people rubs off. Organizations and people must constantly set new standards and goals. Great organizational stress. Raise the bar at every chance but the bar has to be achievable. EQ is the ability to look long term. Adaptability is the new efficiency.
Sefra Alexandra: “Leaders can let you fail and yet not let you be a failure- I came to believe that a leader isn’t good because they’re right; they’re good because they’re willing to learn and to trust.”
From General Stanley McChrystal’s 2011 TED Talk, “Listen, learn… then lead”
General McChrystal imparted the words of wisdom to Joe that, "the first thing you should do each morning is make your bed, so you have already accomplished something when your day starts." My bed has been made first thing every morning since. Thank you gentleman.
Johnny Waite: This guy is so impressive! Incredibly intelligent and compassionate. He gives some very clear advice that anyone can follow to achieve higher level of success and, just as importantly, how to help others succeed!
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0:00.0 | You're listening to SpartanUp Podcast.com where we study success and everything required to create it. |
0:05.7 | We interview people from all over the world that are successful, no matter how they define it. We are here Spartan up the podcast. |
0:17.0 | Are you doing it? |
0:20.0 | So I'm going to go. |
0:21.0 | Go run, run, run. |
0:22.0 | We've got Johnny, Dr run run. We've got Johnny. |
0:24.0 | We've got Colonel Nye. |
0:26.0 | We've got um... |
0:28.0 | Sephra the... |
0:30.0 | We will start over. |
0:32.0 | That's hilarious. We will start over. That's hilarious too. Okay cool. |
0:34.0 | Cool. Hey, we're here in Pittsfield, Vermont in the barn. It's nice and |
0:38.8 | toast to you actually. It was freezing cold early. I should get my jacket off |
0:40.9 | soon. But I'm standing beside Colonel Nye. Great to have you here. We've got |
0:44.4 | Joe DeSena, needs no introduction here at Spartan. And Sephra, who is our re-wilding expert. We were working earlier on what the best term |
0:51.0 | for you is, I really like that and it works. |
0:52.6 | I like that. |
0:53.6 | And they call me Dr. Johnny. |
0:55.1 | I'm a doctor in quotations. |
0:57.3 | It's really just that I have an ability to help people sort out situations and problems |
1:01.7 | and Joe's termed me the doctor which I've always |
1:03.9 | appreciated. But we're now going to go and meet somebody who had to earn his |
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