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The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

348: Simon Sinek - Why Consistency Beats Intensity (Playing The Infinite Game)

The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

Ryan Hawk

Careers, Management, Business

4.81.3K Ratings

🗓️ 20 January 2020

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

Text LEARNERS to 44222

Full show notes can be found at www.LearningLeader.com

Episode #348: Simon Sinek - Why Consistency Beats Intensity (Playing The Infinite Game)

Notes:

  • Leaders who sustain excellence:
    • Humility - They don't believe their own hype.
    • Their power is accumulated through helping others.
    • "I'm fully aware I'm the same idiot I was back then."
  • "Vision is like an iceberg. The great leaders can see what's beneath the surface."
    • "I never look at what I've done, I look at what I can do."
    • "I tend to be very future focused."
  • "People called me the 'why' guy... For my tastes, it's about new ideas, building on ideas."
    • "We all need to find a vision."
      • People should practice telling stories about real people, learn how to use metaphors
  • Simon described the difference between the messaging at Apple vs. Microsoft
    • Microsoft (during the Steve Ballmer days) were focused on their competition
    • Apple was focused on helping teachers and designing beautiful products
    • Stop thinking of others as competitors... Instead find worthy rivals
  • In the late 1970's Milton Friedman said business should maximize profits for shareholders. For some reason, this idea was adopted and it became the norm. it was embraced. It's terrible. Prior to this, the idea of mass layoffs didn't exist as an option for a business.
    • "We all have to become the leader we want to become."
    • "Leadership is not rank, it's seeing those around you rise."
    • "Business is one of the most personal things in the world." You should never said, "it's not personal, it's just business." It's ALWAYS personal.
  • Great leaders are the ones who think beyond short term vs long term. They are the ones who know it’s not about the next quarter or the next election but about the next generation.
  • The greatness of George Eastman - he was not just how great for Kodak, but amazing for the game of business as a whole… He created a lot of employee incentives in 1912 that had not been happening up to that point. Stock options, sick days, college tuition reimbursement, etc.
  • “Consistency becomes more important than intensity.”
  • “Where a finite-minded player makes products they think they can sell to people, the infinite-minded player makes products that people want to buy. The former is primarily focused on how the sale of those products benefits the company; the latter is primarily focused on how the products benefit those who buy them.”
  • “Being the best simply cannot be a Just Cause, because even if we are the best (based on the metrics and time frames of our own choosing), the position is only temporary. The game doesn’t end once we get there; it keeps going. And because the game keeps going, we often find ourselves playing defense to maintain our cherished ranking. Though saying “we are the best” may be great fodder for a rah-rah speech to rally a team, it makes for a weak foundation upon which to build an entire company. Infinite-minded leaders understand that “best” is not a permanent state. Instead, they strive to be “better.”
  • "There is an entire section at the book store called "self-help," there should be a section called "help others."
  • Why lead? --> "Because you want to see others grow. Your job may be 9 to 5, but leadership is 24-7."
  • "If you like the idea of taking care of others, you may be suitable to lead."

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

And we have to stop thinking with the other players as competitors and start thinking to them as rivals and some of those rivals are worthy of comparison

0:10.0

Worthy rivals are that other players in the game who are better at some things than you are.

0:16.1

Whether they're individuals or organizations, we don't have to like them, we don't have to agree

0:21.4

with them, but we do have to respect them because they are

0:24.4

better at some things than we are and their strengths reveal to us our weaknesses

0:29.2

and once our weaknesses are revealed to us, we can work on them.

0:33.1

We can improve on them.

0:34.6

Otherwise we remain blind and eventually we'll go out of business.

0:38.0

So in the independent game of business,

0:39.7

it's much healthier to view the other players as rivals

0:43.3

so that we can learn from them and improve ourselves. Welcome to the Learning Leader Show presented by Brixy and Meyer. I am Ryan Hawk.

0:59.2

Thank you so much for being here. Text learners to 442-2 in order to join tens of thousands of

1:05.7

learning leaders from all over the world receive mindful Monday updates when I'm

1:09.2

reading, writing, watching, thinking about also give you the opportunity to learn more about my book which comes out next week

1:18.1

Welcome to management I wrote this book because I made so many mistakes when I got that initial promotion

1:25.8

from individual contributor to leader.

1:29.2

And fortunately I've been able to learn for more than 350 podcast conversations and incredible mentors

1:35.7

and coaches in my life to do it better.

1:38.7

I've shared absolutely everything I know and what I've learned.

1:42.4

I've distilled it down into its essence

1:44.1

and put it in this book welcome to management it would mean so much to me if you

1:48.7

want out and bought it pre-order on Amazon or Barnes Noble orle or anywhere books are sold. I want to show my publisher

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