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Disruptors

Jordan Peterson: Interview with Clinical Psychologist, Million-Plus Selling Author [Business, mindset, entrepreneur, disruptors]

Disruptors

Rob Moore

Careers, How To, Business, Self-improvement, Society & Culture, Marketing, Investing, Education, Entrepreneurship

4.81.4K Ratings

🗓️ 29 July 2018

⏱️ 54 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Episode Description: Welcome to another episode of The Disruptors Podcast! In this episode, Rob interviews the author of the best-selling book, 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos, clinical psychologist Jordan Peters. Rob and Jordan cover predictors for entrepreneurial success, the importance of dynamic opposition in a business partnership, and just how crucial marketing and sales skills really are, even for creative artists. Together, Rob and Jordan break down the necessary evils of proper scheduling, the benefits of selling directly to consumers, and why you should always have someone around to say no. Key Takeaways: When analysing potential business success, Jordan breaks things down into these categories: -Simple jobs: Where you train and then repeat what you’ve learned. Intelligence predicts how fast someone can learn a simple job but their levels of conscientiousness predict how well they will do it. -Complex jobs: Involve demands that change on a regular basis and cannot ever be fully “learned.” According to Jordan, IQ is the main predictor of success in a complex job. Jordan then breaks things down further into two very different business temperaments: -Managerial and administrative: Conservative, skeptical, organized, risk-averse, who are much more likely to say “no.” -Entrepreneurial: Liberal, excited, creative, lateral-thinking, risk-takers who are trait-open. Jordan explains that one is not inherently better than the other, but that both of these types of people need each other in order to operate a successful business. Creativity, inspiration, and energy are crucial elements but that creativity needs to be organized and focused. Rob agrees and points out that,  “Entrepreneurs tend to hire versions of themselves at first, instead of being more self-aware and like, ‘I’m chaotic and disruptive and what I need is order.’” But he also emphasises not going too far in the other direction and getting held back by a stifling managerial influence. Rob and Jordan then transition to the importance of knowing how to properly sell a product and understanding that making a good product is only the beginning of a very long road. The assumption that a good product will sell itself is just not true. However, Jordan warns that trying to sell your product through a big company instead also has drawbacks, mainly that they are naturally risk-averse, move very slowly, and may never even happen at all. Instead, Rob advocates for selling directly to consumers because: -You’re always at the decision-maker -You get near-immediate feedback -It can be more rewarding knowing your product will change an individual’s life Jordan agrees with this but also says that if you’re selling directly then you absolutely have to understand how essential sales and marketing are. Jordan continues on saying that the artists and creatives who have contempt for the “business end” of things are only going to hurt themselves and never see any proper monetization from their creative works. Rob’s solution for people who struggle with marketing and sales? Find someone who can: “To anyone listening who isn’t really a natural sales or marketing person, partner or align with someone who is and you’ll probably make a great team.” From there Rob and Jordan agree that dynamic opposition makes for good business balance, someone who’s there to dream big and take risks and someone who can be conscientious and know when to say “no.” Having too many people with either personality in one company is never going to end well. They briefly switch to the value of structure and being held to a schedule, and if you can’t be held to a schedule, finding someone who CAN hold you accountable to it. In short, in order to give your business the best opportunity for success, have people whose strengths and weaknesses complement each other. Managerial, conservative types may feel constraining, but often that constraint can hold you back from making mistakes and provide protection. Best Moments: Rob: “Your downfall is likely to be organizational administrative ability. So it’s often useful for entrepreneurial types to pair themselves with administrative types.” Jordan: “Most new ideas are stupid, dangerous, and counterproductive.” Rob: “And they’re the ones that change the world!” Jordan: “If you’re a naive entrepreneur, you think ‘well, all I have to do is make a great product.’ No, that’s about five percent of it!” Jordan: “It’s really, really hard to be a good salesperson. And people like that are unbelievably rare and unbelievably valuable.” Rob: “Discipline, while it’s hard, it’s rewarding at the end when you feel that sense of deep happiness when you’ve gone through it.” About the Guest: Jordan Peterson is a Canadian clinical psychologist and a professor of psychology at the University of Toronto. He is a frequent lecturer and author of the best-selling book, 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos, which has sold over two million copies since its release in January 2018. [Business, mindset, entrepreneur, disruptors] VALUABLE RESOURCES https://robmoore.com/ bit.ly/Robsupporter   https://robmoore.com/podbooks  rob.team ABOUT THE HOST Rob Moore is an author of 9 business books, 5 UK bestsellers, holds 3 world records for public speaking, entrepreneur, property investor, and property educator. Author of the global bestseller “Life Leverage” Host of UK’s No.1 business podcast “Disruptors” “If you don't risk anything, you risk everything” CONTACT METHOD Rob’s official website: https://robmoore.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/robmooreprogressive/?ref=br_rs LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/robmoore1979     disruptive, disruptors, entreprenuer, business, social media, marketing, money, growth, scale, scale up, risk, property: http://www.robmoore.com

Transcript

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0:00.0

Well, is there something wrong with generating money?

0:02.8

It's like, well, it depends on what you're going to do with the money.

0:06.8

You know, like if you're going to spend it all on hookers and cocaine,

0:11.2

then probably that's reprehensible. and cocaine

0:13.7

Welcome to the disruptive

0:17.3

What does the word disruptive mean to you?

0:20.5

It means going beyond the ordinary,

0:22.2

going beyond the status quo. Not thinking

0:24.6

in the conventional way, not just sort of following the herd. Disruptive means taking things up, you know?

0:30.4

Disruptive entrepreneur is somebody who sees the problem and embraces the problem with a new way.

0:35.6

Shake up an awakening.

0:37.0

Quality will take care of itself and you'll go for being disruptive but also profitable.

0:41.2

When you use your reservoir of talent

0:43.0

when you love what you do, then you disrupt.

0:45.0

Mix it up, change it up and dominate.

0:48.0

And now, your host, eight times best-selling author

0:51.0

and double world record holder, Rob Moore.

0:55.0

Hi, it's Rob Moore here and welcome to the Disruptive Entrepreneur

0:58.0

Podcast. So you may be out of here in the background. I am walking home.

1:02.0

I've just got off the train from

1:04.0

London where I've just interviewed Jordan Peterson. Now I wanted to do something a

1:09.3

bit different and give you my thoughts on this interview maybe in a bit more detail than I might normally

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