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The People Whisperer With Ken Sterling

Posted by John Livesay in podcast | 0 comments

25.04.22

TSP Ken Sterling | People Whisperer

 

Public speaking isn’t easy. Sometimes, to maximize success, you need a people whisperer like today’s guest on your side. In this episode, John Livesay and Ken Sterling, Executive Vice President of BigSpeak dive deep into what you need to succeed in the public speaking space. Ken talks about being authentic, reacting to feedback, accountability, and choosing the right speaker for the job. Tune in for more great insights and learn from one of the best in the business.

Listen to the podcast here

 

The People Whisperer With Ken Sterling

Our guest is Ken Sterling, the Executive Vice President at BigSpeak Speakers Bureau. He talks about how they go from gurus to go-tos. Find out what he means in terms of speakers and the kinds of questions he asks to keep people coming back time and again and getting repeat referrals. He has an acronym called ACE for Anticipate, Communicate, and Execute. Enjoy the episode.

Our guest is Ken Sterling, who is based in Santa Barbara and the Executive Vice President at BigSpeak, the leading keynote, and business speaking bureau. He is a columnist for Inc. Magazine with a column called Talk Business to Me. He holds a PhD from UC Santa Barbara and an MBA from Babson College. He also teaches entrepreneurship, marketing, and strategy at USC Santa Barbara. In his spare time, believe it or not, he has some, Ken is a serial entrepreneur, a keynote speaker, and coaches executives for high-performance results. Ken, welcome to the show.

John, thank you for having me. It is an honor.

I am the one that is honored. You certainly are someone who does not dabble at life. You go all-in. You are able to be successful at so many things at the same time. Before we get into how you do that, I would love to know your story of origin. You can go back to childhood where you realized, “I gave a little talk and I’ve got a laugh. Maybe that is something I want to get into. I am interested in how organizations run.” Whenever you want to start the story from childhood or college because those stories are never linear, although I have done over 450 interviews now, no one has this, “I am going to get my PhD.” Few people have that in their heads when they first start their journey. Tell us how yours started.

I do not get asked this question often. I reflect on this a lot because I am so happy doing what I do in this blessed life and career that some people would call a job. It does not feel like a job. It feels like everything I did, including my origin, set me up to be successful doing what I do on what BigSpeak does. Going back over the waves of time back in the dinosaur days, I was born in a women’s college in Upstate New York. My mother was at a women’s college there. She is Sicilian.

Thanks to things like Roe v. Wade or whatever it is, I am a living being here. Thanks to my mom and the doctors at the little hospital there. I lived in a dorm for two years. My mom still has a picture of a drawer where they swaddled me in a blanket where I slept. We grew up very humble, not with a lot of money. My dad was not around. There was a lot of controversy around him and my mother. I grew up with a distant connection with my mother and no connection with my dad.

I have to make friends to survive and later to thrive. The first part of my origin story is about a kid that needs to connect and curate this tribe of a network. That is a lot of what we do in the agency world. We are networking, connecting, and being of service. We do good work. We have a reputation that we need to uphold. What I would do on my vacations is I would go live with my grandparents. My Nonno was an old-school Italian guy. He had a saying, motto, and value for everything. That rubbed off on me.

I was this poor street kid in New York then having these idyllic times with my Nonno. We came out to California when I was a teenager, which was interesting because back in those days, California was the big glitz and glamor of Hollywood. Elvis Presley was still the King. There was a lot going on. I was impacted a lot by Los Angeles, the energy, and the entertainment industry.

[bctt tweet=”Anticipate, Communicate and Execute.” username=”John_Livesay”]

I thought I wanted to be an actor. I auditioned. I was in a commercial with Sylvester Stallone for the Boys Club of America. I then tried out for a couple of being in movies. I’ve never got the parts. I did some theater arts and was in a couple of plays. I am still connected to performance, theater, and things like that. It is funny because I do have a PhD now. I am a high school dropout. I got kicked out and dropped out about two months before graduation.

Things did not go well. I had a run-in with a teacher and did not go back to school for many years. I’ve got my Bachelor’s, Master’s, and PhD much later in life. All the things that I did and the different businesses that I’ve got involved in were very much about building the community, connecting with people, feeding the family, and creating a family. Hopefully, good background of what makes me good at what I do is that I know how to keep people together and take care of people.

What a fascinating story from your crib being a drawer to dropping out of high school. With the predictions that you would go on to get a PhD and be at the level of success and contribution that you are making now, most people would not have bet on a story turning out like that. Was there a mentor involved that got you back into school? We are talking about your hero’s journey. Usually, there is some inciting incident or in a speaker’s career, there is a flashpoint, whether it is a book or a talk that changes things for that person’s career. Is there something you can point to now, looking back, that you said, “This is this person or this event got me on another path?”

Yes. It is interesting because there have been a few different mentors over the years. The mentor that helped me realize it was time to get back into education is the CEO and Founder of BigSpeak, Jonathan Wygant. We have known each other for years. Ever since I was a teenager, he has been a real mentor in my life and helped me a lot with getting me on good paths. What happened was interesting.

I was applying for a great job. Jonathan was one of my references. I ended up not getting the job because I did not have a college degree. I had some accomplishments and started some companies. I made some money, had some houses, and all the stuff. I was upset candidly that I did not get this job. I remember saying to the CEO of that company, “Mark Zuckerberg did not have a college degree.”

To her credit, she said, “With all due respect, you are not Mark Zuckerberg.” I said, “Thank you.” Jonathan invited me to go to lunch. We were having lunch and he shared with me at his company such as BigSpeak that he had a requirement for people to have a college degree and that to him and a lot of people, it demonstrates someone’s ability to follow through on a commitment and analytical thinking.

That was a barrier or a ticket of entry into a different world. I got out of that lunch meeting with him, drove up to the local community college, and went to the transfer center. I remember I waited in line, read a magazine, and got in front of this woman. Christine was her name and I said, “How fast can you get me to UC Santa Barbara” She put a plan together and I stuck to it, hustled, and made it happen.

Let’s talk a little bit about BigSpeak and the story of origin around BigSpeak. It is based in Santa Barbara where you live as well. What is it that BigSpeak does that makes clients want to keep working with you?

TSP Ken Sterling | People Whisperer

People Whisperer: I know how to keep people together and take care of people.

 

It is a great question to answer externally. It is a great question that we ask ourselves internally all the time, and because we ask ourselves that question, it sets us up for success. At BigSpeak, we are averaging about a 75% repeat referral rate, which is pretty phenomenal. We also run what’s called an NPS survey or a Net Promoter Score survey. To set the table for that, if anyone has ever gotten an email that says, “John, thank you for shopping at XYZ Widget Company. On a scale of 1 to 10, how likely would you be to recommend XYZ Widget Company’s services to a friend or colleague?”

There is a lot of science between why they asked the question the way they do and in the waiting for the answers. For example, on a scale of 1 to 10, most people think that a 7 or an 8 is pretty good when 7 and 8 are not good, so you want 10s, “How likely are you to promote us? How likely are you to tell a friend to do work with u?” We have for years sent the survey out to every client that we work with. We send it out on the company event planner side, to speakers, and to the speaker’s bureaus. The number is important. Our number is phenomenal.

Our NPS is 82, which shows a very high level of satisfaction. Back in the day, when Nordstrom had a great reputation, their NPS was in the 80s. Zappos back in the day was up in the 80s. Banks are notoriously down in the 30s and 40s. That is terrible. It is worse than an F’s. I will use the word obsessed because we are engaged with customer satisfaction and with Net Promoter Score, we always improve our systems. The number is one piece of it. The other thing is we ask the question, “If you did not give us a 10, what would it take to earn a 10?” We ask another question, “What’s something you think we do not want to hear?”

It is very vulnerable. With the stuff we have picked up on that over the years, we have revamped the way that we send out bills, collection notices, set up contracts, and do handoffs between our sales team, the events team, and other operations team. It has helped us understand those comments. We learn a lot more from them than the numbers, for example. We love the number and it is great for the ego. What we love are those comments where we learn from those.

Circling back to your original question here, “What is it that has made us successful?” 1) We are obsessed and concerned with customer satisfaction. 2) We work hard to do clean, effective, and good work. What that means is that we try to remove the turbulence and friction. We try to get everything cleaned ahead of time. Some folks in different roles, bureaus, and industries might half-communicate upfront. We like to get it all out on the table upfront. There are no surprises.

That tends to be important in terms of taking good care and setting good expectations. It is also great because when the speaker meets the buyer during the pre-call, onsite or virtually in the virtual green room, there are no surprises. You are in the speaking industry and we were talking about this before we came on. Sometimes, things happen. Anticipating those things and doing good, clean, thoughtful, and considerate work for all the parties helps.

I love a couple of things you have said that I want to double-click on. One, from your TEDx Talk, you talk about how leaders own turbulence. They do not try to avoid it. It is your process at BigSpeak of being transparent. I talk about, as a sales keynote speaker, the need to be a copilot with your buyers. Therefore, you are both agreeing, “This is where we are landing. It is not a surprise when we land the plane.” This concept of removing friction up front is so important because you have this wonderful acronym that I wanted to get into.

This is the perfect place for it because what BigSpeak is doing is putting the acronym into action. It is Anticipate something, Communicate it, and then Execute it. Let’s take the ACE. Let’s take each letter. Anticipating is what could go wrong and not shying away from it, both at the beginning and this is what is so smart about what you are doing but also at the end. What is it you think we do not want to hear? You are anticipating even the worst-case scenario. We still want to hear it so we can learn from it and this clear communication of, “This is what the speaker or the event requires.”

[bctt tweet=”From gurus, to go tos, leaders own turbulence.” username=”John_Livesay”]

Also, let me ask you this. How important is it that people are flexible enough like when a pilot hits unexpected turbulence? If something might go wrong at the event, that speaker has some flexibility in everything from how long they are going to speak to incorporating what happened so that it does not seem like a canned presentation. Do you have some examples of how you as a bureau have communicated some things that have allowed the clients to say, “We feel like you had our back”

Those moments happen when there is turbulence. We did about 1,600 events in 2021 and in 1,575, I will make that number up, we do not hear much. We get the smile sheet on the NPS and the 9 or the 10, “Amy was great to work with. Marc Randolph was an excellent speaker.” Those are great. In less than 1% of what we do, there is going to be some turbulence and the way that we show up, meaning BigSpeak, the leadership team, the operations team who might be interfacing. Also, the advisor on the sales team, when we get that feedback or know there is a problem, the first thing is to remain calm.

We talked about this as a group when we were all together. When a challenge comes up, embrace it as an opportunity to shine. A lot of folks, me included, would tend to sometimes feel a little triggered, anxious, and almost like we need to get defensive about something. What I mean by that is that even if let’s say it is not BigSpeak’s fault, we are still part of it. We still help create, promote or allow whatever the situation happens. Having ownership and accountability around that, realizing we are here to help, and this is why we exist. Otherwise, people could use Expedia for speakers.

We are here to solve challenges. That is a big part of the first step, “We are in a situation. I am here to help. I am a professional. I’ve got the expertise, knowledge, and experience. We have a team here to help.” That helps internally with the process. As we do hit those, let’s say 25 out of 1,600 events a year where there is a stumble and we hit the guard rails. Any number of situations may be created from those 25 challenges. What have we learned from those? That is where we can help with the A of the Anticipate.

We have been seeing more of this going on. It’s because of COVID, airlines have been canceling flights. We have got a speaker stuck in Dallas who was supposed to be in Orlando tomorrow. It is not going to work. Even if we could get a private plane, it is still not going to work, so we are going to have to scramble. Scrambling could mean lots of things. Scramble could be, “Who do we have in Orlando? Who do we have within three hours of driving to Orlando? Could we do a virtual? Could we get that speaker who is stranded in Dallas to a studio?” Those are the things that sometimes we are ahead of.

As we are putting that event together, speaking with the event planner and the speaker on that pre-call, what is our contingency plan? Gosh, forbid, everything is going to go great, and if it doesn’t, what is our backup plan? That is interesting because it hasn’t scared anybody away. It has helped the companies and the speakers feel, “BigSpeak knows what’s going on there. They are thinking of this stuff.” We have changed some of our discovery intake processes and agreements around what happened to COVID. It’s funny because A could be a lot of things. A is Anticipate, Accountability, and Adapting. As long as we are coming at it from those points of view, it is very helpful.

It reminds me of Captain Sully flying for years. When those birds flew into the engine, he needed to be able to land the plane in the Hudson. That is the kind of thing an event planner, management, and big clients want to know that BigSpeak has the skills. For everyone reading, when you start to collect worst-case scenarios, then you are not having to create them on the spot like, “This reminds me of another time somebody got stuck. Here are six choices we had.”

You offered them a virtual and a studio. Who lives there? You are not trying to come up with solutions under stress because you already have that template ready to go. I do the same thing with clients and stories. You have given so many great talks on what makes a good salesperson. We are in sync on the concept of having the ability to tell the right story to the right person at the right time so that you stand out against all the competitors.

TSP Ken Sterling | People Whisperer

People Whisperer: We learn a lot more from them than the numbers, for example. We love the number and it’s great for the ego. What we love are those comments where we learn from those.

 

It allows you to have this predictable revenue that you were focused on, giving people the sense of if you know your ideal client, in my case, it happens to be tech companies and healthcare companies, in that niche, when that offer or request comes up, then people go, “That is John’s niche.” They do not have to think about it. What if you could speak to them? I can speak to a lot of other kinds of sales organizations but that is my niche.

A lot of people are afraid to niche down but I feel and would love your opinion, that when you do have a niche, A) It makes you more memorable and, B) It makes you easier to refer and you get momentum. You are like, “You have got all these healthcare and tech companies under your belt.” You can speak to a real estate group, too, and they might even want to hear what’s going on in healthcare. That is what’s interesting but there is this ability to not try to be everything to everybody. Do you find that those are the speakers that are the most successful?

This comes up in conversations. This question comes up in my daily practice at least once a day, especially with newer speakers that we have been introduced to who are hungry for the work and may or may not be as passionate and do not have their niche, “What is popular? What are your top five topics? I can change my presentation and talk about something different.” That is a hard conversation because I am also empathetic to what their needs are and a few different things.

What I share with them and that I hope the impact is good with them is it is best to stay with your true north and your niche. Here’s why. First, you know it, you own it, and you are comfortable with it. To your point, when you get asked to shorten your presentation by ten minutes, the reason you can do that other than you being a wonderful speaker and you are very professional is that you know this content so well. You can take a couple of those Lego blocks out and it is not a problem.

If it is not you, if it is not authentic, and if it is this whole house of cards that you have built that isn’t true, then you are going to have a challenge with that. When things or a monkey wrench has happened, as you have seen on stage, sometimes, the confidence monitors go down or the lights go down. Who knows what’s going to happen? The more it is you and the more it is what you are an expert on, the better you are going to do, and the better the audience is going to feel.

They also can feel if it is not authentic and it is not what you are passionate about. I loathe sometimes to say, “Follow your passion,” because that is what a lot of parents say to their kids. I do believe in that as a speaker. Get up on stage and share your story that resonates and bangs so deeply in your heart that you have got to get it out there and share it.

I talk about it in terms of being an artist. An artist needs to create. There is this wonderful story of Picasso and other artists painting over their masterpieces in the ’40s because there was a shortage of canvases. If we were salespeople, speakers or whatever we are doing in the world, we would have that same urge, we will figure out how to compensate for a shortage of anything, whether it is a startup or not. The other thing is there are so many similarities between acting and speaking in terms of positioning and branding.

When they are casting a movie or sending out a request for a speaker, oftentimes, everybody wants Meryl Streep and a lot of people would love to have Simon Sinek because he is a wonderful speaker. They go, “We can’t afford either of them. Who else can we talk to?” I’ve got a gig that way because they knew they couldn’t afford Simon. They were looking for not a competitor but who can at least somehow connect the dots from why we like him to what we do when it fits our budget.

[bctt tweet=”If it’s not you, if it’s not authentic, and if it’s this whole house of cards that you’ve built that isn’t true, then you’re going to have a challenge with that.” username=”John_Livesay”]

I do not think a lot of people think of themselves like that. It helps bureaus like you and the salespeople go, “It is not the poor man’s whatever. It is just an alternative.” If you are looking for this kind of storytelling to explain your why, Simon is the man or the speaker. If that budget does not fit, there are also some other people that might be able to get you where you want to go within the budget that you have. You need to have that position for them to be able to think of you in those situations. That is the secret of it all.

I do not know if we can trademark this or not. We call it internally and when we are speaking with companies, the gurus, and the go-tos. I like that because it is not the plusser or the lesser situation. The gurus are Tony Robbins, Simon, Brené, and those kinds of folks. They are great. If that is not going to work out for a variety of reasons, then we have got the go-tos. These are amazing thought leaders who are professional speakers and knock it out of the park. They get 10 out of 10 reviews every time.

Sometimes, I will share candidly, and there is truth to this. I will say, “If you get a celebrity on your stage, it is great. Maybe you’ve got a photograph. I do not know if you or your audience is going to learn much from them. If you bring John in, he is going to get into how to help your sales team achieve their goals, be better storytellers, wrap storytelling into their pitch, and develop a better rapport with their clients. Isn’t that what is going to help move the needle at ABC Widget Company?” I believe that firmly. That is not a spin or a sales thing. I have written a couple of articles, “Do not Book a Headliner for Your Next Event,” and this is why.

It is that counterintuitive thing. I am sure you have got a lot of clicks on that.

I understand that a lot of big companies want that celebrity to sell the tickets, especially if it is an internal event and it is a sales team, you do not have to sell tickets. Their participation is mandatory. Why don’t you save yourself $100,000 and move the needle with someone like John and a thought leader in one of these go-tos who will get in, learn about your organization, and help make some change?

What’s fascinating is at one point, almost every guru was a go-to. They did not start with guru status, whether it is an actor or a speaker, everybody had their first break and went from there. What an enjoyable conversation wrapping around your expertise and BigSpeak’s expertise. Is there any last thought or a quote that you would like to leave us with?

A quote that I love applies to the speaking industry in general. We are in this area of information meets education meets entertainment. Sometimes I call it edutainment. At BigSpeak, our goal or mission is awakening greatness within. Where we go with that is that we believe that we want to help people learn, help them discover, and awaken things within them. I remember a quote by Ben Franklin. It had something to do with, “Teach me and I remember.”

I have got it here, “Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn.”

TSP Ken Sterling | People Whisperer

People Whisperer: Get up on stage and share your story that resonates and bangs so deeply in your heart that you’ve got to get it out there and share it.

 

If you are a speaker, in the industry, and an event planner, as we build these experiences for audiences and have people up on stage or in a Zoom meeting, involve the audience, get them engaged, and make it inspirational, engaging, and interactive as much as you can because that is how you are going to get people and how they are going to remember in 30 days and 60 days. It is not that you had a blue shirt on or that there was a life preserver in the back. They are going to remember some content.

They are like, “There is a life preserver. We are drowning in a sea of sameness unless we tell a story. I’ve got it.” It is even a little visual cues. I have little life preserver chips that I can give people. It is a tangible thing for them to keep in their pocket or purse. They go, “I do not want to go back to my old habits.” There are all kinds of hooks. I love the involvement of using all of our senses. If people want to find out more about you, they can go to BigSpeak and follow you on Inc. The column is Talk Business To Me.

It is one of my favorites. It covers not only current topics but it makes us think in a way that brings your thought process, “I hadn’t thought about that,” or something like that. Here’s one of my favorite titles, “The Best Piece of Investment Advice I Got From a Billionaire Didn’t Involve Money.” That is how you hook an audience, whether it is a soundbite on a talk or a headline. That is part of what makes you and BigSpeak so successful as you cut through the clutter. Ken, thank you so much for being on the show.

Thank you, John. It is great to be here.

 

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Easier: 60 Ways To Make Your Life Work For You With Chris Westfall

Posted by John Livesay in podcast | 0 comments

20.04.22

TSP Chris Westfall | Easier Life

 

Chris Westfall is a sought-after speaker, consultant and author who has helped hundreds of clients achieve transformational results. Chris knows that there is an easier way to make things work for you. This is what John Livesay and Chris get into as they look into how you can transform your business. Chris looks at leadership, storytelling and connecting with people as ways of transforming your business. Tune in and learn more from Chris as he delves into storytelling and sales.

Listen to the podcast here

Easier: 60 Ways To Make Your Life Work For You With Chris Westfall

Our guest is Chris Westfall, the author of Easier. He talks about the best way to make things easy is to realize you always have a choice. Just because the train goes by does not mean you have to ride that train. We talk about storytelling and how important it is to make sure that you are not the hero of all the stories you tell. Make people want to see themselves in your stories and go on the journey with you. Enjoy the episode.

Our guest is Chris Westfall, who’s one of the most sought-after business coaches and sales keynote speakers in the world. He has helped launch over five dozen businesses and has appeared on every network out there. He’s a regular contributor to Forbes, and worked with thousands of leaders at Fortune 500 companies, nonprofits, and high-tech startups. A coach to entrepreneurs and executives around the world, his clients have appeared on Shark Tank, Dragons’ Den, and Shark Tank Australia. He regularly consults with top-tier universities, and is the author of three other books, but the one we are here to talk about is Easier. Welcome to the show, Chris.

John, thank you so much for that introduction. It’s great to be here.

You and I both share a passion for storytelling. You were all about whoever tells the best story wins, and I have a modern version of whoever tells the best story gets the sale, depending on what yours is a broader concept of what winning is. As storytelling keynote speakers, we love to help people tell better stories.

You would find this true too that it not just helps people’s careers but helps them in their personal life. With that said, let’s go into your personal life a little bit and tell us your story of origin. How did you get to be who you are? You can go back to high school or even earlier if you want, wherever you want to start.

[bctt tweet=”Things become easier when you realize you don’t have to hop on every train that passes.” username=”John_Livesay”]

I’m going to start in junior high. I’m in eighth grade, and my English teacher approaches me. She says, “I want you to give the speech at eighth-grade graduation.” I was not valedictorian and anything special. I was just a guy that got approached about giving a speech. I said what I have been saying my entire career, which is, “Yes.” I agreed to do it. That was the very first time that I stepped in front of a group and gave a presentation. There were probably 1,000 people in the audience. It’s a pretty large class of mine in junior high.

That was at age fourteen where I started as a speaker. I went on and lived my life, graduated from various schools, had a career, and all these things. I would always be pulled in front of audiences during my career to speak. I always fought it. I was always like, “This isn’t who I am.” It was a quest to come back to that place of realizing who I am, realizing the person that stepped on that stage at age fourteen is still inside of me.

To recognize that identity and step into it has been something that I have come to realize in my later life has been the most fulfilling part of my career. When you talk about storytelling and particularly storytelling in sales, it’s not just a part of my career. It’s part of my history. It’s something that I grew up with.

Look how far you have come in several years. You have been running a very successful consulting firm, and you speak at these different things. Who is your favorite client to give a talk to?

My client is typically frustrated. They are successful but they want more. My client asks themselves this question, “Is this all there is?” When organizations are looking for more and trying to access a greater market share, sales opportunities, places to make an impact in their careers, and employee engagement, these are a number of things that I touch on but ultimately, there’s a frustration. We know we can be better. We just need to understand how to get there.

TSP Chris Westfall | Easier Life

Easier Life: Personal or general data protection, privacy law concept

 

It sounds like you give them a roadmap of how to get there no matter where they are on the frustration line.

A big part of the work that I do is to show people that while I may have a roadmap, they have an internal GPS. I’m going to speak about human nature. We all have inside of us that internal GPS. We have the ability to reroute when our thinking settles down. Even in the midst of very difficult circumstances, if we allow ourselves to see things in a new way, we can take new action.

From my point of view, that new perspective is always available. There’s always a new perspective, no matter what you are going through. It doesn’t matter whether you are going through a divorce or trying to hit a quota that is impossible. There’s always a fresh way of going about whatever it is that you are up against. That’s the premise behind Easier. There is always an easier way, even when life isn’t necessarily easy.

One of the things that stood out to me when I was reading it was not giving up on the concept that there’s an easier way to do something when it seems completely not easy. You feel stuck, and you don’t even ask yourself the question because it seems impossible. The first takeaway I’ve got from the book was, “I need to open my mind up to the possibility that there might be an easier way to get this sale, this funding for the startup, whatever it is I’m doing.”

Part of your background is that you have been helping people get funding and judging at Southwest some pitch contests. The show is called The Successful Pitch. I would certainly be remiss if I didn’t ask you some tips or thoughts on what makes a good pitch. Let’s talk about it in the framework of Shark Tank, where you are pitching investors since that’s part of your expertise.

[bctt tweet=”An Olympic swimming coach is out of the water to gain perspective.” username=”John_Livesay”]

You and I line up on one particular aspect of what makes an effective pitch. Your pitch is not a superhero story, where you stand up and beat on your chest and talk about your experiences. Not only is that insufferable but nobody wants to hear that. The story that people want to engage with is the story where the audience is the hero. Maybe you can’t make your investor or customer your hero, but it’s a good idea to start trying now, and taking your attention off of yourself will help you to create a greater connection in the sales conversation, investor conversation and in every conversation.

When you take that attention off of yourself, you are not going to forget your product knowledge and lose your ability to sell, compel or be engaging. That’s never going to be taken. Like the song says, “They can’t take that away from me.” The point is when we take our attention off of ourselves, what shows up? Here’s what I know from speaking on thousands of stages. You tell me if you see this too.

There are two questions you never want to ask yourself when you are in the middle of a high-stakes presentation. That’s a sales presentation or a presentation in front of 500 salespeople. The first one is, “Who am I?” The second one is, “How am I doing?” It’s a self-awareness that points towards self-consciousness. When you are focused on yourself, do you know what you are not focused on? It’s the sale and everything that matters.

I fell into that trap a few years back when I was hired by Coca-Cola to speak at their CMO Summit. The night before, they gave us a little program of all the speakers for the next 2 or 3 days. I’m like, “Harvard graduate, New York Times bestseller. What am I doing here? How did I get on the stage? The person who hired me is going to get fired.”

I had to talk myself off the ledge of, “Do I care how many books the speaker has sold?” No. “Do I care where they went to school?” No. I care about how they make me feel. If you don’t trust yourself at the moment, maybe you trust the person who has been at Coca-Cola for over twenty years that she knows what she’s doing and saw something.

TSP Chris Westfall | Easier Life

Easier Life: You got to keep your eye on the ball. It means keeping your eye on the customer, on the client and focusing intently on how you can serve them more deeply, more fully.

 

I think for myself that I had to focus on, “How do I not fall into that trap,” because that’s the worst mindset in the world before you get on stage the next morning. For me, the minute I start comparing myself to other people, I say, “Cut. Stop.” It’s like a movie. The gateway drug to Imposter syndrome is comparing yourself to other people, “He’s more handsome, taller, leaner, and smarter.” It’s endless. That’s in the dating world, let alone the speaking world. I would love to know if you have any tips for people on how to avoid that horrible Imposter syndrome besides not comparing yourself.

I will tell you a story that a coach of mine shared with me. It starts with a weird question, “Do you have to be an Olympic-level swimmer to coach someone who is swimming in the pool?” In other words, do you have to be an Olympic-level swimmer to be of service to someone who is swimming in the pool? The answer is no.

As a former lifeguard, I would say no.

How do we all know that it is True, not where it’s a matter of belief for a faith that someone on the side of the pool can coach someone in the pool? It is not because of their experience, height or color of their swimsuit. It is because of their perspective. The thing that you bring that is powerful is your perspective. That guidance and wisdom for your audience is a function of your experience but there’s more to it than what you have done over the course of your career. The experience that is so valuable when you speak to sales audiences is the experience you create for the audience.

It’s the same thing for salespeople. If you think, “I don’t carry enough quota to be in this room. I have not sold enough to be in this room,” that’s the wrong question to be asking yourself. The question is, “How is your client doing? How is the person in the pool?” Look at them. That’s where your attention needs to be. It’s because of your perspective, not because of your quota, experience or where you went to school, but because of your perspective. You can share and serve, and if you get out of your own way, you can sell.

[bctt tweet=”We know we can be better. We just need to understand how to get there.” username=”John_Livesay”]

What a great solution to that because I have taught everyone from infants how to swim. You are in the water, and we are having them blow bubbles and stuff to being coached in competitive swimming. If the coach is in the water, he can’t see if your elbows are at the right height. He’s eye level with you, not above. I love this concept of zooming out and getting a perspective.

The second problem you said or question we should never ask ourselves is, “How am I doing?” Whether it’s a talk or sales pitch because it takes you out of the moment. You are not listening anymore. You are worrying about whether people like you or not, which is always the kiss of death. We start making up stories in our heads. If someone gets distracted, “I lost them. They are on their phone,” or they went to the bathroom, or whatever is going on. It may not even be true but we are making it up, and we are not in the moment.

It’s like a field goal kicker in a football game. The reason I think of it like this is that my dad kicked field goals. He was a field kicker in college. He used to say to me, “When I’m kicking a field goal, where do you think my attention should be? Should it be on how I am doing? Should it be on what the coach told me last week? Should it be on the fans and the crowd? Should I be thinking about how I’m going to be the hero of this game if I make it through the uprights or how I’m going to be the absolute bomb if I don’t?”

He would say, “Chris, none of those things matter. You’ve got to keep your eye on the ball.” In this case, keeping your eye on the ball means keeping your eye on the client and focusing intently on how you can serve them more deeply and fully. If you think you can do that by putting your attention on yourself and worrying about your likability factor, you are looking at the wrong place.

I imagined a professional baseball player at home plate, getting ready to swing. As the ball is coming, he suddenly looks up at the crowd and goes, “Do you all like me?” He misses the ball. It’s like, “Strike.” That analogy holds up. I see that you’ve got this great testimonial from a mutual friend of ours, Brant Pinvidic, who wrote The 3-Minute rule. He has been on the show. I have been on some adventures with him. He’s quite the cool guy.

TSP Chris Westfall | Easier Life

Easier Life: It’s not about controlling your mind. It’s not about controlling your thoughts.

 

He said that your book, Easier, is unlike any other coaching guide he has ever read. What is it that makes this book so unique? What’s an outcome someone can get? I can share mine, and Brant can share his but I love to ask the author. What was your intent? This book is for people who are frustrated and somewhat stuck and know they can do better but after reading Easier, they are not only going to ask themselves, “Is there an easy way to do this?” but fill in the blank.

The power behind Easier is the power of storytelling. Whatever people take from this book and the uniqueness that Brant is talking about, I would like to think that it comes from the story that unfolds. There are two ways to share information. One is to come down like Moses off a mountaintop and say, “Here are the Ten Commandments. Do these ten things, and the right results will follow.” The other way to tell it is via a story. What people will take away from Easier, whatever it is that they gleaned, the subtitle promises 60 ways.

I was going to get to that. It’s the old Kenny Rogers song, 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover. You came up with 60 ways to make your life easier.

The way that those discoveries are made is through a story. If you find the story engaging and see yourself in the characters represented and the challenges that they have to overcome, that is where the lessons are learned. It’s not so many lessons learned. That sounds like school. It’s more like the discoveries are made if you are looking for a way to blow your quota out of the water to create a deeper market share and an impact on your customers.

I’m not going to say that training is not valuable but those discoveries you make when you are in front of your customer, when you are looking in the mirror and considering the ability to serve, that’s inside of you are much more powerful than these Ten Commandment-type lessons. Training is valuable. You have to understand how things work. You have to be onboard. You have to understand how you create connections, ask intelligent questions, and all those things. My question for the folks reading, and it’s a question in the book is, who are you when you aren’t on your mind?

[bctt tweet=”When you’re focused on yourself, you’re not focused on sales, on everything that matters. ” username=”John_Livesay”]

It’s very much like screenwriting. I took a course that years ago, and they said, “If you want to show a particular character is honest, don’t say it in dialogue. Show it in a situation where they could steal something and not get caught, and they still don’t do it.” You tap into this. It’s Chapter 4 where we are talking about, “Am I the person that eats all the Oreo cookies or am I the person that saved someone’s life? Which self do I put on the shelf? How can I integrate all the different parts of my personality that I’m judging? One aspect of my personality where I am decisive and able to not be afraid, why doesn’t that show up consistently?”

That’s an example of why this fable is so engaging because you start to think of yourself that rare is not the same all the time. Wayne Dyer, back in the day, who was a motivational speaker, used to say, “When you squeeze an orange, you always get orange juice. It doesn’t matter what time of day, in the middle of the room and the corner. What happens when somebody squeezes you, and you get stressed out? Do you get orange juice or do you get anger and fear?” That metaphysical question is my sweet spot of, “Who are we? How can we be more authentic? Why are we, at our best, not at others?” If you could speak to that a little bit and how easy it takes people on that journey of self-acceptance.

It is a journey of self-acceptance. You are right. One of the things that I have accepted in my career once upon a time, which I now reject, is this idea that peak performance comes from mindset and the idea that our minds are set is false. I anticipate that on any given day, we have between 6,000 and 60,000 thoughts running through our brains. Our minds are not set. If we try to set our minds, we are trying to stop the wind or waves from hitting the shore.

What makes things easier is when we realize that we’ve got some thinking going on at all times around a particular subject, and here’s the realization that has shown up for me that has been so powerful. Just because a train of thought shows up, you do not have to ride that train. It’s not about controlling your mind and thoughts and thinking about one thing all day long. That’s not sustainable. That’s not how thought and minds work.

When we get in concert with the way we work, we show up differently. We stop burning cycles trying to rope the wind or stop the waves. Instead of trying to stop the waves, we get on a board, get out in the waves, and start surfing. We start writing and understanding that there is a power inside of these thoughts that can lead us to new realizations and perspectives but we have to step back and stop spending our energy trying to grit and grind things out when there is an easier way.

TSP Chris Westfall | Easier Life

Easier Life: Storytelling is always selective and sales is selective, and selecting the words that are going to help you most is the key to creating that compelling conversation.

 

I can relate to that because this concept of not having to respond immediately to something that somebody says or sends you in an email, sometimes, no response is an answer. A lot of people get all triggered. The front of our brain gets hijacked, and we are in fight or flight mode. We are like in that concept of sleeping on it. Get back to perspective, “Is this going to bug me five years from now? Probably not. Why am I letting myself get so upset?” All of that is a key lesson to learn about. Just because somebody says, “Let’s play tug of war,” doesn’t mean you have to pick up your end of the rope.

Many times, we zoom in on things, and it activates the front part of our brain. All of a sudden, we create these stories that don’t serve us, stories around our obligations and duties. The deadline is the deadline but isn’t there a way for you to relate to those deadlines, obligations, that email that you’ve got that can shift your perspective? That’s what you are talking about.

One of the things that I share in the book is a simple strategy. I call it the YAHOO strategy, which is not about the search engine but YAHOO stands for, You Always Have Other Options. If you are struggling in sales and wondering, “Why can’t I crack this customer? Why can’t I get in front of the people I need to get in front of?” You always have other options. What are those options? Thomas Edison said it best, “There is a way to do it better. Find it.”

Keep looking until you find it. As someone who writes books as we do, usually, our first idea is not the best. We go, “Is there another way I could say that? Is there a better way to say that? Is there a way to say that it’s easier for people to understand?” That’s where I see so many people in sales going down the rabbit hole of, “Let me prove how smart I am with all these acronyms and get into the complexity of everything as opposed to.” The simpler you make it to understand, the more likely you are to get someone to say yes. Just because you are making something easy to understand doesn’t mean you are not smart. That, to me, is a big takeaway from your book. It’s the reverse. The smarter you are, the easier you make things.

If sales is about proving how smart you are, that doesn’t sound very smart to me. Do you want to be smarter or do you want to be richer? Do you want to instruct or do you want to inspire? Do you want to describe or do you want to compel? Are you just there to relay information about the product or are you there to relay information so that your customer can take action, step toward you, and say, “Tell me more,” and continue the dialogue that leads to the exchange that is the transaction you are looking for? That’s so important, John.

[bctt tweet=”Training is valuable. You have to understand how things work. You have to be on board and you have to understand how to create connections and how to ask intelligent questions.” username=”John_Livesay”]

Otherwise, we are trying to impress other people as opposed to making that emotional connection that you understand their problems. That’s why you and I both decided to write fables because, through the lens of storytelling, people are not so analytical in a story like they are a movie or any other fiction that they are learning without realizing they are learning, and that sometimes sticks a little bit better.

I know you are interviewing me but I have to ask you a question. Why did you choose to write a fable? What was it that appealed to you about creating a story around The Sale Is In The Tale?

The thing that motivated me to write The Sale Is In The Tale was I kept thinking to myself, “I have given people the steps on how to tell a good story, and with my coaching, they are able to get better.” Having taken the screenwriting class years ago, they are always about show and don’t tell. I thought, “What if I did create a fable where I showed somebody going through this frustration of not making their quota, losing a big sale, not getting a promotion, and all the things that happened to people in their lives but made somebody see themselves in the story?”

You and I talked before the show that the gold standard of whether somebody takes action is if I see myself in your story, I’m going to buy, say yes or change my behavior. That’s what the motivation of, “Let me see if I can do it.” It was a stretch. I have never written a screenplay or anything that had characters in it, distinguishing that, and painting the picture and setting it here in Austin using real places that I enjoy going to and making that come to life. Having moved here years ago, the book is a love letter to Austin too.

We both set books in Austin. That is so fascinating to me. It’s Austin and Dallas for mine. What I take away from your story, and hopefully people take it away from mine as well, is that there’s an emphasis on relatability. That relatability is what makes stories compelling and engaging. Maybe not necessarily that you see yourself in the story but you see the circumstances and identify with what people are going through. That is certainly my hope, and it sounds like it’s yours as well.

[bctt tweet=”It’s no secret that sales is a people business. It’s where business gets personal.” username=”John_Livesay”]

That is the power of storytelling. Bringing that storytelling aspect back to the sales conversation and focusing on the sales folks who are reading this that are looking in the direction of relatability and receptivity. In other words, how open is the customer? Relatability and receptivity are not there. You are never going to get to slide 47 or if you do, they are looking at their phone.

One of the outcomes for us as sales keynote speakers is that people who have read the book are going to want to have us come speak because they are going to want to ask questions about the story like, “How did you come up with this idea? How did you decide to set this? I related to what you wrote in this book, which is different than other books you have written, which are some instructional tips on how to be better at sales, leadership or whatever it is.”

I heard Elizabeth Gilbert speak about her book around creativity, Big Magic. I was completely into the stories that she was talking about her own journey of creativity. It was very different than reading a book on how to be more creative because there were stories in there. The other outcome is it will get us engaged with the audiences before we even show up if they have discovered our fables.

The questions they may want to appear into the discoveries they might want to make on a personal level because it’s no secret that sales are people’s business. It is where business gets personal. To be able to share that perspective with an audience and give them an opportunity to ask you questions and gain the insights of the author, that level of personalization, from my perspective, I certainly welcome it. I’m early in this process. The feedback that I’m getting and the way people respond to this book are fascinating to me.

For us as sales keynote speakers, the key thing to remember is that aspect of connection with the customers, audience, and in a story that goes from point A, point B, to point C that takes you through on a journey that is realistic. That is not to say that it’s completely chronological like, “Let me tell you my life story from birth up until yesterday.” Nobody wants to hear that. Storytelling is always selective, and sales is selective. Selecting the words that are going to help you most is the key to creating that compelling conversation that doesn’t just describe or inform, it’s the conversation that compels. That’s the conversation that I’m here for, and you are too.

You have so many great quotes in your book. Everything in the past, from anonymous to a quote about being lazy from Bill Gates. Can you end this wonderful interview you gave us with a favorite quote of yours, either 1 of those 2 or something else that you like?

Here’s what I’m going to share with you, “Never confuse a single defeat with a final defeat.” That’s from F Scott Fitzgerald. Those are the words to live by. I don’t know about you but I have gone up in my head. This customer called it and went, “The way that I wanted it in is the end of the world. I’m going to get fired.” That’s a little extreme but we go there because we want to win and do well. I can relate. Me too, but never confuse a single defeat with a final defeat because, YAHOO, You Always Have Other Options. The battle is not over. As long as we live to fight another day, the story goes on.

If people want to find you to hire you as a speaker or as a coach, where should they go?

First of all, if they want to hire me as a speaker, I want to say they have excellent taste. My website is WestfallOnline.com. If you head to that website, you will see in the lower right-hand corner a little Contact button. You can send me an email or you can also set up a time to talk and chat for 30 minutes. If you’ve got objectives that you are trying to achieve, sometimes it’s better to parse that out in a conversation. I’m always happy to create that conversation, whatever that might look like. You can also find me on YouTube, Instagram and Twitter, @WestfallOnline. That’s where you can find me at all of those places. You can also find me on Facebook as well.

Thanks, Chris. It has been a delight. What a joy to share a passion for storytelling, fables, and connection with people.

I’m grateful for the connection with you, John. Thank you so much for having me.

It’s my pleasure.

 

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Keep On Pushing: Lesson Learned From Cool Runnings With Devon Harris

Posted by John Livesay in podcast | 0 comments

12.04.22

TSP Devon Harris | Cool Runnings

 

Have you ever wondered what it would take to become an Olympic athlete? A member of the original Jamaican Bobsled Team, Cool Runnings, Devon Harris achieved his grand dream when he became a three-time Winter Olympian. Devon joins John Livesay as he taps in with the same energy, determination, and skill that enabled him to bobsled with the best in the world. Following his Olympic crash, Devon recalls how it was not all rainbows and butterflies for him and shares how he managed to emerge victorious from his misfortunes. As one of today’s sought after international motivational keynote speakers, Devon continues to inspire audiences to face adversities and get over life’s failures. Listen in as Devon sparks audiences of all ages to dream big and take their “game” to the next level.

Listen to the podcast here

 

Keep On Pushing: Lesson Learned From Cool Runnings With Devon Harris

Have you ever wondered what it would take to become an Olympic athlete, or what it would be like to have someone make a movie about your experience at the Olympics? In this episode’s guest, Devon Harris shares all of his secrets about how that happened for him. Enjoy the episode.

Welcome to the show. Our guest is Devon Harris, who was raised in the violent ghetto environment of Olympic Gardens in Kingston, Jamaica. The greatest gift he ever received was the belief that a positive attitude and a ‘never say die’ philosophy would carry him farther than a sense of injustice and a heart filled with anger. He graduated from the prestigious Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in England, received a Queen’s Commission in December 1985, and served in the Officer Core of the Jamaica Defense Force until December ‘92 when he retired as a captain.

He’s also an original member of the 1988 Jamaican bobsled team and was Captain of the ‘92 and ‘98 teams and a three-time Olympian. He achieved his grand dream and now, his dream is to inspire others to achieve theirs. He’s an international motivational keynote speaker. He taps the same energy, determination and skills that enabled him to bobsled with the best in the world to audiences of all ages and take their game to the next level. When he’s not speaking, he’s also writing books, including his one called Keep on Pushing: Hot Lessons from Cool Runnings.

Devon, welcome to the show.

Thank you so much for having me. How are you?

I’m great. I can already feel the energy coming through. It’s wonderful. What an amazing story you have of two separate careers from what I can see of an Olympian career and a military career. Let’s go back a little bit to where you get this concept that you weren’t going to let your circumstances define your mindset.

[bctt tweet=”People hesitate to make goals because of the fear of criticism or ridicule. ” username=”John_Livesay”]

Every time I’m asked that question or a version of this question, I blame my grandmother. It’s her fault. I spent my early years with her until I was maybe five. The thing I remember about her was that she was an amazing storyteller. Certainly, the ones that had the greatest impact on me were the ones she told me about soldiers and these amazing things they could do and not get hurt. That fired up my little five-year-old imagination and inspired me to want to become a soldier but more importantly, to want to do things that other people thought were impossible or difficult.

What a sweet legacy she left too. As a storytelling keynote speaker, when I hear somebody say that she or he told great stories, it always warms my heart because that’s the power of storytelling. Those emotional stories, in particular, make impressions on us and keep us memorable. Let’s talk a little bit about the concept of goal setting since it’s such a big part of what you do and the power of visualization. You decide whether you want to take us down your Olympic career path first or the military one. Where did you start learning how to start visualizing the outcomes you wanted?

We all grew up imagining things such as wanting to be a superhero like Superman, but I don’t think we realized at the time that we’re using the powers of our imagination. We’re visualizing. The successful ones are those who harness that power and use it in a very deliberate and focused way. Growing up in Jamaica, I wanted to go to high school because we had to pass an exam to get to high school. It’s so much a rite of passage. You dream about that, imagine it, and work towards that. For the first time, I can truly remember in a focused, deliberate way using imagination and visualization was when I ran track. I did not even know there was such a word called visualization, but I would visualize myself running and winning.

To be honest, there were a few races that I didn’t win, and I look back and realized that it was because I was nervously visualizing a result that I didn’t want and sometimes, whether as a salesperson, you go for an interview and you’re nervous because you’re visualizing an outcome you don’t want. Those things are self-fulfilling prophecies.

Let’s talk about goals a little bit. There are a lot of reasons that people resist setting goals. Do you feel that it’s because they’ve done it in the past and it hasn’t worked? Nobody wins an Olympic medal without having that be a goal. It’s not like, “I stumbled into this medal. I don’t know how it happened. I didn’t set any parameters or visualize it at all.” Yet so many people think, “I’m not going to go through my life like that in terms of my career or even my personal life.” What is it that you think causes people not to set a goal? Is it that fear of feeling worse off that they didn’t even try?

TSP Devon Harris | Cool Runnings

Cool Runnings: People who are able to tackle this fear of failure and ridicule develop really tough skin. If you laugh at them or tell them they can’t do something, it makes them more determined to do it.

 

The big F word or fear word is the thing that keeps people from not setting goals. One is the fear of failure. They’re like, “What if I don’t hit the goal? Maybe I shouldn’t set it because if I don’t hit this goal, I’m going to feel awful.” They don’t realize that by simply not setting goals, you have already accepted failure. They are afraid people might laugh at them and go, “What kind of ridiculous thing is that? What makes you think you can do it? You have to be ready for the fear of criticism and ridicule. Imagine four fools from Jamaica deciding they wanted to go to the Winter Olympics. People were like, “Are you kidding me?” People laugh but who’s laughing now? That’s the question.

I certainly have experienced the fear of failure myself. I had another guest on, Jay Samit, who said it’s just feedback. You keep going until you get a zombie idea that’s so great it won’t die but I’ve never had anybody come on and talk about the fear of being ridiculed. Let’s dive into that story. Take us back to 1988. You’re in Jamaica. To my knowledge, it doesn’t snow there and yet somehow, you and these friends of yours decided to compete in a sport that requires snow where other countries that get snow have a little bit of an advantage, if not a lot. How did that all come up? Whose idea was it? Where did it come from?

For the Cool Runnings fans, they’ll remember Sanka in the movie racing this wooden cart down the winding mountain road so it’s like bobsledding except for the ice to crease the guys going down the side of a mountain in a cart. These two American guys realized that a big part of a bobsled race as a start is you need sprinters, so they went to the guys at our summer team. They didn’t want to do it because it was a harebrained idea. They came to the Army looking for athletes and people who were either brave or foolish enough to try this thing. My colonel suggested that I try out for the team. To go back to the whole business of goals and dreams, I’ve always had Olympic aspirations, so there’s like, “It’s a little bit different. It’s not running but am I going to go to the Olympics? Yes. Let’s jump on the sled, as it were.” Honestly, even for myself, initially, it sounded like a ridiculous idea until it didn’t sound like a ridiculous idea. I was like, “I could ride this thing to the Olympics literally and figuratively.”

I’m sure when you were doing this, you never dreamed it would become a movie.

That’s just icing on the cake. That’s the thing that Hollywood stories are made of. We got started. Not only did we have to contend with a fear of failure because it was a steep learning curve but we also had to deal with the ridicule. It’s not just some from a couple of friends who were teasing us but people from all over the world and the stuff in the press. The thing with people who tackle this fear of failure and ridicule is that they develop thick and tough skin. I have an attitude whereby if you laugh at me or tell me I can’t do something, it makes me more determined to do it.

[bctt tweet=”Let go of the fear of failure.” username=”John_Livesay”]

Let’s talk about the movie for a while because a lot of people fantasize that, “They’re going to make a movie of my life. A particular part of my life is going to be in a movie. Who will play me?” Were you happy with the actor that portrayed you? What did you think about watching that movie back after the first time?

The thing is that the characters in the movie are different from real-life characters. If I had to choose one, I’d say it was Yul Brynner, the baldheaded guy played by Malik Yoba, but more so because he was a dreamer. He’s a dude that wanted to go to Buckingham Palace to live. How I see myself as well as a dreamer. I never dreamed of going to Buckingham Palace to live, but I’m a dreamer. Overall, I enjoyed the movie. I thought it was a good human interest story with some real positive life lessons. It wasn’t true to form and I get it. If they had told a story as it unfolded truly, people think that some of it are corny. Fact is stranger than fiction.

It’s the ultimate underdog story. Rocky is an underdog movie about boxing and this happens to be even more of a dichotomy. A lot of movies, because I love storytelling so much, are around fish out of the water. I can think of a more fish out of water genre than someone from Jamaica competing in a bobsled Olympic competition. That’s part of the reason why our brains are drawn in to say, “What in the world is going on here?” How did you transfer that skill and achievement into becoming a motivational keynote speaker?

As I was working to qualify and compete in my third Olympic games, I ended up working with a guy who wanted to be my agent. I’d never had an agent before. It sounded cool. He goes like, “You should be a motivational speaker.” I’m like, “I’ll do that after the Olympics.” I wish there was a far more strategic approach to this. I went to the Olympics, came back, started telling my story and people resonated with it. One of the things I’ve learned over the years is that success principles are universal. There is something about my life, about your life and about this person over here that’s reading this. Each of us has a story we can tell that is going to resonate with somebody else. Encourage them and inspire them. I started with no final plan. I just started telling my story and here we are having a conversation.

When people are having trouble, what do you think is making them stay motivated? A lot of us say, “I’m going to set this goal, hit this quota and sales. I’m going to lose weight,” or whatever their goals are, then they hit the first block and give up. Do you have a story of when you had some obstacle come along either while you were competing for the Olympics and/or in your military career?

TSP Devon Harris | Cool Runnings

Cool Runnings: Success principles are universal. Each person has a story he can tell that is going to resonate with somebody else and courage them and inspire them.

 

I’ll tell you a story, which is a giving up story. When I was in high school running, my goal was to win gold and nothing else. I didn’t want silver or bronze but gold, and then for some reason, I thought I was not going to win the gold. I was the one that jogged. Finishing fourth is worse because I didn’t want any medal that wasn’t a gold medal. I ended up in this race where it wasn’t going as well as I expected it to go, and I started jogging. I did horribly and learned a valuable lesson because I was striving for perfection, which is a problem in itself. Perfection is amazing because it does motivate us to work like a maniac, but the thing is that in the end, you can never know until you see this thing through how it will work and end up.

I look back at that particular race like, “I could have probably won that race if I had given my best.” That’s the lesson. It’s not perfection but excellence giving off your absolute best at the moment. That best that you’ll give may not be the greatest performance of all time but in the end, you can go, “At that moment on that day, that’s all I had and I gave it all.” On one level, I hated the fact that I had that experience, but I’m so grateful for it because it has made me even more determined and resolute. When I do meet those obstacles, setbacks and frustrations, it’s not like I don’t feel them inside, and I don’t get frustrated but I absorb the disappointment and come off swinging.

What you said there is key. A lot of people think that if you’re an Olympic champion or successful in whatever, that you’ve never had a disappointment or an obstacle but to hear from someone like you saying, “I had disappointments. I just absorbed them as opposed to letting them stop me,” that concept is almost like an energetic, “I’m going to take it in and then let it out.” It’s not, “I’m going to take it in and have it freeze me.”

I use a metaphor. First of all, recognize that we don’t live in a world where those things don’t exist. I wish we did. I’m sure you do too, but we don’t live in a world like that so you have to learn. If you have ever watched boxing or any other contact combat sport, it is rare unless you’re Mike Tyson, who knocks out a guy in the first nineteen seconds. You’re not going to go with 10 or 15 rounds without getting hit so the dude or the girl who ends up winning got some good clobbering along the way but they didn’t go, “That hurts. I’m done.” They absorbed the shock, punch and pain, then they come out swinging again and that’s what we have to do in life.

How did you become Captain of the Olympic team? Is that something that the team votes on? You had it happen twice, so you did something right.

[bctt tweet=”Fear is the thing that keeps people from setting goals. And by simply not setting goals, you have already accepted failure.” username=”John_Livesay”]

Interestingly enough, when I started on the team, three of us were Army guys. One was a private. I was a Lieutenant at the time, and the other guy was a Captain. When we were voting for Team Captain, it was obvious that the soldiers were going to vote for the Army Captain to be Team Captain and then, that dude ended up leaving the Army, and I became an Army Captain afterward but I was always there from the beginning. I always, as you can imagine, had the lead role on the team. By the leadership roles that I played in 1992, I was voted team captain.

Those lessons of being a Team Captain for an Olympic team transfer over to being a leader in the corporate world when you’re giving talks?

Yes. In the same way, success principles are universal. Leadership principles are universal. Maybe, the talk about talks, the first thing is communication. As a leader, you must be able to and when I say communicate, not just curable speech and vomit all over people with information. It’s about talking to them at their level and connecting with them.

Not asking anybody to do anything that you wouldn’t do or can’t do. Is that also a part of it?

At least unwilling to do, because I don’t think that the leader on any team is necessarily going to be the guy or the girl who can do everything or do it better than everybody else but if you are expecting the team to sacrifice a certain way, you better be willing to do it as well. You can’t expect and that’s coming from my Army days. You can’t say, “Private Jones, you go run over there and draw the fire,” if you’re not willing to do it yourself so you can’t have the boardroom and the company ask Mary to make certain sacrifices if you, as a leader, isn’t willing to make those sacrifices.

TSP Devon Harris | Cool Runnings

Cool Runnings: The first thing for a leader to learn is communication; it’s about talking to your team at their level and connecting them.

 

The other thing I find very impressive is in the 2018 Olympic games in Korea, you were inducted as an Olympian for Life by the World Olympians Association for your contribution to society. What did that feel like when you got that honor?

It was surprising because I’m an Olympian and I assumed that I was going to be an Olympian for life. It was very flattering. It’s a program that started in Rio, where they honored five Summer Olympians. The next time around was in Pyeongchang, where they honored 5 Winter Olympians, and I was among the first 5. It’s cool to be honored by your peers. That’s one of the most flattering things when your peers go, “Among all of us, you are one of those guys who deserve to be honored.”

Are you involved with deciding who else gets inducted? Is there a criterion for that?

No. They gave it to me like, “Run along. Keep doing what you’re doing.” They have a committee that has smarter minds than mine.

What’s next for you? Are you going to continue to give talks to companies? You’ve got this great book out. What are your goals for the next year or so?

[bctt tweet=”Instead of letting others’ criticisms knock you down, let it energize you to prove them wrong. ” username=”John_Livesay”]

To go back to why I got that award from the World Olympians Associations, giving back is important. My foundation, the Keep On Pushing Foundation’s goal is to provide practical solutions to some of the issues that are preventing kids in disadvantaged communities from getting properly educated. We’ve started working at my elementary school in my old neighborhood and a couple of other schools. We distribute school supplies, breakfast programs and computer labs trying to set a foundation that’s going to help them to compete in the 21st century.

If someone wants to reach out to you to hire you as a motivational keynote speaker, where should they go?

I tell people I’m the easiest guy to find. You’ll probably disagree but DevonHarris.com is my website. They can email me directly from there.

Is there any last thought or a quote that you want to leave us with?

I could modify a quote by Thomas Alva Edison who says, “Whatever lies before you and behind you is totally and completely insignificant to what lies inside of you.” Remember that.

[bctt tweet=”Whatever lies before you and behind you is totally and completely insignificant compared to what lies inside of you. ” username=”John_Livesay”]

Devon, thanks for sharing your incredible story of tenacity and grit and inspiring all of us a little bit more.

Thank you for having me and for having a program like this that’s putting such good work out in the world. I encourage your audience to continue to support that work and share it with everybody they know because it’s amazing.

Thanks. As a storytelling keynote speaker, I love hearing other people’s stories and sharing them with the world, so it’s a great platform to do that. Yours has certainly been one that I know people will come back to more than once.

Thank you. Stay well.

 

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