Transcript
A (0:00)
If people don't listen to you, don't respect you, don't see you as leader, you are probably making the same mistake that I made for years. This is what everybody gets wrong about, leadership. And it has nothing to do with what you do and everything to do with how you think. Becoming a great leader comes down to really three steps. It's changing how you think about yourself, how you think about the person leading you, and how you think about the people that you lead. I only understood this when I studied the strategy behind one of the greatest leaders in history. I'm talking about the Phil Jackson paradox. The reason that Phil Jackson won 11 NBA championships more than any coach in history, is because he knew something about leadership that most people don't actually know. Phil Jackson coached Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant. He was also famous for something that drove people insane, which is he refused to call timeouts when his team was struggling on the court. So he would literally sit there on the bench and watch his players fight it out, figure it out, whatever, and he would not jump in. And so he said one time in an interview, he said, the more that I tried to exert power directly, the less powerful I became. So instead, what did he do? He used indirect actions to lead his team, which we will talk about more later. The results, though, were what is insane. He had 11 championships and players who could perform at the highest level, even when he was not there directing every play. He has gone down the hall of Fame. People know who Phil Jackson is anywhere you go. Compare that to Michael Jordan, who is also the greatest player of all time. But he has openly said he could never be a coach, and he has admitted that he has no patience for it. He has said that in multiple interviews, and it shows. Because his leadership style as a player was to demand that every single person match his intensity and work ethic. There was even a time where he punched Steve Kerr in the face during practice for not defending hard enough. So that temperament that made him an absolutely unstoppable player. It's also why coaching was never in the cards. Because coaching requires patience, delegation, letting other people make mistakes understand that they are their own people. So the same drive that made him the greatest player also also made him incapable of being the greatest coach. That's why the best leaders learn to let go of control, while the ineffective ones, the ones who never actually make it to the top, they try to hold onto the power at all costs. And that is the paradox. They believe stuff like, nobody cares as much as I do. It's probably one of the most common self delusion of ineffective leaders. Because the truth is, is that you haven't created the conditions for anyone else to care as much as you. You've set it up so that only your effort matters. And then you're really surprised when nobody else steps up to the plate. What I want you to get from this is that when you're a leader, not the star player, but a leader, your job is not to be the star player, it is to be the coach. Nobody ever won a championship because the coach could dribble faster than the point guard. Number two, how you think about yourself now. Here's what nobody tells you. The hardest part of letting go of control is not the part where you step back. It's the part where you have to take accountability for things that you didn't realize were under your control. So the day that I hit 50 million in revenue was actually one of the worst days of my life. That afternoon when we realized it was like, wow, wow, we hit 50 million. It was like our highest month ever. I went on a walk that afternoon with Alex. We're talking about, oh my gosh, we've hit 50 million of revenue. This is crazy. And I remember as we're talking about it, he was all excited, talking about like how crazy that is and how it's amazing. And I remember feeling zero excitement. I actually felt depressed because I was like, wow, I'm so tired. I'm so resentful. I feel like I've literally, like carried 120 people on my back across the finish line. And it felt like none of them were at my level. I felt like I had done it all by myself. And he was like, that's not good. You should talk to somebody about that. So I went to one of my mentors and I told her what was going on. And I was like, I need help or something. And it feels like everybody's wrong, but like, this company's so big and like, it feels like it's just getting away from me and I. I don't have control over it anymore. And I just kept complaining, to be honest. And I remember she looked at me and she said, if it's your business, then it's your fault. And I was like. And then she said, so what are you gonna do? Let it burn down or fix it? And I was like, I'm not gonna let it burn down. I remember thinking like, in that moment, I was like, I kind of want to. I wish I was the person who could sometimes, but I can't. I can't do it. And I remember in that moment just feeling this immense feeling of clarity because I understood, like, no, I'm not gonna let it burn down. It's like I have to fix it. And also anxiety because I realized that I and nobody else was going to undo what was done. I agreed with what she said. I was like, this is my fault. And it's not like I did it intentionally. It's like I didn't know what I was doing when I was building my business. Like I was new, I was inexperienced. Like I had hired people who were probably like got in above their bridges and now I have to be the one to either demote them, move them, put in people above them and that's me who has to do it. Like there's nobody else. Then I remember thinking to myself, like, what's the alternative? I'm like, I can't. Like I just, I don't have it. I'm not gonna shut it down. I'm not gonna be done with the business. Like the thought of the humiliation was enough to keep me going. Like, I'm not gonna do that to my team. I'm not gonna do that to the people that rely on us. Like, I'm just not gonna do that. So I asked myself, I'm like, how did I get here? Because I felt like I had tried to do everything right. I remember I went home that night and I was just kind of reflecting. I would write an end of day journal every day for like the first few years of my business. I realized that I had been playing the game as Michael Jordan when I needed to be playing as Phil Jackson. I had been trying to be the star player, not because I wanted the credit, but I was always saving the day. I was always being the rescuer. Me, me, me, me. I was the one that was imperative to the business running. And so I remember committing to, I said I'm going to commit to fixing this. Making sure that there's no freaking way in hell that a year from now this is the case of my business. I did that and it was terrible because basically what I had to do was like turn over an entire level of leadership. Which a year before I had hired and I felt like about it and I still feel like about it because it sucks. Like nobody likes to fire people, especially somebody who claims themselves to want to be a great leader. It really got tested because about a year into this and I'd finally brought in new leaders. I had other ones out, but team still didn't feel great. Like they Were like, man, there's a lot of change. There's a lot of stuff going on. We saw that somebody from our team, this person left, and they created a business that was essentially the exact same business as ours. They were trying to steal all our clients and they had relationships with a lot of the clients. And so thinking we really need to innovate the product, we need to redo our packaging and pricing because they essentially copied all our stuff. And I said, this looks gross. I don't want to. Well, when you're number one, you don't want to look like number two in the marketplace. And so I started thinking, like, how do we revamp everything so that it doesn't look this way? It was the first time that I recognized I could not be the one to come up with the idea to fix this. And so I remember I went to my leadership team and I said, guys, this one's for you. I know how to fix this. I know what I would do. But I want you guys to tell me what you should do in this situation. I want you to give me the plan and you have until Monday. And I was so terrified because it was like everything in my body was like so uncomfortable. I just wanted to jump in and do it. And instead I waited. And on Monday, I was actually really impressed. Like, they came to me, they had a really good plan and it actually ended up turning everything around. Like, we put together a brand new marketing campaign and they were able to execute it with like me meeting with them once a week. That really taught me so much of the time. Until we allow other people to do something on our behalf, we just don't believe it's going to happen. You kind of have to just let yourself be proven wrong by the universe by just letting go and just saying, like, if it doesn't work, it doesn't work. But I can't keep doing this. And that's kind of where I got to. There's a research study on high performing teams and it talks about how one of the number one factor for high performing teams, it is not talent, it's not intelligence, it's not experience. It's literally just psychological safety, which is the belief that you can make mistakes and take risks without being punished. Now what did I do in that moment? I showed them that they could take a risk and I wasn't going to punish them. The thing is, is that when the leader is the star player who always has the answer, they, without meaning to and without knowing, destroy that psychological safety because the team thinks I should depend on them. They are smarter than me. They should do this. By you stepping in constantly. You're showing them with your actions that you don't trust them. But when you give them space and you coach them and you say you do it, that signals confidence. That says, oh, they think if my boss gave that to me, then they believe I can do it. Maybe you don't believe they can do it, but you're willing to give them a shot and they're going to feel a lot better and they're going to perform better when they think that's the case. To be clear, that doesn't mean that you're not going to hold them to a high standard or push them to their max capability. I think psychological safety and high standards are not two opposite things. You need both of them to have a great organization because without safety, teams are going to essentially go quiet and they're not going to bring things up to you and they're probably not going to try and push themselves. Without standards, teams are going to get really comfortable. And so you need both of these things. If you want to avoid that, I recommend that you follow a few steps. One, track your time for two weeks. And this is all I want you to think about. Categorize all the chunks of time and the meetings you're in and the things you work on as either solving today's problems or building the team's ability to solve problems. If more than 50% of your time goes to you solving it directly, you're still the star player. And listen, it's hard to make this change over time. Like, I get it, it's much more satisfying to solve problems on your own. But I also, if you watch my channel, maybe you want to build something that goes far beyond you. That's what I would like to do. You have to learn these lessons early on. The second thing you want to do is you want to redefine your KPIs. One of the worst things you can do as in business is only measuring individual KPIs. Your measurement of your success is your team's performance. If your team hits their KPIs, then you did your job. If they don't, you didn't do your job. So stop focusing on your KPIs and start looking at who reports to you. Their KPIs are measurements of your success. Because what a leader does is a great leader multiplies the efforts of their team. They are there to remove friction and increase leverage for their team. That's it. Which makes success Easier, faster, and more fun. Now, the third thing I want you to do after you've done these two things is just identify and write down three things in your company or on your team that only you can do and nobody else, and ask yourself why. And now you could say, well, anybody could typically technically do anything. Well, what are three things that if you do, they get a four or five times greater return for your company than if somebody else does them. And then you look at everything else on your calendar and you're like, why am I still doing it? If you have capital and you've got capacity, why do you hold onto it? Maybe it's an identity. Maybe it's because you don't trust people. Either way, it's your problem to solve. The next step is to change the way that you think about the person that's leading you. Your boss. So this is for you, those of you who work in a company and you have a leader. Now, in order to do this, you need to understand what I call, like, the iceberg illusion of leadership. The best way to become a great leader is to become a great follower. When I worked my first couple jobs in gyms, I remember that I had a boss that would leave earlier than me and come in later than me. And I would think to myself, must be nice. I felt resentful. I mean, like, that's what I did because I was working really long hours. I was grinding, like, drinking, like, coffee grinds all day. And I felt like when my boss came in, they were like in a great mood all the time. And they were always, like, well rested and, like, had a good frame of mind. And my thought was like, well, a good boss should be there all the time. Like, they should be able to do my job better than me. And if they can't, then they're a bad boss. Like, if they don't know how to make the sale better than me, if they don't know how to train better than me, if they don't have the same skills with clients that I have, then that means that they're not good at their job. How can somebody who's worse at my job be my boss? I did not understand the point. What clicked for me was when my boss, I remember I walked into their office and I saw that they had tears in their eyes. And I said, is everything okay? And they said, I'm just dealing with a lot right now. And I said, well, what are you dealing with? Suddenly I hear everything. It's like, there's a huge staffing issue there's a huge budget issue where they can't bring enough resources. Their boss is asking them to do something that they don't have the resources to do. And there's a bunch of construction issues with one of the new locations. And I remember in that moment, that was when, like, the paradigm broke for me. I realized, holy, I did not realize how much this person was holding. And it was the first time I had empathy for my boss. From that moment, I was like, how can I take things off their plate? Instead of resenting them for not being able to do my job, I started saying, how could I help them do their job better? It's interesting because that one little shift in seeing that moment, like that glimpse of, let's say, like, vulnerability, it changed how I was treated, how they developed me, and ultimately my entire career trajectory because they offered me a management position not even 10 months into the job. Now, why was that? This is what a lot of people don't get. There's this iceberg illusion of leadership. You think about any organization like an iceberg. There's the work you see, the tasks, the meetings, the client facing or team facing stuff. It's like above the waterline. Just assume that what you see is 10%. The other 90% is strategy, politics, financial decisions, preventing crises, managing up, managing sideways, negotiating, hiring, creating a culture, firing, protecting the team from they'll never know about. And so when you judge your Boss by the 10% you see you will always be underwhelmed by their ability. The whole point of them being above you is to shield you from all the shit they deal with because you're supposed to focus on your job and they are supposed to protect you from everything else. So when you understand your boss's job is not to do your job better than you, it's to do a different job. Their job is not to do your job better than you can. It's to make decisions and operate and do a completely different job than you do. And to see ahead and deal with problems and open up opportunities for you that you didn't even know that they will do and that they will never get credit for. What I learned from that experience is how you think about the person leading. You will determine how leadable you are, and how leadable you are determines how fast you grow. And the people who rise in the organizations, they are not the ones who think they're smarter than their boss. They're the ones who figure out how to make their boss's job easier and how to be a great direct report. So when you shift from my boss should serve me, My boss should be better than me at these things to how can I take things off my boss's plate? My boss should be better than me at their job, not mine. Two things will happen. One, your boss is going to trust you more, and they're going to give you more stuff. And then two, you're going to develop more skills because they give you that stuff. Which then leads to three, you're going to grow way faster and you're gonna get more skills than everybody else around you. So one thing you could do this week is you could literally ask your boss one question. What's on your plate right now that I could take off? A lot of people think to themselves, they're like, well, why would I help them do their job? So you can learn, mother. What are you talking about? If I could take something off of Elon Musk or Jeff Bezos play, I do it. If they were like, hey, you can be my janitor for a week, I would do it because I want to learn. Most people never ask these questions, and they never do it because they let their ego get in the way and they believe all the they see on social media about how bad bosses are and how bad it is to work in companies, blah, blah, blah. Those people don't get noticed, they don't grow, and they certainly don't have lives they want. So replace resentment with curiosity. Instead of saying, must be nice that they leave early, try thinking, I wonder what they're dealing with that I don't see that they have to get down with more time to recoup from work. That one. Reframe. It is the difference between an employee mindset and a leadership mindset. Number four is how you think about the people that you lead. Now you. You are ready for the higher level of leadership. This comes when you change how you think about the people that you lead. So if you want to become a top 1% leader, you need to understand another key aspect of what we call Phil Jackson's strategy, the triangle offense. So this is not just a basketball strategy. It's a very, very good leadership philosophy. In most offenses, there's a point guard who controls the ball and makes all the decisions. The triangle eliminated that. Every player had to read the defense and make their own decisions. So what that meant was there was no single decision maker. So Kobe Bryant couldn't just, like, ISO ball his way through the triangle, and Shaq couldn't just demand the ball in the post. They actually had to trust their teammates and More importantly, their teammates had to develop the basketball IQ to make real time decisions under pressure. Phil Jackson forced this not by giving speeches about teamwork, but by designing a system where individual talent, dominance, authority wouldn't work. He literally created the conditions where the collaboration was not optional. It was the only path to success. Now, the result in the first few weeks was always panic because people were so used to being told what to do and would escalate it to Phil Jackson, and then what he would do is send them back. And the first month, I remember they talked about, like, how frustrated everyone was. Why won't you just tell us what to do? Why don't you tell us what the play is? But then by the second month, because he knew you have to wait, something shifted with everybody. The players started talking to each other. They start solving problems together, essentially being their escape hatch. The real work in leadership is learning to delegate not just tasks, but decisions. If you delegate a task, it means, go do this thing. I've already figured out that's to the degree I trust you. When you delegate decision, it means, here's the outcome we need. I need you to figure out how to get there, which means I trust you. If you want to create doers, then give people tasks. If you want to create leaders, give people decisions. I had to let people make decisions that I disagreed with, and I still do. There's so many things I don't fully agree with in my company, and I have to watch them take approaches that I wouldn't always take and still won't. And sometimes they fail. And I'm like, I thought that would fail, but sometimes they don't. And I'm like, wow, I suck. I can't believe I was gonna tell them not to do that. And sometimes their approach actually works better than what mine would have. And I'm like, I'm getting old. But here's the thing. Both outcomes were very valuable because in both cases, they are building the muscle to think and lead independently. And so I have stopped asking the question, did they do it the way that I would have done it? And I start asking the question, did they achieve the outcome we wanted? That has changed everything about how I lead because it just, it completely removes me as a person from it. And it makes it all about what we do for the company, because we are all stewards of the company. And remember this, companies plateau at the competence of the founder. If you are the genius with a thousand hands, then your ceiling is always the company's ceiling. So if you want to avoid that Take these few steps. Audit your delegation. Look at everything you've delegated this month. For each item, ask yourself, did I delegate a task or did I delegate a decision? And I'm gonna go ahead and tell you it's probably mostly tasks. You're probably building people who come to you for every decision point. They can do the tasks really well, but they don't think so. Then you have to ask yourself, how do I switch that? How do I create decision makers? The second one going with that is create a decisions I no longer make list. Okay, look, the back at the last week, two weeks of your life, what are all the decisions that you made? Walk through your day, go through your calendar. Remember the meetings you were in, what you were talking to, the conversations you had. What decisions did you make that you don't need to make? Somebody else can make them and then hand them off. You don't need to approve them. Just, like, let your team own them end to end, and resist that, like, very compulsive urge to overrule everything unless the building is actually on fire. And then the third thing is replace. How would I do this? With did they achieve the outcome? Okay, you need to stop measuring your team's success by whether they did it your way. Measure them by if they got the result. Now, I'm not saying disregard all values. I always tell people, I'm like, listen, our values are there because we abide by the values to get the results. But your way and my way are gonna look different. And there are usually multiple paths to the right outcome. And sometimes their path is actually gonna be better than yours, but you're never gonna find out if you don't give them the shot. And the last thing I would say is schedule your own absence. Okay? So for every role that you play in the business, absolutely identify who could do this next. I'm doing this right now. Who could do this next? If the answer is nobody, that's probably like, your most urgent priority is to find somebody who can or bring somebody on who can't. Because the goal is to always be training your replacement. Not because you are leaving, but because that is what's going to free you up when the next opportunity comes. And if you are not growing your business, your department, your team, who is. And so next time there's a crisis, don't just jump in and rescue the team and rescue the thing. Go to your team and say, I trust you guys. You guys are smart. Come to me on Monday with your plan to solve this. And then sit on your hands. I don't know. Go on a hike. Lose reception. Go camping. Distract yourself. I know it's hard. I get it. By the second time you do this and the third time you do it and the fourth time you do it, you're going to see that people really rise to the occasion because you stop being the escape hatch. If you are serious and actually interested in becoming the kind of leader that your team wants to follow, you can go ahead and check out Layla's letters. I know it's cheesy. This is a weekly memo that I send to my leadership team, so I send it in our Slack channel. I just send like once, maybe twice a week sometimes from Feeling inspired. It's not filtered. We don't write it for this. I've been doing it for years and I decided to repackage it for my newsletter. It has the frameworks how I'm thinking to build people and build businesses. So if you're interested in that, you can go ahead and grab the link in the description and you can sign up for it. So you just learned how to think like a leader, but if you can't speak like one, none of it's going to stick. So go ahead, watch this next video. Learn the top five skills that make you sound like a top 1% CEO.
