Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - EMBRACE The 4 Phases Of Change With Jason Feifer The Editor & Chief Of Entrepreneur Magazine Episode 251
Episode Date: September 13, 2022In This Episode You Will Learn About: The Beta state  Discovering new possibilities Rebuilding yourself    The 4 phases of change Resources: Website: www.jasonfeifer.com Read Bu...ild For Tomorrow Join How to Future-Proof Your Career & Life Listen to Build For Tomorrow LinkedIn: @Jason Feifer Instagram & Twitter: @heyfeifer Overcome Your Villains is Available NOW! Order here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com If you haven't yet, get my first book Confidence Creator Show Notes: We are in a CONSTANT state of evolution! As humans, we are always being revised and redefined. I’m joined again by Jason Feifer, Editor and Chief of Entrepreneur Magazine, and an expert on ALL things that CHANGE. Change can feel like a loss, but it DOESN’T have to! You gain wonderful NEW inspiration and lessons when you step outside your comfort zone. Try EMBRACING change and you’ll discover NEW possibilities. About The Guest: He’s been on the show once before, and I am THRILLED to have him back! Jason Fiefer, the Editor and Chief of Entrepreneur Magazine, a start up advisor, and host of the podcast Build For Tomorrow is here to help us all EMBRACE change. Tune in to discover his expert tools and techniques for adapting to change!    If You Liked This Episode You Might Also Like These Episodes: How To Feel Good About Standing Out Instead Of Shrinking Back, With Heather! The Key to EXPONENTIAL Success in 2022 with Aaron Bare Why You MUST Be Willing To Go For It With Heather! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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We are in a state of constant evolution.
We should live in permanent beta,
which is to say to think of ourselves as a product in beta
that never is finalized,
is always being refined and revised.
And if we think of it that way,
when the change comes to us, even
if it comes to this thing that we feel like we've reached our wouldn't go back moment,
we've redefined ourselves, we got there and now change is coming again. We have to just
see that as another part of the natural cycle of things and an opportunity to build even
more.
I'm on this journey with me. Each week when you join me, we are going to chase down
our goals. If you've ever come at diversity first aid and set you up for a better tomorrow.
After no sleep, I'm ready for my close-up.
Hi and welcome back. I'm so excited for you to meet my guest this week.
He's been on the show once before, but we're glad to have Jason fight for back.
He's the editor in chief of Entrepreneur Magazine, a startup advisor,
close to the podcast, build for tomorrow and problem solvers,
and has taught his techniques for adapting to change
at companies including Pfizer, Microsoft,
Chipotle, Draftings, and Wix.
He has worked as an editor at Fast Company,
Men's Health, Boston Magazine,
and's written about business and technology
for the Washington Post.
Slate, popular mechanics and others.
Jason, thank you so much for being back with us today.
I am honored to be back.
Great to see you.
Great to see you too.
So we were just offline talking about the fact
that both of us are going through moves right now
to get out from small time living,
two bedroom type apartments and get into
a bigger, spacious opportunities.
And I know that you just wrote a book about change and adapting change.
And it's just so funny that right now you and I are like all in and racing change in
this moment.
I know.
I am excited for your move.
I'm excited for my move.
I'm excited for everybody's move.
So this book built for tomorrow, it's funny.
We were talking about where we live and we're going to move because I wrote this book during this major disruption in my life.
So when the pandemic began, literally the day that schools closed down in New York City,
which is where I live, my wife and I, we have two little boys and we live in the right now
at 1,000 square foot, two bedroom apartment.
And we were like, we don't know how long we're going to be locked in here, but it's going to get crazy with these two little kids. So my parents live in Boulder,
Colorado, and they have a house and outdoor space. And we thought that's just going to be a much
better environment for our kids. So we went out there for what we thought it would be, I don't know,
who knows, but turned out to be 18 months, which is crazy. I know.
And the reason was because of schools, because camps opened up out, the summer camp opened up
out there and hadn't opened up in New York.
And then we got them into a school that was going to be open the whole year, whereas it
was kind of iffy in New York.
So anyway, we stayed for 18 months.
And I got to tell you, I went through this process when I was out there, which I then
recognized in so many other people,
which was, I spent quite a while, once we knew we were going to be there for a while, I spent
quite a while defining myself against this new area. I was like, I'm a New Yorker and
oh, this, all this boulder stuff. I don't like, everybody here just wants to talk about hiking
and these are not my people, right? You know, this is what we do. The very first thing that we do
when change comes to us is we panic and we try to hold on to what we had before because we experience
the change as a loss. And I was feeling a loss for my identity as a New Yorker because here I was
in Boulder. And when I came to realize after 18 months there was, oh, actually, it's kind of
wonderful to step away from work and go on a hike in the middle of the day. I'd never done that
before. I never even thought of that. And that doesn't mean that I lose my identity. You were the
things that I kind of orient myself around, but rather that I can add things and I could discover
new things. And I came out of that experience with great new friends and some new lifestyle habits, frankly.
And a sense that I had reached what I now like to call
wouldn't go back the final phase of change,
where I say, I have something to new and valuable.
I wouldn't want to go back to a time before I had it.
I mean, we came back to New York,
but something in me had changed.
I wanted something different.
I wanted a somewhat different pace of life.
And that drove us, for example, to my wife and I, to find a house in Brooklyn that's
further out.
It's not in the center of the action like we're in now.
We can't just walk around the corner and have amazing restaurants anymore.
But we have this space and it's going to afford a different kind of pace and lifestyle.
And I got that out of this change that I didn't know I needed, but I did.
Wow. That is shocking. I completely understand when you're talking, I'm thinking in my mind,
the analogy for me is when I got fired. And when it first happened, you know, just sheer
panic, what is going to happen, the unknown, the uncertainty is so scary. How do I fast
forward through this window of time and get to something stable?
And like you said, and then inevitably reaching a place through your four step process,
where you are finally in a moment saying, oh, I don't want to go back again, I'm so glad this
all happened. I am raised this new thing. But those middle steps in that beginning are definitely
challenging. Can you break down those four steps for everybody?
Yeah, so I gave you the book ends of it.
So this is something I realized during the pandemic,
I was going into it.
For years, I've been studying how entrepreneurs are adaptable
because I found that adaptation is really the key driver
for success, but my question was, how are they doing it?
Because it doesn't seem to be something people are born with.
It seems to be something that they are learning.
And then the pandemic happened and I got to watch, we all got to watch.
Everybody go through the same change at the same time, but some people seem
to move through it faster and some people move through it slower.
And some people tried to hold on to what came before.
And I realized that everybody goes through change in four phases.
They are panic, adaptation, new normal,
and wouldn't go back.
And it's really, it's illuminating to watch people
go through this at different pieces.
Because what you get to realize is that everything
that you experience is totally normal.
Even if you are deeply successful,
even if you have a lot of advantages
that other people don't,
you will still panic at the very beginning of change.
You will.
And then you will be forced to figure out
how to adapt what are the things that are available to you.
And then you will develop a new normal.
You'll start to have a foundation that you can build upon
and you'll discover some new familiarities.
And eventually you will reinvent the thing that you're doing or the way that
you think about yourself. And you will get to that point that wouldn't go back moment
which is available for us all. And I think that the greatest challenge is not moving through
these phases because we will all move through them but rather that how fast can we move
through them, how efficiently can we move through them? How thoughtfully can we move through them? Because that's how we get
to new opportunity and growth. Well, sometimes before anyone else does.
How do you get through the panic phase faster? Because for me, I hate that phase. That
is like, oh, it's my worst nightmare. I can't stand it.
Right. Me too. It's awful. Feeling that panic is terrible.
And there are a number of things that we can do.
First of all, I think we need to recognize what we're actually doing in our heads, which
I alluded to a little bit earlier, but just dive a little deeper into it.
What we are doing is we are equating change with loss.
So when change comes to us, the very first thing that we do is that
we identify the thing that we're going to lose as a result. I'm no longer going to have access
to this. I'm no longer going to be able to do this comfortable thing. I used to do things in a
certain way and maybe now I'm going to have to change it and that feels like loss. And then
because what we want most of all is to be able to know what's coming next.
Like, we all want to know the future for ourselves.
We start to extrapolate based on the information that we have.
And if what we're seeing is loss, we're going to extrapolate the loss.
So we're going to say, well, because I'm losing this, I'm going to lose that.
And then because I lost that, I'll lose this other thing. And then very quickly, we start to feel like we have absolutely
nothing under our feet anymore. And so one of the things we need to do is just simply
reframe the experience as one in which we are trying to find game. Game is harder to
see because you don't see it immediately. That story that I told you about moving to
Boulder, one of the great games that came out. That story that I told you about moving to Boulder,
one of the great gains that came out of that was that I started to be more mindful of what I needed
outside of work and thinking more about my physical health and taking time for myself. I didn't
know that I needed that. That was gain that came later for a long time. I was just focused on loss.
So how do we do it? Well, I found that three simple questions can
help start to get us there. And those questions are number one, what is the new thing that
we're doing, right? Just like, let's just lay it out. Number two, what new habit or skill
are we learning as a result? And then number three, how can that be put to good use? Because
once you limit the way in which you're evaluating something based on how can this be put to good use? Because once you limit the way in which you're evaluating something based on how can this
be put to good use, you're forcing yourself to at least have some kind of answer there.
And it may not be the right answer.
You may not know exactly, but what you're going to start to do is explore and experiment
with your hypotheses.
Well, how can this be put to good use?
I don't know.
I guess if I live in this different city than I did before, one of the things that I'm learning is how to live somewhere else.
I didn't know that I wanted to live somewhere else. How can that be put to good use? Well,
I guess if I realize that I can make it work somewhere else, that tells me that I don't maybe need
to hold on to everything that I'm comfortable and familiar with, and I can
start to open myself up to the possibility that I'm more adaptable than I thought I was, and maybe
new opportunities that I had discounted or ones that I should consider now, right? You see how you can
start to push yourself to reframe things as change as gain, and that really starts to push down
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Heather, I don't know how you're going to produce this afterwards, but what just happened
in case we cut it out is at my seven-year-old just came into the room and demanded that I get
up and get him something out of the fridge that he can very clearly get himself.
And then he decided to put my Oculus 2 on, even though it wasn't on, and then he could
say he couldn't see.
And it was a whole thing.
And then finally, he left.
You said, thank goodness for editors, which is true.
Thank goodness for editors. But also, I realized this interesting thing during
the earlier days of the pandemic, when my kids were home all the time, as, you know, yeah,
as yours, as you know, very well. I saw a major eye roll there, which was that they would
come and they would like burst in on me doing things that were live. There was no editing.
I sometimes I was giving a keynote talk that people were paying me to do, right?
And they would come burst in
and they started climbing all over me.
I was doing like live webinars for entrepreneur
and the kids would come bursting in.
And at first, my instinct was to just get them away
as fast as possible or ignore them or something.
But then I came to realize that for the audience, the kids interrupting was a highlight because
it was relatable and because they have gone through that themselves and because it showed
this humanness of experience that's far different from my professional presentation.
And they really liked it.
And I came to realize that sometimes the things that we think are dragging us down
can actually be great assets.
And so now, if we were doing this live,
if you and I were doing this live,
I would have played that differently.
Like when my kid came in, I engaged him,
but I was basically like,
how can you leave this room, right?
But if we were doing it live,
what I would have done is I would have just grabbed him,
plopped him in my lap and kept going.
And he would have said something funny and I would have made a joke about it and everyone would have loved it. And afterwards, people would have done is I would have just grabbed him, plopped him in my lap and kept going. And he would have said something funny,
and I would have made a joke about it,
and everyone would have loved it.
And afterwards, people would have told me
that that was the thing that they remember.
So sometimes, we can't always be so afraid
that something is going to go wrong
because sometimes the thing that goes wrong
can be turned into the thing that is most memorable
in the good way.
Oh my gosh, I love that.
And thank you for sharing it.
This is so good.
And in my mind,
this is what popped into my mind right before the pandemic hit. I was interviewing Sarah Blakely
live in Boston for a hyper growth conference for drift sales and marketing event. And when I was
walking out in front of her to introduce her and my feet get really, really sweaty when I'm nervous.
And of course, I always have four inch heels on.
And so I'm walking out my Christian Louboutins and for a thousand of people was
Sarah Blakely right behind me and my foot comes out of my shoe. And I almost face plan on the
stage in front of everyone. I was able to catch myself. And so I jumped up and said, major shout out to the hometown girl who didn't face
plan. And everyone went wild,
geez, and like it was hope. They thought it was so funny.
Right? I just need a joke about it. And then Sarah started
laughing and we high five. And like the next thing you knew,
everybody was with us. And after the event, people were like,
wow, that was so funny that you made a joke about falling
out like, who knew that was going to be the thing that got people fired up?
I know because that's the human thing, right? Because the people in the audience are not
in a position to be getting on stage and interviewing Sarah Blakely, but they definitely have fallen
in their shoes, right? And so when they see you do it, they feel that instant connection.
This is what we
should want. We should want to break down boundaries. And we should also be open to that sometimes
the greatest things that are going to happen to us are the ones that we didn't plan for it.
As you were telling that story, which I love, I was thinking about I was in Maine last week. And
there's this in Oxford, Maine, just this tiny little town, there's a,
there's like a country store or like a farmstand or whatever
called Smedbergs. And Smedbergs has a giant sign
in front of it advertising that they sell
lobstur, L-O-B-E-S-T-E-R. Now, what is going on with that?
So I went inside and I asked because I was like,
that's not how you spell lobster.
And surely somebody has told them that, right?
And so the story is that, is that years and years ago,
the owner was making a sign to advertise their lobster.
And she had done it, L-O-B-S-T-E-R.
And one of her employees was like,
oh no, no, no, you're missing an E.
It's L-O-B-E-S-T-E-R.
And so the owner, who was like, oh, well,
I guess she knows knows made a sign that
said lobsters and then put it out front. And people thought it was hilarious. And they, you know,
they very quickly realized that it was a misspelling, but it distinguished them. Suddenly,
Smedbergs became the lobster place. And people started to remember it as the lobster place,
which you know, in a region where everybody's selling lobster,
I mean, a lobster is a lobster lobster is, it's hard to differentiate. And so they've kept that thing up for years now.
And they even sell shirts that say home of the lobster and they really leaned into it.
And people love it.
People love Smedbergs.
And, you know, you could have been embarrassed by that and you could have taken the sign down immediately,
but by owning it and having fun with it and just being
able to break down that barrier a little bit between you and the people that
you serve, you can really just create so much.
That's so funny.
And I love that they developed a product line with t-shirts out of it.
I mean, what it's like a great, unique value proposition.
They've separated themselves from everybody else out there doing the same thing
and made them self-memorable. So that's an excellent story. I love it. Okay, so we've talked about
the poor phase is what's the most important phase in your opinion? Well, it's a good question.
You can't have one without the other. You're going to go through them all. I think that the most
important phase is also the most challenging one. And that is the obvious way to answer that is wouldn't go back is the most important because
it's the goal of the whole thing.
What you want to do is get to this moment where you say I have something so new and valuable
that I wouldn't want to go back to a time before I had it.
That's the goal.
But I'll tell you, it's also the most challenging because once we get to wouldn't go back, we're
going to want to hold onto that for dear life, right? We're going to have this new thing. It was hard to get to wouldn't go back, we're going to want to hold onto that for dear life, right?
We're going to have this new thing.
It was hard to get to, you know, think about it for yourself, right?
I mean, you reinvented your career and now you've got what you have now and it's amazing,
but it's not going to be like this for the next 70 years, right?
Some other kind of change is going to come to it.
And when that happens, all of us, we're going to say, oh, no, but I went through this whole
process and it was so hard to get here.
And I don't want to give it up now.
Right.
And what we have to remember is that we are in a state of constant evolution.
We should live in what Reed Hoffman, the co-founder of LinkedIn likes to call permanent beta, which is to say to think of ourselves as a product in beta
that never is finalized, is always being refined and revised.
And if we think of it that way,
well, then when the change comes to us,
even if it comes to this thing that we feel like we reached
our wouldn't go back moment, we've redefined ourselves,
we overcame obstacles, there was a lot of struggle
and challenge
and we got there and now change is coming again.
We have to just see that as another part
of the natural cycle of things
and an opportunity to build even more.
I think again, we cannot go to this place
where we think that the only things
that we will ever have are the things we already have.
We need to instead be able to set ourselves up
to think that when
change comes, it's an opportunity to upgrade. Now, one of the ways that we can do that is a
really important mental exercise that I think we shall go through. Everybody should go through this.
I should be curious if you have and what your answer is, is to very clearly separate what we do
and why we do it. And the reason for this is because I think that we too often identify with the product of our work,
with the output of our work. We think of ourselves as, what do you do? Well, what I do is I produce this thing.
And that's fine, but if you identify too closely with that, if that's your identity,
then as soon as that changes and it will change,
you are going to feel completely unmoored. Heather, if you thought of yourself only as
a podcaster, and then tomorrow, the podcast industry falls apart, right? Well, you're going
to feel completely unmoored. You're going to feel like, well, now I'm nothing. But if
you can identify something about yourself
that is so core, the value that you provide to people
is so intrinsic to you that it can survive any change.
It is the thing that does not change
even in times of change.
Well, then you have an orientation point
whenever there's a moment of disruption.
So for example, for me, I have the sentence that I tell myself, I tell stories in my own voice, right? This is very different
from say, I'm a magazine editor because I'm a magazine editor is contingent upon me having
a job in magazines easy to not happen. But I tell stories in my own voice. Well, stories
is anything. Stories is newspapers and magazines and podcasts and speaking on stage and books and whatever.
And in my own voice, I'm setting the terms for how I'm going to operate.
This is the work that I will do.
Now, anything can change.
Anything can come at me.
After this conversation, I could check my email and entrepreneur could say, Jason, it's
been a good run.
We're sick and tired of your face and goodbye, right?
And I hope that doesn't happen.
I'm not not interested in that happening.
But if it does happen, it doesn't impact my ability
to tell stories in my own voice.
I have an orientation point.
We all need that.
Have you thought through something like that for yourself?
No, I haven't, but it's really, really helpful.
And I think like you said,
it's going to help everybody listening right now
because what I just walked through in my mind was when I got fired, I felt like I'd lost
everything because I lost my chief revenue officer title, right?
I wasn't thinking of what's intrinsic to me that I can bring with me wherever I go.
I wasn't thinking that way.
I was thinking, this has been taken from me and I had a non-compete.
I had to leave an abandon what I was an expert
in. That's when the panic set in Step 1, panic came in hard, right? But then I also thought
to myself, to your point, with the pandemic, I went through a much smaller version of that,
but I had really stepped into my speaking business and taken off a year before the pandemic
came. So I was really identifying with myself as a speaker. That too, now I have become in my mind.
But same thing, using that same methodology,
it doesn't need to be a title of speaker,
a title of chief revenues or a title of editor.
It's who are we intrinsically so that we don't,
that can never be taken from us.
And I've never actually sat down to do that exercise.
So thank you so much for sharing that.
That's really powerful.
I give that advice when I speak to companies a lot
because people bring me in to help their teams navigate
moments of big change sometimes it's in their industry
sometimes they've gone through a re-orc.
And I ask people to answer that for themselves.
And the answers are really interesting, right?
Because to give a sentence to yourself,
to give a kind of mission that isn't subject to change is to drill down really,
really deep.
And so people will often they'll say things like, I am a problem solver, right, or I am
a builder, or I help people achieve their own greatness or things like that, right?
And you know, if you spend a little more time with it, you can maybe get a little more eloquent. But like, I think those are really wonderful starting
points because that's something that's transferable. It's really interesting when you,
when you got fired from that job, of course, the very first thing so natural that you thought of was,
okay, I don't have access to that title anymore. And I don't have access to being able to do exactly
the kind of work
that I was doing in the arena that I was doing it.
And so that felt like a total loss.
But the reason why you have been able to build everything that you've built is because
there were these deeper transferable skills inside of you that you weren't immediately
recognizing, but that were there.
And then you started to apply them in other areas and other
arenas. It turns out that you had a whole body of knowledge that you could build upon and that you
could use in completely different ways. And you didn't see that at first because you were so laser
focused in on identifying with the product of your work rather than going deep enough and seeing
what are the things that are transferable. And when I talk to people who have gone through these kinds of changes,
I often hear a moment like this where they lost access to whatever it was they had before,
and then they spent some time figuring out, like, what do they have?
What do they have?
And it turns out that what they have is pretty powerful.
Stacey London, it comes to mind.
For example, Stacey London, her name people might recognize she was the coast of what not to wear on TLC for a long time. So Stacy's become a friend
and after a great run in television, she basically, you know, I mean, she would, this is how she would
say it. So she basically kind of aged out of it. Like she, you know, like the television networks
just weren't as interested in her and she was feeling that and she was struggling with it. She's
getting older and she had this opportunity to take over a company called State of Menopause, a company
that makes products that help women with symptoms of menopause. And at first, Stacey said,
well, this isn't me. I don't know how to do this. I, you know, I've been in television
my whole career. And then she realized, no, no, no, I'm a truth talker. That's actually
what's at my core.
That's what drove my success in television.
And that's what would drive my success here
because I'm gonna engage in difficult subjects.
That's what I did in television.
And now I'm gonna engage people in difficult subjects
with this company.
And once you recognize that deep, deep thing inside of you,
it really liberates you to find other opportunities
that you know you can you can master.
That's so good. And yes, I definitely have followed her and I think she's an amazing person.
I love that she was able to make that change. This is what just caught in my mind. It's not who you
think you are, to you think you are not. Right? And it's that idea that you're saying, okay,
is that possible? Well, that definitely isn't possible for me.
We put ourselves in these boxes,
and I remember for me having that one day,
I don't remember, it was right after I met Elvester Ann,
and he said to me, you're writing a book.
I allowed him to speak a truth into me,
and I said, okay, if he believes that,
that could, it's possible,
maybe because he thinks it,
and I had him on a pedestal,
and I'll tell you, I sought with that for a while,
like, could I really be an author, you know,
does someone need to give me permission?
You go through all of these conversations with yourself.
When at the end of the day,
I finally made a decision, months into this.
You know what, I'm blowing up the lanes in my life
and I'm gonna lift my life lanelessly
with my talents wherever I go.
And I'm sure I'm gonna fail at some of them.
I failed miserably with Perry Ellis and a clothing line that we launched and that did
did not take up.
But then my book didn't incredibly well.
My podcasted it, like there were things other things that did well, but it was all the
key was just to keep moving forward instead of getting caught up hung up and stuck on
what we are not.
So I really love that.
I love that way of thinking about it.
I will add another way of framing that exact idea,
which came to me via Malcolm Gladwell.
So I was interviewing Malcolm Gladwell
for the magazine a number of years ago.
And I asked him this question that was a little selfish
because I was curious as a person in media myself.
I wanted to know how Malcolm, who is a, for people
who don't know, bestselling author and top podcaster and every huge, it's hard to compare.
And, you know, everything that Malcolm does is so distinctively Malcolm Gladwell.
Right? Like, there's just an essence to the things that he does. And I wondered how he has a filter
for what is a Malcolm Gladwell project?
How does he look at something and say,
this is a Malcolm Gladwell project or this isn't?
So I asked him that and he said,
you know, to the best of his ability,
it's not 100% possible to do this, of course,
but to the best of his ability,
he tries not to define himself at all because he said,
and these were the words,
it was as soon as he said these words,
I jotted them down and I slapped them on the wall because self perceptions are powerfully limiting. And yeah, it's a great
line. Self perceptions are powerfully limiting because if you have a very specific idea of who you are
and what you do, you will turn down everything that does not match that. But as it turns out,
some of the greatest things that we will do were the ones that fall outside of some narrow
conception of us. Malcolm gave the example of podcasting. He had been a New Yorker writer and a
book author, and the idea of a podcast, it first didn't make sense to him. You know, then why would I do that? I'm a written word kind of guy.
And after enough conversations, he decided, you know, why don't I give it a shot?
And now, of course, it's a core part of his of his brand. It's great. He has a show.
It's called Revision Assistory. It's fantastic. And I really try to digest that.
It's hard because we all want to feel like we have a good sense of ourselves and we should.
But we should also be pushing back against that and asking ourselves, what else can we
do?
What am I missing here?
Where are the opportunities that I could thrive in that I haven't even given myself a chance
to explore?
So I'll just say it again, self-perceptions
are powerfully limiting.
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One thing that I was just thinking of in regards to your framework and the exercises in
the book, did you think of applying this?
We're talking about everything from a business context.
Did you think of applying this to relationships as well?
Oh, yeah.
I think that a lot of this stuff actually can apply really well to basically any part
of your life.
I'll give you a funny story, a funny embarrassing story.
So one, I believe that we should treat failure like data, which sounds like a very business
thing.
But when we try something and it doesn't work out, instead of thinking this is a terrible
failure, we instead say, this taught me something.
In fact, it taught me something that I now know better than other people.
And that's a powerful insight that can be used in lots of ways. Michael Dell, when I interviewed him of Dell,
told me that he keeps, he keeps me mentors from the company's failures in his office.
Not as a reminder of what went wrong, but rather as a reminder that sometimes when things go wrong,
they teach you what you need to know to build something correct the next time.
And so I really have always tried to say,
what can I learn from this thing that just happened?
And now I will tell you the embarrassing story.
So when I moved to New York, I moved to New York,
I was 28 years old, I was living in Boston previously,
and I just broken up with my girlfriend
of don't fall on the floor when I say it, of nine years.
We started dating sophomore year of college, and we were together until I decided to move to
New York and that broke us up.
Obviously, it was not the right relationship, or we would have advanced that thing along.
But anyway, point is that I moved to New York.
I was single.
I had never been on a date before, never.
And because, you know, I started dating this girl, sophomore year of
college. So I'm excited. I go on to okay, Kupit. And like, you know, immediately start chatting
with, and I should just to situate, this is 2008. So this is like pre Tinder and in fact,
pre dating apps. So like, I'm on, I'm on desktop here. And I'm on OKCupid and I meet this girl who in my memory,
I think her name was Talia.
I could have forgotten her name at this point.
But anyway, so Talia and I kind of hit it off
and we decide, let's go out.
And so again, I don't know anything about dating.
So I suggest why don't we go get dinner this Friday,
which later I would find that's not a good plan for a first date.
But because there's too much commitment, right. So anyway, we meet for dinner. We meet
under this bridge. We meet under the Queensborough bridge and then we walk to dinner, which is a few
blocks away. And we sit and we have a great conversation and goes really well afterwards. She's like,
you want to walk around? It's great. So we walk around the city for an hour or something and we end up back under the Queen's Baroque Bridge where we admit. And we're talking for a moment and
then, you know, conversation seems to kind of wind down and she's looking expectantly at
me or I think she is. And I don't know what she is expecting because I've never, ever
done this before. And so I think to myself, what am I supposed to do? And like, what is a 20 something do in this moment?
Before I tell you what I did do,
what do you think I should have done?
I don't know.
I mean, is she wanting you to kiss her?
Or was she saying, why haven't you taken her dinner?
I had to be one of the two.
Yeah.
So I was thinking, all right, yes.
I mean, that was definitely one of the options, right?
Like, does she want me to kid?
Like, what is, what's happening?
It seems like some this part of the evening has concluded, what is the next thing?
So the next thing must either be a, hey, it was really great to meet you in a, in a hug
or be it's me going in for a kiss or it's see me like inviting her back to my place
because we're in our 20s and you
know that's a thing people do but I don't know I don't know. And so I just I figure you
know let's go big I'm going for option C and so I invite her back and her entire demeanor
changes. She's like suddenly she's like, is that what you expected to happen tonight? And I was like, I don't know, I'm sorry.
And she's like, I just I didn't expect that. And I was like, I'm sorry. I just, you know, I just got out of
a relationship. I just don't know dating very well. She's like, you just got out of a relationship. How long was it?
And I was like, I was like, she's like nine years. Now I I went into the end that I was like last week.
It's just a last week.
And so she now she's like, Yuri is at me, right?
Yuri is at like, I, you know, here I am.
I just got out of this long relationship.
I'm like, I'm wasting her time.
I asked in her back to my apartment,
which apparently was very offensive.
And I am in a panic here, right?
So uncomfortable.
But I was like, okay, well, I know what to do, right?
Like the thing to do is just apologize, wrap it up.
And so I was just like, look, I'm really sorry.
I misread the situation.
It was really nice to meet you.
And I think I might have offered a handshake or something.
And then I was it.
And then I walked away.
And ran away.
Ran away.
Ran away.
Ran away.
And afterwards, afterwards, as I was walking home, I to tell you, I didn't feel, I remember
this so clearly, I didn't feel bad.
Instead, I felt like I know more now than I did before.
Like, I hadn't been on a first date yet.
And now I have.
And I learned some things.
And, you know,
Talia, the stakes were really low here.
I wasn't supposed to meet and marry Talia.
I was supposed to have a first date and see what that's like
and I did it and it went okay for a while
and then it really went south and that's okay, right?
Nobody got hurt and I learned something
and now I feel emboldened that the next time
I go out, I just, I know more than I did before. That's the healthy way to be. You know, I,
it's funny. I was recently talking to Annie Duke, the former professional poker player and
decision-making expert. She wrote a couple of bestselling books. And she, she just wrote this book
called Quit about why quitting is a quitting is an overlooked and important strategy.
She said, look, you know, you got to think about everything like dating in a way, which is to say,
if you had to marry the first person that you went on a date with, you'd be afraid to ever go
on a date, you wouldn't or you would be such an insanely challenging process to go out on that date.
But the reason why we do go on dates is because we can try something and if it doesn't work,
we can move on to something else, right? We can meet somebody and if it's not compatible,
we just go meet somebody else. And we need to think about everything that way. We date ideas, right? We date directions.
We date experiences.
And sometimes they're going to be really good.
And sometimes they're not.
And that's OK, because not everything
is supposed to be a full time forever commitment.
Some of these we just try things.
And so that's how I see a lot of this stuff
about managing change as being applicable outside
of work because I think that ultimately what we really need to do is take this mindset
of we are adaptable, we can learn, we can grow, we should be pushing ourselves to expand
who we are and what we do.
And that has to happen in every part of our lives.
This is so good and I love the dating story, but I also like how you just wrapped it up there
with the author of quitting.
I really like that painful circle
and it's super, super helpful
because we all need to apply that methodology
and that reasoning in our life.
And even I'm just saying here,
thinking my own life right now
and that just the way you broke it down
was so, so good, so helpful.
Jason, who is this book for?
This book is for literally anybody who is experiencing some kind of change in their lives. It is
mostly work focused. I will admit, but like I just said, I think that the things that you learn
that you can apply in work, you can really take to any other part of your life. I wrote it because
everybody is going through
massive change right now in some way. The ripple effects of the pandemic are nowhere near over
and possibly will not be over in our lifetimes. And that means that we're going to be constantly
constantly feeling disrupted, that what we want is going to change. What is available to us is
going to change. And I wanted to give
people a guide for ways to think about that and navigate for that for themselves. So
that they can realize they're more in control than they think they are.
And that's control is a beautiful thing in the moments where you have it fleeting most
often, but you really getting to that place. Like you said, where you're embracing it instead
of panicking is the whole key. Build for tomorrow an action plan for embracing change, adapting fast and future
puping your career by Jason Fiper. Where can we find the book? Where can we find you?
You can find build for tomorrow anywhere you find books. So Amazon is a place that you can find books.
Barnes and Nobles plays you can find books. If you cannot remember those, then jasonfiper.com
slash book also a fine place to find the
book, but anywhere you find books is built for tomorrow. And then I'd love for people to reach out
directly to me. I am on Instagram at at Hey Fyfer. And I'm on LinkedIn very active. As I know, you
are Jason Fyfer. And I make it a commitment to respond to everybody. So if you heard this,
I know you're making a face, but it's a lot. It's a lot. I know it's a lot, but there's a reason
there's a reason I do it. And the reason I do it is because I find that even though it can be time
consuming, when people reach out to me, I mean, I'm sure that this has happened with you too, right?
People reach out, they say something, they give me just a comment on something I heard
you on this podcast, whatever it is.
And then if I respond to them, they will respond immediately and they'll say, oh my gosh,
I didn't expect to hear from you.
And I find that this small gesture, which for me is, you know, it's not that much.
It's a moment of my time where I'm scanning in front of the microwave, waiting for, you
know, the pizza to reheat or something.
But for somebody else, that small gesture of mine is really big.
And one, I just find that to be a powerful, it's just a powerful thing to be able to do.
But then two, frankly, strategically, if you connect with somebody, if you allow somebody
to feel heard, they are your fan for life.
It is just the greatest, though not that scalable audience building tool that I've ever found.
And so I know the number one thing that people want is to feel heard and I want to validate that so anyway that's why I respond to everybody even though sometimes it takes me a little time and so anyway point is if you hear this podcast if you pick up this book.
If you have a thought a comment drop, drop me a line, DM,
I will respond.
Well, I will have all those links and all of Jason's handles in the show notes. So you can
go check them out, but go grab the build for tomorrow. We are all dealing with a lot of
change. Just like you mentioned, I'm so grateful you wrote this book and thank you for all
the tips today, Jason.
Oh, thank you. And good luck on your move.
A year right back at you and good luck to everybody who's listening,
dealing with change out there. Until next week, keep creating your confidence.
I decided to change that.
I
can look around once in a while. No one seems alone.
You don't stop and look around once in a while.
You can miss it.
I'm on this journey with me.
I hope you're enjoying this episode so far.
I'm Jennifer Cohen, host the top ranking
business and entrepreneur podcast, Habitson Hustle,
apart the YAP media network, the number one
business and self-improvement podcast network.
So most people live the life they get and not the life they want. And I'm here to change all that.
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