Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - How To WIN When They Say You Won’t, With Daphne Jones CEO & Founder Of The Board Curators & Fortune 50 Technology & Business Leader Episode 279
Episode Date: December 20, 2022In This Episode You Will Learn About: The key to identifying transformational changes you need to make to your central business strategy How to break through barriers and take your success to the ...next level You will get Daphne’s playbook which took her from secretary to the C-suite leading a 12B business Resources: Website: www.daphneejones.com Read Win When They Say You Won’t Join The Board Curators course Email: daphne@daphneejones.com LinkedIn: @Daphne E. Jones Instagram: @daphnejonesofficial Twitter: @DaphneEJones Overcome Your Villains is Available NOW! Order here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com If you haven't yet, get my first book Confidence Creator Show Notes: You have the power to become EXACTLY who you want to be! It’s time to STOP letting labels define you and start defining yourself. When someone tells you that you CAN’T accomplish something, you’re talking to the WRONG person. Daphne Jones, founder of The Board Curators, joins me so we can start looking at our losses as lessons, and continue growing! Dream big and don’t allow other people to define your success. About The Guest: Daphne Jones has over 30 years of experience in general management and executive level roles at companies like IBM, Johnson & Johnson, and GE. She currently oversees the $13 Billion segment of healthcare at GE and serves on the board of directors at AMN Healthcare, Barnes Group, and Masonite International Corporation. Daphne recently started her own company that prepares leaders to serve on boards, reach their goals, and transform their careers! If You Liked This Episode You Might Also Like These Episodes: Let Go Of Scarcity & Let In Abundance With Author & Podcast Host Cathy Heller How To Live FEARLESSLY With Heather! Get in Touch With Your INNER COMPASS With Wayne Dyer’s Daughters, Saje Dyer & Serena Dyer Pisoni Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The key part that stops us sometimes is we get bad news.
We get emotional or we may cry and I say think of what a business does when they lose market share.
What do they do?
When a business wants to expand, like open up another branch or another,
go another region.
What do they do?
When an app has a bug in it, what does the developers do?
They use tools to get them from where they are to where they want to be.
I'm on this journey with me.
Each week when you join me,
we are going to chase down our goals.
Overcome adversity 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 our guest today.
Daphne Jones, she's got over 30 years of experience
in general management and executive level roles
at Get Ready For It, IBM, Johnson and Johnson,
Hospira, GE, but began her career as a secretary.
At GE, she served as SVP for future work,
SVP and CIO for product engineering,
imaging an ultrasound and a senior executive in CIO for global services,
all of which composed a 13 billion with a B segment of GE Health Care.
Joan's service on the board of directors for AMN Health Care, Barnes Group, and Mace
Knight International Corp.
And as the recipient of numerous domestic and international awards, she recently started
a company that teaches leaders how to prepare to serve on boards.
Daphne, thank you so much for being here today.
May you're my new best friend.
Hi.
We have been living right down the street for the time.
Yes.
This is crazy, but a small world.
Yeah, we need to go to that park that they just built, you know, right there on fifth.
Yes, it's beautiful.
It's so nice.
Let me two days.
All right, Daphne, let's get right into it
because the fact that you started out as a secretary
and have achieved so much massive success,
my first question to you is, at some point,
there had to be a pivotal moment where you're seeing
yourself at this level of secretary and support staff.
What was it that changed for you in your mind that allowed you to think that you could go
for more than that?
Sure.
Great question.
But I do want to make sure that folks know here's how I became a secretary.
Limits and labels were replaced on me.
I asked my high school counselor, you know, it's time for me to go to get ready for college.
What do I need to do to get ready?
He says, Daphne, black girls,
like you don't go to college,
they become secretaries.
And I can send you to a secretarial,
we call it college.
It was only two weeks.
And then you can learn how to be a secretary
and then we'll place you or they'll place you
into an organization.
And so they did, I did that.
And they placed me into
Women's Day magazine. And it's funny, had their Women's Day magazine is a Women's magazine, but
it was run by all men. So all white men sitting in their offices and then a couple of us secretaries,
somewhere black, somewhere white, that sat out there outside of our principal's office. And so I
was lousy, and that was the turning point was,
you know, he dictated some things to me.
I knew how to do shorthand, and I typed really, really well,
but I just, it just wasn't good.
I didn't do a really good job.
He was always yelling at me, the snide comments that they made,
the jokes that they were making about the women
was just really hard.
And I said, you know what, I don't know what they do,
but I feel like I can do what he's doing if I
Just go to college. So I don't think I should be a secretary anymore. I should have a secretary. Yeah, that's it. And I decided
that even though that, you know, I went to college, got three years, you know, ambassadors degree, got my MBA in one year.
And I realized at that point that the audio didn't match the video.
You know what the audio of what my counselor was saying didn't match what I actually did.
The movie that I was living and I found that I could shape my own narrative and call my own
place when I found that I could go to college and win as he said that I would not be able to do.
You never found it or you didn't think to yourself because I know I've been told many
times when I was in Korpon America that I could only reach a certain level of success
and not to fool myself.
And I struggled a lot with that in Foster syndrome when I would try to start pushing beyond
it.
And then I'd have the negative self-talk like, wait a minute, who do you think you are?
Everyone's told you can't do that.
Did you have that same type of situation when you pushed yourself to go into college or did you just leap and never look back?
I actually at that moment my mom was a Jamaica immigrant and Jamaica was under
the British rule for until 1950 maybe 62 or something like that. And so she
would always say to me, Daphne, you're not black, you're British because we were
under the British rule. So that's how she looked at things. So she would always say to me, Daphne, you're not black, you're British, because we were under the British rule.
So that's how she looked at things.
So she was always into, you can do it, be excellent.
I skipped first grade, for example.
And so all my life, she was always pushing me
to be the best and to study hard and hearty boys,
books and Nancy, Drew, mystery books, and all those.
I was always reading.
And so up until my counselor, I had run ins with,
you know, gangs that would beat me up for, you know, racial assault and things like that.
But somehow I was able to brush that off, but it wasn't until I went to IBM, I was laid off by IBM.
I was downsized. And it was at that moment, and IBM was my first job after college, and that was my dream job. And with the fact that they laid me off,
made me say that they, whoever they is,
would realize, and or realize that I was really just a secretary
in an IBM pinstribe suit.
And I was afraid they were gonna send me back.
And send me back where to being a secretary.
I had to ask myself,
were my achievements up to this point where they real,
or was I fooling people.
So after realizing that it's really a conditioning
that we have gone through, women, minorities,
we go through, it starts when we're young
and the job of the conditioning is to plant seeds of doubt,
seeds of inferiority, seeds of gratefulness
that somebody gave us a chance.
So when that seeds turn into a full grown plant,
it doesn't produce much fruit,
or the fruit is underdeveloped.
And so yeah, I did go through various bouts of that,
but you realize that you have to tell yourself,
just like I tell my son what they need to hear.
I am great, I am creative.
I have super powers and a cultural
advantage that my company has yet to uncover or appreciate. So it was a mindset like my
mom started me out with of winning and I found that whoever has your mind has you. And so
it just comes through practice and application that you realize that the audio will not
always match the video.
This guy who was an expert at coaching and counseling children or kids like me was wrong.
So that means other people who say things about my inability and for me to minimize my voice
and to hide my culture and to underpay me and to underdevelop me. They're also wrong, but it takes practice
and surrounding yourself with people and books
who will give you life enhancing words
and speak words into your spirit
that continue to boast to you and lift you up.
Wow, I love that you just pointed out
that that one man was wrong
and because he was wrong, it means all the rest
of these people could be wrong
to that.
It's super powerful, Daphne, and so true.
You are incredibly confident.
Have you always been this way your whole life?
No.
Oh, my man.
I was an ugly duckling.
In fact, my first name is Daphne, and they called me Daphne Duck.
And I think I walk kind of like slew footed
or whatever like a duck does.
And so first of all, for so physical issues,
lack of confidence.
And being a woman of color,
I was beat up by a gang of white boys.
I've been told even in my later years
that I dress too nicely or all kinds of things that have been said to me.
And so it's really mind over matter.
I look at you driving your car that windshield is huge, right?
But your rearview mirror is really small.
So I don't want to look at my past a whole lot
and it's smaller, it's receding into the background,
but my windshield, my future has got to be bright.
And so it's really a mindset that's really what it amounts to. So no, I haven't always been
confident, but I've always known that I've done tough things before. I've not done some things
great. You know, I never was perfect and I was never always awful. And so when you realize that
there have been times that I've done things for the first time and it worked out well,
it kind of gives you that confidence, as you mentioned, not to be cocky, but to be sure.
When he told me that it was impossible to go to college, I realized that the word impossible
really should become inevitable. If you can think of it, it's not impossible then, it's just a matter
of time. So my vision, my purpose is not denied,
it's just delayed for a moment.
So you just kind of get it at mindset
of talking yourself out of that funk
that we might find ourselves in.
Oh, that's so good.
All right, so you were laid off from IBM
and I personally, I was fired, not laid off,
but for a lot of people, they take an ego hit, a real emotional hit when you're separated
from your line of work, your paycheck, your title.
How are you able to bounce back from that?
My book is sort of built on these steps of, you know,
envision, design, iterate and transform.
And the first thing I did was I had my family around me.
I had my sister who was with me in Atlanta, Georgia,
where I was working, and I had a son,
and I was going through divorce at that time too, Heather.
It was so, I said, how am I going to be able
to get custody of my son when I don't have a job?
It was really tough.
But my sister was with me, and we are Christians,
and a lot of prayer and supplication,
and with Thanksgiving at the same time
allowed me to be able to get through that.
And I said this boy who how old was Jared,
eight years old maybe seven, he's depending on me.
And so it's like when you have somebody depending on you
and you know how that is, depending on you for everything,
I said I can't quit. I gotta keep going.
And, you know, I've skipped grades in college,
I've done well before.
This is a setback and they say,
my friend Willie Daly says that a setback
is a set up for comeback.
And so I had to look at that and say,
this is just a set up for how I'm gonna come back.
And I did.
And so I ended up moving from Atlanta,
moving to Newark, New Jersey,
where I joined with Public Service Electric and Gas, PSC and G. It's the utility in New
Jersey. I was there for a short time, but it was a time that changed a lot of my life
because from there, somebody at Johnson and Johnson discovered me. And then from there,
I just went on. So you just don't look at that loss as a loss.
You look at it as a lesson and you say,
well, what did I learn from that?
I'm too young and even though I started getting cuter
as I got older, wasn't cute earlier.
I said, I'm too cute.
I'm too young to give up.
And so I said, I gotta keep moving.
And this baby is depending on me to win.
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Okay, so you mentioned your new book when when they say you won't break through
barriers and keep leveling up your success. And you also mentioned the four step edit methodology.
Can you talk a little bit more about that method? So I have a couple of concepts about it.
That first of all, we are like products. We are like a product or a service that can have a new version of itself continually.
It should never stay stagnant, adormant.
And you think about a product, what do we have in common with products?
Well, one, we have a market.
Whether you're a hedge fund manager or a CFO, there are people that you serve and support.
Products provide solutions.
Services provide solutions.
Products have value.
I am valuable.
I have a price and I heard you talk about a $300,000 talking gig that somebody was doing,
they have a price, right?
So products have a price, products have competition.
And so there's somebody that's always looking to unseat you, right, and take your spot.
And products get feedback from the market. And so,
and finally, products have to remain relevant. And so they don't become obsolete or don't get
moved down to a lower shelf in the grocery store. And so one of the things that I do with my
edit process and edit actually means change, right, the word edit, but it is also the four letters that says,
I need to find a way to have an ongoing cycle of success.
I believe that my book and the edit process is an antidote, a self-administered antidote
to the poisons that are hurting our careers, right?
And so the things that cause us to lose our mind in our careers
is that we don't envision where it is that we want to go.
We don't have the right type of mindset.
I talk in the book about a growth mindset
versus a fixed mindset, a mindset that doesn't believe
and impossible, but leaves inevitable.
A mindset that does not ask for permission to prosper.
So we get into the mindset because once you have that mindset,
my book provides the rest of the tool sets
that you can then use as a product,
as a business would use,
and then you have that skill set for life
that you can use over and over again as an antidote.
So first, it's the ambition, that's the eat.
The deed is when you design.
So now I know what I want to do.
I get into what we call bomoes and nose, bodacious objectives. I think sometimes we may not succeed
as we could because we just got too many things going on. Everything's urgent and not enough things
are important, but we do those urgent things. So I kind of have you sit down and say, what are my
bodacious objectives? Then most important one or two?
And so you design a plan, we get into OKR's, objectives and key results, just like a business does.
We don't take our situation personally, even though it's happening personally to us.
We use business-like tools and methodologies to be able to look at our situation and manage through it.
So you design your plan of action.
You look at what I call the 5Fs, which are when I was going through my career at IBM, I
only focused on one F and that was furthering my career.
But then there's your fitness, your faith, your finances, and your family.
And so we talk about how you look at those other foundational things.
So make sure that when you create your plan of action,
you've made a plan that takes into account all of the things that you care about,
not just your career.
And then once you have your plan, then the third step is you iterate.
You go into the market, you work your plan, and then you get feedback.
You see it was working or it's not working.
When it's working, you keep on going.
That's what we call perseverance.
But when you find that your plan is not quite perfect, you then go back to your plan and
redesign it and you pivot a little bit.
You never quit because your goal is still your goal.
So you then, you iterate.
You go back to your design and you make it better.
So we use the Agile methodology,
because I'm a former techie developer programmer,
we use the Agile methodology that allows you
to get real-time feedback from the market.
And then you adjust your plan ever so slightly
or ever so largely in order for you to make it.
And then, once you've done, whether it's a microchange or a macrochange,
you transform and you sit with that change,
you learn the job, you learn the thing,
you transform it and then you then go look
for what your next win is gonna be.
And so that's edit, envision, design, iterate and transform.
I love the process, I love the methodology.
It's simple, it's directive, and anybody can put this process
into motion, correct?
It doesn't matter what job they have.
Yeah, and it doesn't have to be a job.
If you want to be a better wife or a better mother,
if you want to help your child do better in school,
if you want to lose weight and get healthier,
if you want to start your own company,
the steps are the same.
And I think the key part that stops us sometimes is we get bad news, we get emotional or
we may cry.
And I say, think of what a business does when they lose market share.
What do they do?
When a business wants to expand, like open up another branch or another, go another region.
What do they do?
When an app has a bug in it, what does the developers do? They use tools to get them from where they are to where they want to be.
And we use in my book things like the SWAT analysis. You will look at, what do I have going for me?
What do I have going against me? You know, plans of action. We'll look at Johari's window. What are
my blind spots? If you don't know what your blind spots are, trust me, somebody does.
So it really doesn't matter what you want to do.
What matters is that you want to do it, and you want to look at it from what you're doing to what you want to become.
And so we go from, you know, they say that we are not human doings.
We're human beings. And so what is it that we as human beings want to be?
Because a lot of us are just doing things today,
but we need to look at what we want to become.
Wow, that's so powerful.
I love that you brought up taking a motion out of it.
What are some of the tips that you can give people to?
Because I've seen countless meetings,
even in business where people have lost their cool,
definitely reacted not responded.
What are some of the strategies that people can implement
so that they can remove
emotion from business or from, like you said,
even being a better mom or wife or in their fitness.
Right, right.
So one of the former chief HR officers,
one of my companies said to me,
because I'm a very inclusive communicator,
I just wanna tell you everything, right?
At one time, or I'll ask a lot of questions.
And he said to me,
Daphne, you need to wait. And I said, wait, what am I waiting for? Somebody coming?
What's going on? And he said, wait means why am I talking? So the first thing that we have to say
is when we're in a room with with other men who may be talking over us, who may be repeating what we said, we just need to just take
a deep breath and wait for a moment. Gather our thoughts. And then in my book, I talk about what do
you do, I think the chapter is internal politics or corporate politics or whatever. So one example is
when a man says something that you just said 10 minutes ago,
he seems to get a standing ovation.
They're like, yeah, John, that was amazing.
And so then what you say is, John,
I think you articulated my point really, really well.
In fact, let me make another point
to add on to what I said earlier.
And so you give him credit for articulating your point,
but you don't give him credit for having the point
and the first tag on place.
But then you take it back and then you add another point
on top of it so it is solidly your point.
And so there's things that you do as a woman
if they want you to take notes.
Daphne, can you take the minutes of this
and that used to when we had flip charts and stuff?
And I said, no, I'm a lousy writer.
You really don't want me.
I don't say anything about, oh,
because I'm a woman you want me to, no,
I just, I make it non-gender-specific.
And then they'll learn, let's get somebody
who's the best writer, not someone who's the best woman.
And so there are just things you just have to think about
as a business and not respond emotionally.
When a company loses an employee, they quit their job.
The company does not go banging on the door of that new company that person went to work
for.
They look back and they examine, they reflect, they say, well, what is it about our company
that may have caused them to leave?
They look at that as data, as information, right?
As facts, and they use that fact to then change their policy
or do something with employee development
or leadership development.
They don't get angry, upset, or emotional.
Or they make it emotional,
but they don't use their actions to display the emotion.
So that's so good.
I am so big.
And to always respond, never react. And unfortunately,
it definitely is something it took me years to learn that, but it makes you people view you and
respect you in a powerful way from coming from a place of calm. And I always think to myself too,
I want to be the best version of myself. What does that look like being thoughtful, taking a moment before I have something to say
to your weight method.
I love the weight method.
I love how you articulate that.
Thank you.
You talk in the book about how can you win when you don't have any support?
What are some of the ways that people can help elevate themselves or get ahead when they
feel like they don't have any champions on their side?
I can't imagine a situation where there is no support.
So there are at least five different levels of support that one may have.
First of all, and you may not call this support, but it's role modeling.
Who do I look up to?
You know, if you go in my office here, you'll see Harriet Tubman
in my office. And she is a role model for me. And in that picture, you'll see her leaning forward
with one hand. She's kind of going forth. She's got a rifle under her arm and a lantern,
you know, leading the way. And she was the one that did the underground railroad to free slaves.
So she's going forward. And then if you look at her other hand, you'll see her pulling people
behind her. There are slaves that are behind her and she's saying, okay, come on. She's pushing
forward to new, dangerous territory because she could get shot, killed, captured, whatever.
But she's also bringing people along with her. She's my role model.
So then I think about her.
She didn't have much power.
Most people in the world have more power
than she ever did.
And so I look at her as a role model,
and I say, well, what would she do?
So if nothing else, you say, I have a role model.
So who in your company seems to attract
the most amount of success?
What do they wear? How do they look?
What meetings do they attend? Can I get on their calendar for half an hour? Can I find a way
to read their blogs or their posts or their LinkedIn profile? Even if you don't know anybody
in life, which is really hard to imagine, you least look at your own model. That's number
one. Number two, there are people who you can turn into your mentor, right? So you don't have support from Tom Dick or Harry, but then there's
Jane over there who you may not know, but you say, Jane, I really appreciated how you busted out your
quota. You did this, you did that. Do you mind if I spend a couple of minutes just talking to you
and picking your brain? I want to learn more about how you did it.
People love to talk about themselves, Heather.
So get on Jane's calendar.
She will tell you all that you want to know.
And then be a good listener, be a good protege, be a good mentee, and listen to what she says,
and then do it, and then go back to her and say, Jane, I tried what you do all the time and it worked
for me. Child, you got Jane for life. She will always be in your corner. They say whoever is in your
circle may not be in your corner, like in a boxing ring and Jane will be not only in your circle,
she will also be in your corner because you listen to her. And then Jane may eventually become a sponsor, which is the next level up.
And so there are accountability buddies.
There are peers of yours.
There's somebody in the organization
that may not be your boss.
They may be your peer.
There's somebody who respects you.
There's somebody who likes you.
And you may work with them and have them help you
by being your accountability buddy.
And so I do talk about that there is somebody in your life,
there's even your family.
Your family knows somebody, right?
Your family has a neighbor, you know,
or your husband or your spouse or your partner
has somebody that they work with
that has something in common with you.
There's organizations that you can join, right?
Whether it be technology organizations,
finance organizations, women's organizations, board organizations, there's organizations that you can join, right? Whether it be technology organizations, finance organizations, women's organization,
board organizations, there's always someone
who wants to help and is available to help.
I love the role model because to your point,
you know, a lot of people will say,
I can't find a mentor or no one's available to me
or no one's offering to me, whatever it may be,
but that really takes the excuses off the table.
Like you said, whether it be a famous person
that you look to in history
or someone you follow on social media,
I mean, it is so attainable and available for everyone.
So thank you so much for sharing that.
And LinkedIn, I think, yeah,
and I'm sorry, LinkedIn is a perfect place.
You don't have to know every
CFO in the world, but you just search for CFOs that work in the automobile automotive industry
That live in Georgia or whatever the ability to find these people who don't know you is
Incredible so using LinkedIn even to find the role model that is close to doing what you do, I think
it's really doable.
So, you know, one of my quotes is hashtag find a way to win.
It's not only one way, it's not only I got to find a mentor who works in my company,
it has to be male, it has to be white, they have to be this and that.
Find another way to win.
Find a female mentor.
Find one is a different nationality.
Find one that doesn't work in your company.
Find a way to win.
That is it.
Hashtag, find a way to win.
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How do people work smarter, not harder? I never have mastered this. I need this advice.
Well, I find that hard to believe.
I mean, look at you.
So yeah, we've been given, as I say, women
have been undervalued, underpaid, lack of access to capital.
We paid 80% of what men get paid.
And we still have to find an African-American woman.
Black men, we are all in
that similar category where we have to work twice as hard, be twice as smart, and maybe we get
half as far. That's my premise. And so my strategies of looking at yourself as a product, the
strategy of having the mindset of a growth mindset so that you can drive personal transformation.
When you think of yourself as a product and you're focusing on being a new version of yourself,
that's how you work smarter.
Because now you're not spending your time.
You know, when I talked about bow, bows, and nose,
B.O. are bodacious objectives.
M.O. are those moderate objectives. M.O. are those moderate objectives.
Yeah, they're pretty important.
They're pretty urgent.
They align with my future.
And then there's the N.O.s, the N.O.s,
which are negligible objectives,
or non-essential objectives.
And so, first of all, don't focus on those N.O.s,
focus on very few M.O.s, and focus on one or two BIOS,
bodacious objectives that will align with, and I put a two by two matrix in the book,
where you can have an X-axis that gets into how does it align with my vision, and then
the Y-axis that says, how good will it be?
This is going to deliver a lot of value. And so I have the reader actually put their goals
into those three categories.
So one example of working smart is being able to work
on the things that count.
They say things that can count aren't always counted.
And so you're doing all these different things,
but they don't really matter as much.
Work on those two things that matter the most,
delegate those things that might be important to somebody else,
delegate those other MOs or those nodes to somebody else,
so you can be focused on what's really important.
So that's just one example.
Don't give up. I've read Lean Startup by Eric Reese,
and he talks about either you pivot or you persevere.
But nowhere in the book does he
talk about giving up on your goal. So you persevere if the data is working, if the data is not working,
you just don't keep going after stuff that's not working. You pivot and change your hypothesis
and you don't waste your time going after things that doesn't seem to be working. You pivot and
change your approach a little bit and then you go back in.
So I think those are two ways that I would say
you can work smarter and not harder.
I love them.
Who did you write the book for?
I wrote the book for women.
It's funny, I had my publisher,
McGraw Hill said,
Ackney, who's the book for?
I say everybody.
Everybody wants to win, right?
And they said, well, yes,
but you need to narrow it down a little bit. And so I said,
okay, it's for women because we're the ones that are typically told we can't. We've been condition
that we won't. You know, the system was not built by us and it wasn't built for us. So it's for women.
And then I said, well, which women? It's for women that tend to be a little bit more in the middle
of their career and just
want to know how to get to that next level.
Because sometimes there's a point where you kind of rise and then you kind of plateau.
You may go have a child or something happens, but your trajectories not what it might
have been or what you wanted to be.
So it's for women who are in mid-career.
And I think it's also African-American women of color.
I have a chapter in there that's called
Leading While African American.
I have a whole chapter devoted to what is it like
as a woman of color.
And so when you're stuck and stymied
that typically is who it is,
it's usually women who are in the middle careers
or that are of color.
But men can read this book.
Men can share the learnings,
the stories in the book from all women, and I have one
man in there, from all women that can learn from other women what they did in order to
get out of a tough situation. So it's for women, middle career.
I really relate to that idea that, you know, even if early on your trajectory, what you
were climbing very rapidly, and then you get to point to your point, have a child
and suddenly you don't have as much time and or, you know, drive or focus or whatever and you kind of take a step back.
And suddenly a couple of years have gone by this literally happened to me and I realized I've just been maintaining at work instead of
I had these bodacious goals before by sort of just I dialed it down a little bit And I think that happens to a lot of people mid-career.
And that's one of the things that I,
when people say, do you have a regret thing?
I think to myself, yeah, I just should have been pushing harder.
I didn't have to work more to your point.
You could still work smarter,
but I could have just been going for more, asking for more.
That's right.
And the five Fs are a real thing.
And when you're single or don't have a child, that family F is not as important.
And I look at what phase of life are you in.
You're in learning all you can, you're earning all you can, or you're returning all you
can.
And you have to look at what phase you're in and say, of those five Fs, which are most
important to me for this phase that I'm in.
And then you look at that.
And so now you have context.
You're not just going after a goal.
You're not just having a baby
and not thinking about the implications to your faith
or your fitness or what have you.
But you look at all those 5Fs and now you call your place.
It's up to you.
It's not life is not happening by chance.
It's happening to you. It's not life is not happening by chance. It's happening by choice.
And so the five Fs in my opinion really helps you understand
all dimensions that you are.
And so that you can then decide what is it you want
to be able to do.
And how do you want to govern having children
and getting back into the marketplace?
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How often do you suggest that somebody
go back and revisit that and say,
okay, we maybe we need to change
which is the highest priority?
Well, so in the plan of action,
if you've got two bodacious objectives
and then of course the objectives have key results, and those key results lead to actions.
You know, in order for me to get these key results, I have to act on some things.
These key results, then if I do these key results right, they become objectives.
And there's a section in there that I talk about 5F impact.
It's 5F impact.
So whenever you create your plan of action, you intentionally
Put in your plan of action
What you're gonna do for your 5F? So for example if you say I'm going to take a new job in California
And your family has to move and you are now gonna be working
14 15 17 hours a day
You have to know that your family's gonna take a hit.
So then in your plan of action, you say there's a 5F impact.
5F impact is my family is going to see less of me.
Then what are you gonna do, either you're not gonna take the job, or you're gonna take
the job and you're gonna do something for your family every Friday and Saturday and Sunday,
or you're gonna come home once, you know,
one day a week early, there's something you're going to do
so that you can make sure that your family is okay.
If you were going to be working 12, 13, 14 hours a day,
and you don't work out anymore, and you used to,
and you used to have, you know, local esterol
and low blood pressure, and all of a sudden,
you're going to be eating McDonald's at your desk every day,
you've got to figure out, well, my fitness is still important to me, my physical fitness or my emotional fitness, my mental fitness,
and you have to put in your plan, this is going to be something that I'm going to have to make
sure I focus on because I always enjoyed having a 118 over 80 blood pressure or whatever.
And so it's built into the plan that you always look at your 5Fs on a regular basis to check and make sure that you're doing what you said you're gonna do.
It's so powerful because it does change and when we just forget it and like you said just you know kind of let it take charge,
we're not really creating our life, we're just kind of accepting what or allowing for what's ahead of us instead of directing it.
So I really like this idea. Your book is literally like a business plan for life.
It is.
I call it the playbook.
There's a playbook that I think kids have gotten from their
parents that when they see a kid who looks different than them,
who's a girl and not a boy, there's a playbook that I think
kids have must have received from their parents.
And then my book is the reverse playbook. I'm going
to reverse and tell you how to go back against that playbook that's been conditioning our minds
in the wrong way. Because we don't want to just watch our life happen to us. Like you say, go
and pass this. And we just kind of watch it happen to us. We want to call our own place.
And if we can't call the play,
you know, there's sometimes you've got to quit your company.
If the culture doesn't match,
what you're trying to do,
and if you don't like what the company is all about
and what it stands for,
there are times that you have to say,
you know what, I'm not going to be here anymore.
But you call that play on your own.
Well, you've called these plays.
Like you did, like you did.
You did that. Well, you too. I mean, you've called like you did like you did. You did that. Well, you too. I mean, you've
called these plays. Your track record is incredible. The value that you deliver in this book is
incredible. Where can everyone find your book and where can everyone find you?
Well, my website is Daphne e Jones. So it's D-A-P-H-N-E-E Jones.com.
DaphneE.Jones.com. And then you can put a slash there and then type book.
So if you just want to go to the website, DaphneE.Jones.com, and then you'll see a, you know,
a thing for my book or you can just type the slash book. And, you know, the orders are available
on Amazon. You know, you can preorder right now. The books will come out in November.
But please pre-order right now.
And you can find me and send me an email if you want to talk.
If you want anything I can help you with.
Let me know.
DaphneEJounds.com.
When, when they say you won't break through barriers
and keep leveling up your success, Daphne, thank you so much
for writing this book and for all the good work you're doing
and giving back. Thank you so much for writing this book and for all the good work you're doing and giving back.
Thank you so much.
It's a pleasure to see you and girl,
we gonna get together in Miami.
Oh, we are doing it.
All right, people, hang in there, get that book.
It's live November 8th.
You can get it right now pre-order
and you will be so grateful that you'll be calling
your own plays and going for both day-cious goals
just like Daphne and I.
Until next week, keep creating your confidence.
I'm going to make a move again.
I decided to change that idea.
And I thought I'd be around.
I couldn't be more inside of the world.
What you're getting here is starting to learn
and growing.
And inevitably, something will happen.
And no one succeeds alone.
You don't stop and look around once in a while. You can miss it. I'm on this journey with me. This episode is brought to you by the YAP Media Podcast Network.
I'm Halataha, CEO of the award-winning Digital Media Empire YAP Media, and host of YAP
Young & Profiting Podcast, a number one entrepreneurship and self-improvement podcast where you can
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