Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Book Club: My 10 Favorite Takeaways from "The 5 Elements of Effective Thinking"
Episode Date: April 10, 2023Life can be compared to an IQ test. It’s a series of difficult problems that you need to solve with limited time, resources, and information. Winning in life requires avoiding catastrophic moves t...hat forfeit all your previous hard work. That’s why books like The 5 Elements of Effective Thinking are worth reading. It provides profound ideas that, if embraced, can significantly improve your decision-making skills. The book is highly practical, offering concrete examples of how to apply the information in daily life. In this podcast, I’m sharing my top 10 key takeaways. “Can you recommend a book for…?” “What are you reading right now?” “What are your favorite books?” I get asked those types of questions a lot and, as an avid reader and all-around bibliophile, I’m always happy to oblige. I also like to encourage people to read as much as possible because knowledge benefits you much like compound interest. The more you learn, the more you know; the more you know, the more you can do; the more you can do, the more opportunities you have to succeed. On the flip side, I also believe there’s little hope for people who aren’t perpetual learners. Life is overwhelmingly complex and chaotic, and it slowly suffocates and devours the lazy and ignorant. So, if you’re a bookworm on the lookout for good reads, or if you’d like to get into the habit of reading, this book club for you. The idea here is simple: Every month, I’ll share a book that I’ve particularly liked, why I liked it, and several of my key takeaways from it. I’ll also keep things short and sweet so you can quickly decide whether the book is likely to be up your alley or not. Alright, let’s get to the takeaways. Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe and leave a comment! (9:47) - Why did you like this book? (11:41) - What are your takeaways? (13:55) - Save up to 50% during our Spring Sale! www.buylegion.com Mentioned on the Show: Save up to 50% during our Spring Sale! Go to buylegion.com and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% on any non-sale items or get double reward points!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, hello, and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life. I am your host, Mike Matthews.
Thank you for joining me today for another book club episode where I discuss a book that
I liked enough to want to recommend it to others. I often get asked for book recommendations
or people want to know what book or books I'm reading right now. And so I thought every
month or so I would come here now. And so I thought every month
or so I would come here on the podcast and share a book that I've really liked, why I liked it,
and some of my key takeaways from it, some of the key learnings. And so today's book is the
Five Elements of Effective Thinking by Edward Berger and Michael Starbird, kind of a cool last
name. And this book teaches you how to become a
better problem solver and critical thinker. And that then teaches you how to live a better life.
I read books on a rotation. I follow a rotation of genres. I actually have two rotations because
I have a personal column in my little spreadsheet of stuff that I'm just personally interested in,
or that is related to improving as a person. And then I also have business. So I have a rotation
of genres related to business. And for anyone listening who is interested here, let me pull
it up and I'll share. Although I actually do need to work these over and I'll explain why.
But for some time, my work genres, the rotation has been marketing slash persuasion. So I would
read one or two books related to marketing slash persuasion before moving on to the next,
the next business slash work slash leadership, the next health and fitness, the next art slash
creativity slash writing, and the final masterwork, which to me
just means books on how to create really good work, how to do extraordinary things, how to create
extraordinary products and services and experiences for others, how to be the best, I guess, and do
the best. And then on the personal side of things, biography slash history,
be smarter slash better fiction slash literature slash poetry, and then financial slash miscellaneous.
And so what I do is I read one or two books in, let's say I'm starting with marketing slash
persuasion. So I'll read one or two books related to marketing slash persuasion. And first I will
look through any book summaries that are
available through like InstaRead or Blinkist or Get Abstract or others before I read the book.
And if I don't like the summary, if I don't find myself making highlights in the summary,
or if the summary is not really selling me on reading the book, I skip it. I only read books,
particularly with work, because there are so many books that you
can read about marketing slash persuasion, business slash work slash leadership, and so on.
And once you've read the classics that are time proven and that are often very good,
it can be frustrating to find a new book. It's a New York Times bestseller. All these people have
many great things to say about it. You read it and you're a hundred pages in and you've made, you know, a handful of
highlights and you've wasted time. And I am willing to quit a book if it's not worth continuing, but
I am resistant to it. I'm just the kind of person who likes to finish things that I begin.
And so again, first I look for a book summary. I check that out. And if I like that enough,
then I will actually read the book.
And that system has worked out well for me
in that it helps me weed out the clunkers.
So I'll read one or two books
about marketing slash persuasion,
and then I'll flip over to my personal column.
So let's say that starts with biography slash history,
and I'll read one or two books related to those genres. And then I'll come
back to work. And the next one on work is business slash work slash leadership. Go back to personal.
The next there is be smarter slash better. And I generally just follow my rotation in less
circumstances dictate deviation. Sometimes there are opportunities in my work or in my businesses
that I want to read about and learn about quickly because there's a window of opportunity here.
And so I might end up jumping from one genre down a couple or up one, or I might read more than one or two books on something if I
really want to learn about it more deeply because of urgency. But generally, I just kind of stick
to my rotations and those rotations reflect my priorities in my work and my interests in my work
and my priorities and interests in my personal life. And I mentioned
that I'm going to be reworking these and that's on my list of things to do this week because of
where my businesses are at. I'm not sure, for example, it makes sense for me to continue reading
about marketing slash persuasion, even though I like those topics to achieve the goals that I want to achieve in my work and with my
businesses over the next few years, it doesn't require me to know more about marketing and to
be an even better marketer. I've read scores and scores of marketing books at this point,
and I've done a lot of marketing and I've reached a certain level of competence. And I do think that the level that I've reached is
more than sufficient to achieve my shorter term work slash business goals. And therefore,
it does not make sense to weight that genre as equally as my business slash work slash leadership
bucket, which can encompass many different types of books, of course, but which
will be more heavily weighted toward strategy and toward growing the value of the business,
which doesn't necessarily mean just growing the business with marketing activities or business
growth activities. There is more that goes into creating a very valuable business than simply
making sales or even simply making sales and profit. And again, that shift is because
circumstances are different now. I'm no longer the quote unquote CEO of Legion. I'm really just
the founder of Legion and I'm not very involved in the day-to-day operations. I do have
a regular rhythm of meetings and so forth to be as involved as I need to be and to be kept up to
date on important things. But my role outside of Legion, of course, is creating content,
writing the next book, recording podcasts, doing social media things, email marketing, blah, blah, blah. But in the context of Legion,
the most value I think I can bring is more strategic in character because now there is a fairly large team. There's 80 to 90 of us now, if you include full-time and part-time employees,
we have a lot of people who can do a lot of things and we have done a good job over the years creating strategic plans
and executing on them. But the business is big enough now that even slightly better strategic
plans can result in disproportionately better results. And so if I look at my understanding
of business strategy, it's not bad because I have read a fair
number of books over the years regarding business strategy, and I do have a fair amount of experience
doing business strategy. But I would say that I know far more about marketing and sales than I do
business strategy. I'm a much better marketer and salesperson than business strategician.
much better marketer and salesperson than business strategician. Probably not a word,
but you get what I'm saying. And so I will be updating my genre rotation for work to reflect that and some other changes that necessitate change in how I am spending my time educating
myself. And on the personal side of things, probably nothing will change there now
that I look at it. But I guess I'll think about it after I fix up my work rotation. And so anyway,
that was a long tangent. Hopefully you found it at least a little bit helpful. That's why I shared
it. And the book that I'm going to be talking about in today's episode is one of my be better slash smarter books in my personal rotation. So this five elements of effective thinking book, and I liked it because in some ways I think you can liken life to a big IQ test. It's a long series of problems, some of them simpler, some of them more difficult
that you have to solve. And you often have limited time and you have limited information and you have
limited money and you have limited other resources. And that's one of the reasons why living a good
life is difficult and why many people struggle to get there. And I think you could work in an analogy to chess as
well, because to win in life, you don't just have to make far more good moves than bad moves. You
have to also never make certain catastrophic moves because those are the ones that forfeit
all of the advantages of all of your previous moves, if not the game altogether.
So it's not just like an IQ test where you can get several questions horribly wrong and pick
the wrongest answer in the, let's say it's multiple choice and still score quite well.
No, in life, there are certain scenarios that the wrongest answer produces calamity. And so books like the five elements
of effective thinking are worth reading and internalizing. And the three primary reasons
I enjoyed this book and I am featuring it here are one delivers a high amount of value per page,
which is crucial with any nonfiction reading. Ultimately, that's what we're going for. This is a how-to book. We want to know how to get better. So give me a lot of meat. We don't want
an interesting idea, something that we highlight, followed by 10 pages of boring anecdotes or
unnecessarily detailed descriptions of scientific research. So many self-help books in particular have just been way overextended with
too much boring and useless minutiae and stories. This book is not one of those books, so I
appreciated that. This book also contains a number of, I thought, pretty profound ideas that if truly
embraced can really produce a quantum leap in your ability to make winning
decisions. And third, this book is highly practical, and it gives a lot of concrete
examples of how you can immediately apply the information in your life. And that's helpful
because many people, and this has been shown in scientific research, they struggle to go from
abstract theory, abstract principles that they scientific research, they struggle to go from abstract theory,
abstract principles that they understand theoretically, they understand them intellectually,
to actual implementation, to action items, things that they can do right now to put that principle into use in their life in a specific situation. So it always helps when a book like this gives a
number of those examples, because even if the examples don't directly apply to your life,
they spark ideas. They help you bridge that chasm, so to speak, from theory to practical.
Okay, so let's get to my top 10 takeaways from this book. The first one is,
quote, often we are persuaded by authority and repetition rather than by evidence and reality.
Two, quote, one profound habit of thinking individuals is to first acknowledge their
biases and then intentionally overcome them. Asking challenging questions can help. Passionately argue an issue from the
opposite point of view and ask probing and difficult questions that challenge your original
stance. Be brutally honest and see what's actually there rather than what's expected.
Get in the habit of asking, do I really know and refuse to accept assertions blindly.
Number three, quote, there is nothing so useless as
doing efficiently that which should not be done at all. And that was a quote from Peter Trucker.
Four, quote, solutions to little problems generate solutions to great problems.
Five, quote, good progress is often the herald of great progress. 6. Do you or don't you truly know the basics?
Consider a subject you think you know or a subject you are trying to master.
Open up a blank document on your computer.
Without referring to any outside sources, write a detailed outline of the fundamentals of the subject.
Can you write a coherent, accurate, and comprehensive description of the foundations of the subject, or does your knowledge have gaps?
Do you struggle to think of core examples? Do you fail to see the overall big picture that puts the pieces together?
7. The simple and familiar hold the secrets of the complex and unknown.
The depth with which you master the basics influences how well you
understand everything you learn after that. Eight, quote, you can't always get it right,
but you can always get it wrong and learn something. Get to failure fast. Nine, quote,
the goal is not to make stupid, obvious mistakes. Good mistakes lead to insights that lead to workable solutions and good results.
10, quote, don't try to create something great,
create something bad, and then make it great.
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Well, I hope you liked this episode.
I hope you found it helpful.
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who may like it just as much as you.
And if you didn't like something about this episode
or about the show in general,
or if you have ideas or suggestions
or just feedback to share, shoot me an email, mike at muscleforlife.com, muscleforlife.com,
and let me know what I could do better or just what your thoughts are about maybe what you'd
like to see me do in the future. I read everything myself. I'm always looking for new ideas and
constructive feedback. So thanks
again for listening to this episode and I hope to hear from you soon.