No Stupid Questions - Extra: Angela Duckworth on “Masters of Scale”
Episode Date: May 23, 2024WaitWhat C.E.O. Jeff Berman interviews Angela about “grit-scaling” and her unlikely path to academic celebrity. ...
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Hi everyone, producer Rebecca here.
We have a special bonus episode for you.
Angela was recently a guest on the podcast Masters of Scale, a show that features stories
and advice from some of the world's most iconic business leaders.
We're excited to share host Jeff Berman's recent interview with Angela.
We hope you enjoy it and we'll be back on Saturday
with a brand new episode of No Stupid Questions.
I was a science major.
I thought it would be really cool to teach kids
how to learn about solar energy by making like a hot dog cooker out of like tin foil and cardboard.
I go around to the school's classrooms and I'm knocking one by one on the doors of I
think it was like fifth or sixth grade classroom.
And I went into one classroom.
I remember the teacher's name Mr. Z.
And he lets me do my little three minute commercial at the front of the classroom. And one little boy puts up his hand and is asking questions about it.
You know, he's sort of leaning forward in his seat.
He's got a big smile on his face.
And Mr. Z interrupts him and he says, oh, not you.
This is not for you.
This is for the smart kids. And I
nearly took a baseball bat to that man. I was like, that kid will never forget what
you said. And God knows what you've been saying the rest of the school year. You know, I can't
get that classroom teacher fired. I couldn't make decisions at a level of policy that would
directly change that kid's life.
But I knew I would never forget that story and I never have.
And it taught me a lesson, which is that, yeah, for sure we have genetic endowments.
I am probably lucky to have gotten certain genetic cards from my dad and certain from
my mom.
I don't want to deny that, but holy smokes, the environment
you're in, the people who you're with, the opportunities that you have. I think we vastly
overestimate talent that's natural and vastly underestimate the power of our environments.
That's Angela Duckworth, author of the bestseller Grit and creator of one of the most watched
TED Talks of all time.
She's dedicated her life to understanding learning, motivation, and achievement.
She's a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania in Wharton and winner of the
MacArthur Genius Grant.
She also hosts the Freakonomics podcast, No Stupid Questions, and she has a new book,
Brewing.
More on that later in this episode.
Angela's writing and research have profoundly impacted the way we think about perseverance,
success, how we find our purpose, and how we reach our potential.
She's a thought leader whose work has helped everyone from first-time founders to first-grade teachers.
She's helped business leaders understand not only how to cultivate grit in themselves,
but the grit they need across their organizations as they scale. You gotta have incredible talent at every position.
There are fires burning when you're going home.
Can you believe it?
Such an idiot.
And then you go back to, this is totally going to be amazing.
There are so many easy ways.
I have no idea what to do.
Sorry, we made a mistake.
But you have to time it right.
Oops.
Working at a three-bedroom apartment.
Stuff that just seems absolutely nutballs.
Ten years later, we're like, well, that's just how you do it.
We haven't made it.
Just how you do it.
This is Masters of Scale.
I'm Jeff Berman, your host.
Angela Duckworth's book, Grit, The Power of Passion and Perseverance, became an instant
success.
Already a respected scholar, the book introduced a broad global audience to her research and
insights on grit as a predictor of achievement.
Angela's own journey as an academic, an author, and a public intellectual has been
anything but linear.
Her work has helped so many business leaders persist, scale, and succeed, but it took several
major pivots for Angela herself to find a career fit.
One that suited her strengths and met her deep desire to understand and help children.
We'll start with Angela as an undergrad at Harvard when she took her personal passion
to heart.
To pursue childhood education, she had to step off the path that had been laid out for
her.
Angela Brown Well, not to stereotype, but I am the daughter of Chinese immigrants who grew up in suburban
South Jersey.
So, it was a bit of cultural destiny to be pre-med.
But along the way, I found kids.
So I started tutoring actually back in high school, but as I got into my extracurriculars
in college, you know, I just found like more and more hours on the side of the ledger being outside of the lecture hall, even outside of the lab, and in schools and
in homes in the Cambridge, Massachusetts community. And at one point I did tally up and there
were more hours on the side of the lecture of being in the community versus in the lab
or in the lecture hall. And I made this discovery that kids are amazing. And just sitting next
to kids who are like
11 years old, I was like, whoa, you're wicked smart relative to me anyway.
And then the epiphany of like, oh, I need to change my life was just that I, at the
same time, had this dawning recognition that the education that these kids were getting
was not at all like the education that I got growing up in my home
and in the schools I had attended. So I made a hard pivot and I decided to not take the MCAT.
My dad refused to talk to me for six months, I think, after I made that choice. And I decided
to dedicate my career to kids and to initially education, teaching, nonprofit stuff, and now as a psychologist who studies human development.
This pivot from pre-med to education
is more than a narrative twist
that took Angela in a new direction.
It's perhaps the first example of a framework
that she's applied time and time again.
You could sum it up with a simple maxim,
take your own curiosity seriously.
When she felt the tug to work with kids, Angela did not set it aside as an inconvenient truth.
She didn't try to get rid of it.
She didn't allow herself to be frozen by the consequences it could bring as she migrated
away from the career in medicine she'd been pursuing.
Instead, she investigated her own curiosity.
She trusted her instincts and
followed the path where her energy and interest were naturally flowing. But pursuing that
passion wasn't without personal consequence. Did it make you rethink the decision to pivot
to kids?
Okay, I was a little bit of a rebel. My dad and I had this incredibly close and affectionate relationship.
I was the apple of my father's eye.
But we had this dynamic where if he said no, I said yes.
And if he said yes, I said no.
And you know, I have this I'll show you response that the moment someone says, oh, that's impossible.
You curl your fist into a ball, there's a fire in your belly,
you lean forward and you say to yourself, and sometimes out loud, I'll show you. So when my
dad told me not to go into education, yeah, I said back to myself because he wasn't picking up the
phone, I'll show you. In her senior year at Harvard, Angela started a not-for-profit summer school for underserved
kids.
That helped set her up to pursue her life's work after graduating college.
I rode around on my bike all senior year.
I think I got almost every business in Cambridge, Massachusetts to donate photocopies or free
ice cream.
I didn't know what I was doing.
I didn't have a business bone in my body, but I incorporated a 501c3 nonprofit.
We had a board of directors.
We opened our doors.
And then, you know, we ran and actually ended up being profiled as a Harvard Kennedy School
case study and won the Better Government Award and celebrated its 30th anniversary recently.
So it ended up becoming, I guess you would call that a successful startup that, you know,
in some ways scaled.
I think at last count, they serve 10% of the children in the Boston, Cambridge area.
What exactly were you seeing back then that inspired you that may not be obvious to most
of us?
So, when I was sitting next to a kid trying to help them do their homework, it was clear
to me that they were very often extremely bored. And when they were bored, they couldn't
learn anything, right? It was just like, you know, trying to pour water on a concrete surface. But when they were interested, so this would often happen, not when we were bored, they couldn't learn anything, right? It was just like trying to pour water on a concrete surface.
But when they were interested, so this would often happen not when we were doing
the homework problem that they were begrudgingly trying to solve.
But more like, let's take a break and talk about music or
talk about anything that you care about, skateboarding, whatever.
They could memorize facts, they could make connections,
like abstract general truths from disparate set of facts. I mean all the things that we would
call intelligence. And it was hard to ignore the gap between the obvious
intellectual potential that these kids had, especially when they were interested
and encouraged. And on the other side of this chasm, you know, their failing grades,
their trajectory of not graduating from college, and it was in a way obvious. Angela ran the not-for-profit
tutoring program for two years. Then she got a Marshall Scholarship to attend
Oxford. Furthering her interest in learning, she earned a master's in
neuroscience and planned to work in US schools. But she graduated in October,
missing the start of the academic year. So she needed a gig to work in U.S. schools. But she graduated in October, missing the start of the academic year.
So she needed a gig to tide her over.
The global consulting firm McKinsey came calling.
Basically, McKinsey hovers over Oxford like vultures
waiting for a stag to fall over.
So they just pounce on you.
So I do my best, bumble through this interview, and I made an offer, and I accept it under
one condition.
I said, I don't really care about increasing the productivity and the revenue and the profits
of these companies that pay you obscene fees. But I really care about public education.
If I come and work for McKinsey,
can I do pro bono work for most of my time?
Sure, that's fine, just come.
And I get there to New York.
And of course, looking at my resume,
neurobiology undergraduate from Harvard,
masters of neuroscience from Oxford,
I'm immediately put on all the pharma teams and all the
medical devices teams. And I did do a little bit of pro bono work, but I only
lasted 11 months and I only lasted 11 months because that got me to September
the next school year. And I went immediately to work in the New York City
public schools.
It doesn't sound like this was a tough choice for Angela. She knew she was biding her time, but that wasn't a given.
Prestige is alluring.
Big firms can be flattering.
They also come with life-changing paychecks,
and for many, they're a great fit.
With her personal passion propelling her,
it was easy for Angela to decide
to swap consulting for teaching.
But the change in environment was startling.
Imagine stepping from a massive company boardroom
straight into a seventh grade classroom.
I mean, you walk in, there are bars on the window.
I couldn't tell whether they're trying to keep people out
or keep people in,
but it did have the feeling of a jail cell.
There was like one terrible bathroom
that everybody in the school had to share,
like literally one, like one stall. So all the the school had to share, like literally
one, like one stall. So all the teachers, all the kids, you can imagine what that
was like by the end of the day. But what truly surprised Angela was the increased
challenge of the work itself. As a high-paid corporate consultant, she was
bolstered by vast resources and legions of high-achieving colleagues. Compare that to sitting with a middle schooler,
one-on-one, tackling word problems.
Teaching seventh grade math, it was just so much harder.
I mean, it was like, wow, I thought figuring out
what to do with your $7 billion of excess cash revenue
was a problem.
Like, this is hard, right?
What do I do with this kid who, you know, sitting
in front of me and has umpteen problems and I have 45 minutes to like change their life
per day? So it was humbling. And I don't think I was a great teacher. I tried really hard,
but I think the things I failed to do as a teacher probably were the inspiration for
like everything I've done since then.
Why were you not a great teacher?
Well, I mean, I did try, right?
So I was like, I will triple the amount of time
these kids get math.
When you're talking to somebody who's in seventh grade
and they only have second grade skill,
I mean, some of these kids were like barely adding.
So the most obvious thing to do
is just increase the time on task.
I don't think that was wrong,
but I think one of the things I have since learned
is that learning is not just about quantity of time on task, it's about quality of time on
task.
There was so much I had yet to understand about how to make learning efficient.
And I think the other major mistake was a failure to understand human motivation.
So I thought just by kind of like exhorting children, try harder.
If you try hard, you can make a life for yourself.
If you try hard, you can go to college,
you can get out of this hellhole where you live.
And I thought these sermons I would give on just trying hard
were going to motivate them.
And I think for the vast majority of my students,
it was not at all effective.
And that's why I discovered many better ways
to motivate ourselves and others today as a psychologist.
So, talk about the decision to pivot out of teaching. What was that next phase of the journey like for you?
Well, Jeff, I first want to say it was tear-filled.
I mean, we got this old couch from my parents. I ended up marrying my classmate from Oxford and then my McKinsey consultant colleague, Jason Duckworth,
and that's where I get my very white sounding last name.
And we had this old couch secondhand from my parents.
It was really ugly, but super comfortable, and it had these like huge overstuffed pillows.
And Jason joked that if we could get all the salt out of that couch because I cried so
much into it, we could just have enough salt for like New York City for the rest of the
century. I cried so much because it was so uncertain for me, you know, and
I didn't want to be a classroom teacher forever. I think that was very clear to me. It's not
that I disrespected the profession, but it wasn't fulfilling all of my needs. There was
a moment in time where I thought maybe I would start a charter school. I thought, oh, that's
how to scale, right? I've got this classroom with 30 kids. I had this urge to scale my impact.
But then I was like looking at these other principals and leaders. I didn't have that
leadership desire, actually, and I still don't. So I was really stuck. I was really angst-ridden.
I was like, maybe I should get an MBA. Oh my god, that sounds horrible. Like, what is
human resources? Should I go into that? And then I looked into it and I was like, no, please God.
It took an important type of grit for Angela
to let in this realization.
That no matter how much she kept at it,
teaching just wasn't for her.
It meant stepping away from her life plan,
starting over, yet again.
She was no longer an undergrad. Radical professional
change can feel wildly different depending on your phase of life. Angela
chose to embrace the unknown as a mid-career professional, married and
settled in Philadelphia. She dug deeper into her own curiosity. What was it
exactly that she wanted to know? She trusted that question to lead her.
And then finally, I kind of put two and two together
and I was like, I love kids.
And I'm pretty good at science.
And I think maybe I should go and get a PhD in psychology
and figure out how to help kids,
not as a classroom teacher,
but as a psychologist who unearths
their motivational
learning processes.
I only applied to one graduate school because it was the only one within commuting distance,
and that was University of Pennsylvania.
And I was 32, I think, and I was accepted.
So my classmates were like a decade younger than me, but I knew what I was in graduate
school for, to unpack the potential of kids and
to understand what motivates them, what enables them to be brilliant, and
what does the opposite.
And I started studying it in various ways.
And one of them ended up being the grit research that I've done on high achievers.
But everything I did from the very first day of graduate school to where I am
today was motivated by those kids
that I was sometimes not helping as much as I wanted to
earlier in my life.
More on how grit led the way for Angela Duckworth
to become a global thought leader after the break. We're back with University of Pennsylvania and Wharton Professor of Psychology, podcaster
and bestselling author Angela Duckworth.
To watch our extended interview with Angela, visit the Masters of Scale YouTube channel.
Let's talk about grit.
Because when you do a Google search for Angela Duckworth, if you were to graph it, it would
be a hockey stick starting in 2016.
So how did you land on grit?
How did you isolate that variable?
It's really quite an extraordinary branding as well
that you've done here around this word.
It's a really powerful word.
One syllable, just onomatopoeic.
Yes, yes.
Yeah, well, okay, so I did inherit something from my father.
I don't say this in the genetic sense, but being incubated in a household that talked about high achievement every single
day, I think I was bequeathed, as it were, an obsession with excellence.
I love the Olympics.
I love three-star Michelin chefs.
I mean, if you're a world-class plumber,
I want to watch you work, right? There's nothing more beautiful to me than the ballet
of human performance at its best. So I did the kind of straightforward, I don't know,
I just didn't have anything else to do other than to talk to these people who were Nobel laureates
or who had won a Grammy Award or you fill in the blank.
And what I was looking for is not what made them different from each other. What I was
looking for was the common denominator. What makes a prima ballerina the same as a Nobel
Prize-winning physicist? I found that they had this common trait. They had this combination combination of passion for what they did, unfakable 24-7 love of what they did, and
they had perseverance.
And I think in both dimensions, passion and perseverance, the thing that was most striking
was not the intensity but the stamina.
And so I found this common denominator emerging, and I thought to myself, how do I get kids
to begin to develop on this trajectory?
And then I also just wanted to reverse engineer those high achievers and ask the question,
how close can we get to that kind of excellence in our own lives?
So you embark on this research journey, you identify this common denominator, it's then
a leap to become really a public intellectual, right?
That was a total accident, by the way.
I started being asked to do interviews even when I was in graduate school,
which I thought was kind of ridiculous.
You know, I remember being asked to be on the local news because I had published research.
And now we have Angela Duckworth, a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania,
here to talk about the science of success. News
interviews led to more speaking invitations. Chris Wink, co-founder of the
Blue Man Group, asked Angela to present at a TEDx event about creativity. Her
reply? I don't study creativity, I study grit, right? And he said, anybody who's
creative knows it takes a hell of a lot of grit for one moment of inspiration. I was like, yeah, that's so true.
Angela may have found the media attention unpleasant, even off-putting at first, but
it was in service of her larger mission, and it led to a worldwide audience for her work
through another TED event.
It was like this collab with a public broadcasting service. So Bill Gates and others who were really passionate about education were all asked to give TED
talks.
I was one of them.
John Legend was our emcee and host.
So I gave this talk and I then went home from New York City back to Philadelphia and I just
didn't think about it.
I was just like, okay, check.
I did my job.
I did my best.
And then the talk ended up taking on a life of its own.
I think like coaches and moms and dads and managers everywhere started forcing people
to watch my talk.
And I think maybe there was a message there
that was hopeful to those of us who don't feel as I do.
Like, you know, we're not the most talented and most innately gifted people.
I will say that that was probably the one event in my life that put me into the spotlight.
But as I said, it was accidental.
It was not intentional.
Angela's book, Grit, The Power of Passion and Perseverance, was published in 2016.
The book perched atop the bestseller list and became a global clarion call.
The success of her book and her talks on stage added up to something new for Angela.
Writing and speaking were not just a byproduct of her research and passion.
They were a dynamic factor to lean into.
A whole other dimension of impact to explore.
There was the more gradually dawning realization
that I loved words, I loved using them,
I loved speaking them, I loved writing them,
I sure as hell loved reading them.
And I think one of the things that people
who become successful and people who scale, as
you say, what they do at some point is figure out not only one thing that they do well,
but a constellation of things that they do well.
So I could bring that love of words with me in my work as a psychologist.
And if I could use that, then maybe I could do something that would be really special.
Yes to helping kids.
No to being a manager of people.
Yes to science.
No to leaning away from her way with words.
Get clear about your mission,
which of your strengths can serve it,
and equally importantly,
the roles to rule out.
This is what helped Angela Duckworth
forge a unique path to impact. She paired
down her career to a few essential components. She also has applied this principle to her
writing. Her work is so wildly successful in part thanks to a hard-won commitment to
simplicity.
And to me, and I know that writers have different philosophies about the words that they string
together and what they're trying to accomplish, but my literary agent, a wonderful mensch
named Richard Pine, he said to me, Angela, you are a teacher.
And I think that's how I write.
You know, I'm trying to do the same thing I was trying to do with my seventh graders,
like teaching them algebra. I'm like, how do I take this hierarchical linear model with the set of time varying
covariates and explain to a smart but non-social scientist person what the bottom line is for
their lives?
And it's precarious work because I don't want to mislead by simplifying.
But I will stand up in front
of you and say that I think it's honorable work. I think a lot of my academic friends
think it's tawdry and possibly worse than tawdry, dangerous. They don't like the kind
of TED talk. They don't like this, that we're having this conversation.
Because it's impure, because it's not academically peer-reviewed.
It's not nuanced enough.
It doesn't embrace the full complexity, right?
There aren't the caveats and the footnotes.
It's not just the form, I think, that bothers them.
I think it really, in a meaningful way, disturbs them that people would leave out some of the
things that they think are important.
And I understand that.
And they're right.
But also, I think they're wrong.
What are they wrong about?
Okay, here I'm going to call on William James.
There's a kind of a joke in psychology that a psychologist isn't a real psychologist until
they've invoked the great William James.
So William James was the chair of Harvard's psychology department almost exactly a century
ago, maybe a little more.
And William James, actually,
I wish he had lived to see TED Talks because he was very much engaged in the project of
sharing what he had learned. I mean, he was a master of scale. He delivered a series of
lectures that he called Talks to Teachers. And you can actually just download Talks to
Teachers for free. It's everywhere on the internet. He says, what I have learned from
giving these lectures to school teachers is that I would learn to take out more and more
of this like abstruse academic detail and leave in the practical implications and the
most basic principles. And I have taken that to heart. You know, William James, he knew
that if he could deliver a short lecture on the nature of memory, on the nature of attention,
on habit formation, on love, on faith, that he would do more good than giving an 1800-hour
exposition that nobody would listen to.
Yeah.
We'll link to the William James talks to teachers in the show notes.
Please.
Yes, that would be a great service.
What's the most important one-liner of your career?
Probably the most well-known is that grit is at least as important as talent in predicting
achievement.
I think that's the one I'm known for, but I'm hoping to live a little longer and to
do better than that.
What I have been occupied since writing grit, and certainly for the last few years in earnest,
is a second book and a second line of work, and it is on the power of the situation.
So in a few words, grit is not enough, right?
And if you give me more words, you're like, oh, Angela, your one-liner can be a little
longer.
You can even have a semicolon.
You know? I would say, okay, Jeff, how about this?
Grit is not enough.
You must have your situation as your ally.
And what I'm obsessed about is something that psychologists,
in a way, it's like telling a chef that you need to make sure
you have to put enough salt and fat into a dish.
It's like the chefs are like, yeah, we know that.
It's elementary.
But I feel like that about how this power of the situation narrative is
blindingly obvious to psychological scientists, but maybe not to those of us who are just navigating our everyday lives.
And even in my own marriage, I thought to myself, wow, you know, my husband was a young real estate developer in 2008, right?
And it was a very, very stressful time. He was working some weeks, a hundred
hours a week. I was on tenure track at an Ivy League institution. We had two young children
who had to be taken care of. Like, there was so much stress. And the only trick I knew
was try harder. The only trick I knew was grit. I was like, you know, I'm going to wake up earlier, I'm going to stay up later. I am going to use every ounce of my will to make the life that I need
to make for my children and my husband and my career. And I'll tell you that that led
to a real crisis. It almost broke our marriage. There were just an unbelievable number of
therapy hours that we logged trying to rescue
ourselves from the precipice.
And what has struck me now and what I'm writing about is that grit is not enough.
You need a situation.
We needed therapy.
We needed to reach out to our friends and actually be vulnerable and not just have small
talk but actually tell them that we were in crisis.
He needed to change his work situation.
He has an advisory board now of mentors who help him prioritize in ways that he would
never be able to do on his own.
I reached out to mentors to help me figure out my research program and help me accomplish
it in more effective ways.
And so to me, you know, grit is great, but grit is not enough.
And you absolutely need to make your situation your ally if you're ever going to run the marathon of success.
Does the new book have a one-word title?
It does. It is easier. And it has a subtitle. Can I cheat and give you the subtitle?
I'd love it. Yeah.
The one-word title is easier and the subtitle is, A Better Way to Be Your Best.
And it's a quote from Maya Angel a better way to be your best.
And it's a quote from Maya Angelou who said,
do your best and then when you know better, do better.
What's the action item or the set of action steps
for someone who has got the grit?
They know that they're gonna work hard enough
to give themselves the best chance,
but the situation isn't yet right.
How do we assess that and what do we do about it?
One of the mistakes that I see founders make
is because they've had this trick
that has gotten them really far in life,
like try harder and be independent,
to not be a slacker, right?
I think the double-edged sword of that
is they don't ask for help.
And what I would say is a number one action step
is like you should be in a formal community
of other founders.
There's a power in the solidarity, the accountability, and the peer learning of a group.
You know, you want to be in a flotilla, not like off-sailing on your own. So that's number one.
And when I look back at the mistakes that I've made in advising young leaders,
it was to not tell them that first. And the second one is related, which is I think you need to make mentors.
When you listen to people talk about their mentors, it's like a thing that falls out
of heaven, you know, like, oh, I'm so grateful that this person came into my life and they
put me on the straight and narrow.
Right, but they're not just falling out of heaven.
You have to proactively make them.
It's a relationship.
And you need to start at the beginning and cultivate and so forth. So those would be my two pieces of advice to founders. You know, go find another
founder. It doesn't have to be your co-founder for your startup. It can be somebody who's
doing something totally different, but you should be meeting regularly, trading stories,
crying on each other's shoulders. And then you should go and very proactively cultivate
mentoring relationships. There's almost the myth of the lone entrepreneur working late into the night, whether it's
coding or solving a supply chain issue or whatever it is.
It's almost part of the hero's mythical journey.
Yet what I'm hearing you say is that myth should be actually a myth.
The reality is the highest achievers have that grit,
have that work ethic, but they're building a community
to help them get wherever they're going.
Is that the right way to think about it?
It is.
I mean, remember, even Luke Skywalker needed Obi-Wan Kenobi, right?
The modern day Luke Skywalker, for me, is Diana Nyad, right?
And this is the amazing woman who swam from Cuba
to the shores of Florida, you know, feet
that had never been done without a shark cage.
I mean, amazing and completely a story of grit.
And at the same time, on her last and successful attempt that she had made, you know, after
decades of trying and failing to do this, she heaves herself onto shore and she says
this, and I'm going to quote you, I'm going to read it to you so I don't get it wrong.
She says, I have three messages. One is, we should never give up.
Two is, you're never too old to chase your dreams.
And three is, it looks like a solitary sport, but it takes a team.
Angela Duckworth's journey has been shaped by pivots and hard-won realizations.
She has seen and studied the power of grit.
And not being one to believe her own hype, she's gone on to explore the limits of grit
alone.
In this next chapter, Angela embraces a nuanced, sustainable approach to achievement.
One that helps us understand the power of community, of mentorship, and of systems that
nurture.
Her commitment to rigorous research, coupled with her gift for turning complex ideas into
accessible wisdom, make her a beacon for anyone striving to reach their full potential.
I'm Jeff Berman. Thank you for listening.
Masters of Scale is a Wait What original. Our executive producer is Eve Trow. The production team includes Tucker Legerski, Masha Makatenina, and Brandon Klein.
Special thanks to Juliette Luini.
Mixing and mastering by Aaron Bastinelli and Brian Pugh.
Original music by Ryan Halliday.
Our head of podcasts is Lital Moulad.
Visit mastersofscale.com to find the transcript
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