Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Robert Glazer: How to Build a Winning Team and Culture | E270
Episode Date: January 29, 2024Robert Glazer knows something about how to maintain performance while scaling a business. After his company Acceleration Partners grew quickly from 7 to 300 employees, Robert knew he needed to figure ...out new ways to maintain employee satisfaction and performance. In this episode, Robert is going to share some easy steps you can take to start building the capacity of your teams and employees today.  Robert Glazer is the Founder and CEO of Acceleration Partners, a global partner marketing agency. He is also the host of the popular podcast Elevate, as well as the author of the inspirational newsletter Friday Forward and of six bestselling books including Elevate. His latest book is called Elevate Your Team.  In this episode, Hala and Robert will discuss: - The early days of e-commerce - Letting his first successful business die out - His passion for teaching other entrepreneurs - Building his email newsletter from scratch - Capacity building and pursuing your potential - The epiphany he had in his shower - Why your top performers can change - How to scale your business without breaking it - Why he doesn’t like personality tests - Creating a culture of learning in your company - Giving effective feedback - The problem with compliment sandwiches - And other topics…  Robert Glazer is the Founder and Chairman of the Board of global partner marketing agency, Acceleration Partners. A serial entrepreneur, award-winning executive, bestselling author, and keynote speaker, Robert has a passion for helping individuals and organizations build their capacity and elevate their performance. He is also the host of the popular podcast Elevate, as well as the author of the inspirational newsletter Friday Forward and of six bestselling books including Elevate. His latest book is called Elevate Your Team.  Resources Mentioned: Robert’s Website: https://robertglazer.com/ Robert’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/glazer/ Robert’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/robert_glazer Robert’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/robertglazer_/ Robert’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RobertSGlazer/ Robert’s Podcast (Elevate): https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/elevate-with-robert-glazer/id1454045560?mt=2 Robert’s Newsletter (Friday Forward): https://robertglazer.substack.com/ Robert’s Course (Discovering and Developing Core Values): https://robertglazer.com/core-values-course/ Robert’s latest book (Elevate Your Team: Empower Your Team To Reach Their Full Potential and Build A Business That Builds Leaders): https://www.amazon.com/Elevate-Your-Team-Ignite-Reads/dp/1728238781   LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course.  Sponsored By: Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at youngandprofiting.co/shopify HelloFresh - Go to HelloFresh.com/profitingfree and use code profitingfree for FREE breakfast for life Nom Nom - Go to youngandprofiting.co/trynomnom for 50% off your two-week trial Coda.io - Head over to coda.io/profiting to try Coda for free Indeed - Get a $75 job credit at indeed.com/profiting  More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review -  ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting  Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala  Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/
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We have way too much focus on hours and inputs and not outputs.
I've talked to people who still have PTSD from being told they weren't strategic
or they weren't funny.
A lot of feedback is way too personal.
Robert Glazer, founder and chairman of the board of acceleration partners.
He's on Glassdoor's list of top CEOs, a best-selling founder and chairman of the board of acceleration partners.
He's on Glassdoor's list of top CEOs, a best-selling author and host of a top 0.5% podcast globally,
The Elevate Podcast.
Sometimes people recommend to give a compliment sandwich.
It's actually a worse practice.
Again, we don't like to give hard feedback.
So we warm them up with a compliment, then we kind of say the thing that we want to say, and then we kind of end with a compliment.
The people just miss it. They miss that that was the important part.
There's times to compliment. You particularly were talking about a conversation where someone's
job is might be on the line. You want to be really clear and make sure that they understand
that and that they aren't confused. We have societal burnout going on right now. So you
can try to work people to death,
but you'll have to find new people
and they're all tired too.
And the way to fix that is...
["The World's Most Beautiful"]
What's up, young Improfiters? Welcome back to the show.
We've got a super insightful conversation in store for you all.
We're going to be talking about how to build capacity within our teams with one of the
best in the business.
Robert Glazer is the founder and CEO of Acceleration Partners, a global partner marketing agency.
He also is the host of the popular podcast Elevate, as well as the author of the inspirational
email newsletter Friday Forward and his bestselling book, Elevate.
Robert is passionate about helping people and organizations elevate their performance
and reach their true potential.
Today, we're going to be discussing his latest book, Elevate Your Team, and Robert is going
to share some easy steps you can take to start elevating yourself and your teams today. Welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast, Robert.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah, I'm super pumped for this conversation, and I really want to get into all your work with
elevating teams. But before we do that, I was hoping our listeners could get to know more about
you personally and professionally. Now, you've done a lot as an entrepreneur. You founded the product review website,
Bobby's Best, brand cycle,
and Acceleration Partners,
which is a partner marketing agency.
Everything seems to fall into
this intersection of e-commerce and marketing.
I thought we could start there.
Where did you first get your passion for
e-commerce and marketing and how did you hone
your skills in that area?
Yeah, I think I was probably always a marketer. I think I was born that way. And I ended
up after college working at a strategy consulting firm and that started a business incubator
project at it. From there, I went to an actual incubator and then a venture capital firm before going to operate a business.
And I think what I realized really early on was I liked fast growing businesses and being part of them.
But what I realized and led to a lot of the work that I did was that really at the end of the day for a consumer business,
what mattered was could you acquire customers cost effectively?
You hear a lot of times people, oh, there's someone who does this and this part of the
country, but if no one knows about them, that doesn't matter.
The businesses that win in the long run figure out how to get customers cost effectively.
That actually eventually led me into partner marketing and a bunch of different things.
I think it was those insights, fast growing businesses, and then how do you win in that
space?
And I started doing that when the whole e-commerce digital DTC boom happened.
And so that just sort of became the intersection of the things that I focused on.
Yeah.
Because you've been doing this since 2005, and that was pretty much the early days of e-commerce and things
like that.
Yeah. That was right before the whole direct-to-consumer revolution. And I remember when this business
called CSN Stores was launching all these crazy different brands and 100 different
brands, then all became way fair and people were first selling stuff online. And then all became way fair and people were first selling stuff online. And then I got very into SEO initially.
And that was what led me to the product review site.
The Bobby's Best Stuff was figuring out how do you get people to your site?
And then how do you convert them to buy things elsewhere?
And that's where I first ran into affiliate marketing and I just became
fascinated with it, but also found it ironic that it was so lowbrow when there was
an opportunity for the enterprise segment to use the same model.
Yeah.
And we actually have something in common.
So I used to have a website, which was a hip-hop entertainment news site back in the day when
I was like 25 years old, and it was actually really popular.
And it doesn't exist anymore because blog sites just aren't really that popular anymore
and things are always evolving.
And it seems like that's pretty similar to what happened with Bobby's Best.
Can you talk to us about that origin story, that company and what happened?
I was always the person.
I had consumer reports.
People would ask me for everything like which TV did you buy,
which whatever did you buy, like otherwise. And so eventually I was like, this feels like a job.
So why don't I set up a website and I'll pick one thing for each category. And I started hard
having kids. And so people were like, okay, can I have your baby list and all this stuff also got
a lot of interest in these life cycle markets with the same people, whether it's weddings or babies or certain milestones are going to be looking for the same things
at the same period.
So I set up this newsletter, but then I also set up a website.
This was kind of the birth of SEO and I realized, oh yeah, there's the thousand people I know,
but there's the hundreds of thousands I don't know.
So how can I rank for these things?
And then particularly getting the deals on these
things. And I think a lot of my friends thought it was just the silly kind of newsletter, but I was
ranking tremendously high around certain products and deals and discounts and making
a ton of money. And no one realized it. I kept it very down low. But like anything, eventually, you had
retail me knots and big sites coming in the customer shopping, and I just couldn't keep up.
And I was also building acceleration partners. And so, look, some things are designed to be
cash cows. Some things are designed to have enterprise value. At some point, I just had
to make a decision, do I keep doing this thing or do I build a bigger business?
And so I just let it die off.
Yeah.
And that's nothing to be ashamed about.
I brought that up because that's what it is, being an entrepreneur, especially in the
digital world.
It's understanding when something's not hot anymore and it's not going to scale.
Moving on to the next thing, that's going to have enterprise value like you mentioned.
So with Acceleration Partners, I know this is an agency
that still exists. You actually did create a company brand cycle that you sold. Correct me
if I'm wrong? Talk to us about those two businesses. What were you doing and how did they grow?
It was all connected. One of the things that I was doing incredibly well with as I had,
I was working at a company, this company called Tiny Prince, which did the first high end photo baby birth
announcements. And I hooked up with that company and I was
their biggest affiliate. And I went to the founder and I met him
and I was like, because I worked at a business that was oriented
around babies and parents. I said, look, I'm doing all this and
I'm brokering deals for you. But like, you could set up an
actual affiliate program. And he said, I have no clue how to do
that. And so I researched it and I deals for you, but you could set up an actual affiliate program." He said, I have no clue how to do that. I researched it, and I was an affiliate, but I didn't know how to
run in a program. I was like, all right, I'll try to set this up for you. I looked around,
and some of the networks, what they were doing didn't make sense. Everything was deal-in-coupons.
That program, we went out and we just found all these mom bloggers and baby bloggers,
and they loved this product. They were making a ton of money and the program grew like crazy and
Eventually they sold for hundreds of millions of dollars to shut or fly and what happened was I was running that program and then I got another referral and
The people from that company as happens in the valley they create success
They went elsewhere and then people started calling and saying, can you do that same program we had at Tiny Prince?
And they have a wedding site, wedding paper divas.
And so classic story, I did it and then I got one person to help me.
And then we kind of went into the affiliate industry that was very focused on lowbrow,
coupon, loyalty.
No one having any clue where their partners were and did the first,
let's go find content partners
and people related and build high quality programs
and make sure there's no fraudsters in it.
And kind of this white glove program.
And at the time, most people was more in the weeds,
but they went to their network
and they got the technology and the agency.
And we basically said, you don't go to Facebook,
to be your Facebook agency for obviously reasons. You don't go to Facebook, you know, to be your Facebook agency for obviously
reasons, you don't go to Google to be your search agency, you really should keep your
agency that's focused on ROI separate from your technology.
And we helped start this industry of independent agencies that manage affiliate partner programs.
And we helped drive and expand that industry into the high end white glove.
There was always the email offer, but this was the targets and the e-bays and the ubers
and people wanting to run very global,
high-quality partner programs
that had hundreds or thousands of partners in them.
That's so awesome.
Robert's actually in my podcast network.
And this is one of the first conversations
that we've had together.
And I love finding out that you have this awesome agency with doing partnerships because it's
so similar to what I do at YAP Media, but just with affiliates.
It's very similar to running sponsorships and things like that, and at least working
with the same brands utilizing influencers and things like that.
It's just cool to know your background and get to know you better like that.
Yeah.
The influencer stuff is now crossing into the partner stuff.
When you think about, if you're an advertiser, you can buy a click or an impression, but
if you can just pay on performance, if you could enable all of these people and it's
coming to podcast a little bit.
Brands are excited to pay for marketing after they get a sale.
We are now over 300 people global.
We partnered with a private equity firm a few years ago, and we helped run some of the
biggest programs in the world.
Awesome.
That's incredible.
You're obviously a very successful entrepreneur.
You are on Glassdoor's list of top CEOs.
Like you just mentioned, you built an agency with nearly 300 employees.
But now you're moving into books, podcasts, and you're basically teaching entrepreneurs.
And I do the same. I've got companies, and then I also love to teach entrepreneurs.
So what drives you there? Why do you feel so passionate about teaching entrepreneurs how
to be more successful? Yeah, so a couple of things. I've identified my sort of core purpose is to
share ideas and help people grow. And so when I figure out something, I kind of want to share it.
And so building the company and trying to build a company that had a great culture
and was a place I wanted to come to work every day, we broke a lot of rules
and we did things differently and we felt like it really worked.
And so I started writing about those things and talking about those things.
The big tipping point for me was after a leadership training,
it was talking a lot about the importance of sort of
reading something positive in the morning
and writing something positive in the morning.
We had about 40 people at the time
and we were all distributed.
And I decided to start this newsletter
which I changed the name or this note like five times.
It was a Friday thing and it was not about work. It was not about our business.
It was about just getting better or something about improvement.
I didn't have the turn building capacity at the time.
And I started just sending this note every Friday to our team.
And I honestly didn't think that anyone was even reading it or cared.
But people started to write back and they said, you know what?
I really loved that or I tried that or I did that.
Or actually I sent this to my brother. I sent this to my husband. He forwarded along. And I was like,
hi, I wonder if people outside the company would be interested in this. I was at an EO,
an entrepreneurs organization event. I was telling people as a best practice that this
was something I did and I was getting good feedback. And they all said, oh, we'll send
it to us. And so I threw them on there. And three of them were like, this is great.
I'll just send this to my employees every week.
And the fourth one started his own and still does it.
And I said, huh, so maybe, I don't know,
I'm managing this to BCC.
People are asking me, I wonder if people would be interested
in this outside of the company.
So I took like 300 of my friends and family.
I created a newsletter list, but it just looked
like a regular email.
I just couldn't manage it anymore.
I threw everyone on.
I waited for the hate mail. Like, what the hell is this? Take me off or otherwise.
But I kept getting great comments. I kept getting forwarded. So I called it Friday
forward three or four years later, I woke up and there's 100,000 people in 60 countries
signed up for this email every Friday. And I've been doing it for eight years. And so
that led to a book sort of on the Friday forward and actually that book was rejected,
which turned out I went back and wrote the Elevate book.
So there's a whole story there.
But that simple email every Friday now built a multi-hundred thousand news.
I think I just looked like 140 countries now, people reading it every week.
Yeah. I get that email.
So what a cute story.
I love that you shared that.
When I was looking at your background,
I saw that you got a really interesting major in college.
You studied industrial psychology,
and I had to look that up and I found out
that was the study of behavior of employees
in the workplace.
And when I was thinking about all of your work and building these companies and building
such big teams and now writing books about teams, I have to ask, did you always have
a passion for teams and how did this learning in college really help set you apart from
other entrepreneurs, do you think?
Steve Jobs had this quote about the dots connecting and only in reverse.
So I went to school, super competitive business school.
I didn't get into the business school initially.
You can't really transfer, but I wanted to take advantage of it.
And so I ended up creating my own major focusing on the sort of team,
human behavior side, and then the business fundamental stuff.
This may resonate with you deeply, but having now run professional services
firm for over 20 years, all the business fundamental stuff is so... I could have been a psychologist
and it would have been the same background because in a professional service business,
your product is people, your customers are people, your partner are people. No one ever
calls me and tells me a machine is broken, a widget didn't come in otherwise.
So I do feel like a professional psychologist in some ways.
It's always a human issue.
So that side of it was super helpful.
And obviously the business kind of fundamental and basic and management accounting is helpful,
but particularly in where I landed up in professional services, it just worked out perfectly.
I really think that's so awesome that you were able to go to school, learn about that,
and later on it connected the dots.
But I bet you like you were saying, in the process, probably didn't feel like you were
using what you learned in school, but later on you probably look back and think, oh my
gosh, how everything comes full circle.
It is interesting.
And we spend a lot of time on people and capacity
and helping people build and develop leadership.
I'm really passionate about that.
And when you really get into it with people,
it's a lot of personal things that are holding them back
and things that they carry with them
and things that have nothing to do with the workplace.
And the more that you have these discussions and kind of authentic and carry with them, and things that have nothing to do with the workplace. And the more that you have these discussions
and kind of authentic and vulnerable with people,
I just, you see a lot of those same patterns.
So I feel like at this point,
I almost have a psychology degree.
How people work and react and teams and personality types
and all of that stuff and communication styles,
that's all the stuff that shows up day to day
and in the workplace in leading and management.
I totally agree. Let's move on to your book Elevates. In your book, you spend a lot of time
talking about four life-changing principles or capacities. You talk a lot about this concept
of capacity building. You touched on it earlier in this conversation. So let's start there.
What do you mean by capacity building exactly?
There's a short and a long definition.
Capacity building is the method which individuals seek, acquire,
and develop the skills and ability
to perform at a higher level in pursuit of their potential.
That's during my long winded.
The short thing is I think this is actually
a formula for how we get better.
And it's not about doing more,
it's doing the right thing.
It has four pieces and if you can imagine four quadrants of a ball,
spiritual, intellectual, physical, and emotional.
And I'll explain each one,
but to me, if you're working on those things and growing them,
you have this ball, bigger mass,
it's rolling, when one of these gets out of whack,
you can imagine it kind of flying all over the place. But these to me are the four things of how we improve. So spiritual capacity is not religious. It's about understanding who you are, what you want most and the standards you want to live by. I think for most people, it's their core values and what it is they value at their core. Intellectual capacities about how you improve your ability to think, learn, plan,
and execute with discipline. This is like your personal operating system. Like, how do you get
better at something? How do you learn something so you do it better, tomorrow, and faster, and
smarter, and don't make the same mistakes? Physical capacity is your health, well-being, and physical
performance. And then emotional capacity is how you react to challenging situations, your mindset,
and the quality of your relationship.
So if this was a race car, spiritual capacity would be designing it, intellectual capacity would be building it,
physical capacity would be like taking it on a practice track.
But then emotional capacity is like what happens when other people are driving their cars at 200 miles an hour, right?
It now takes on a whole different thing.
And so I think for all of us working on those four pieces interconnected or how we improve, and we're always a little at a
whack, but some of us are really at a whack in a couple of these areas.
So you wrote this book in 2019, and like you just mentioned, it's all about how to elevate
yourself, leveraging those four principles that you just mentioned. You had an epiphany in the shower where you realized that these concepts fit
perfectly with material around teams and the work that you know around teams.
So talk to us about that epiphany and what led you to write elevate for teams.
Elevate actually was a Friday Ford compilation that got rejected because
the editor said, look, you've already written all these things.
I love the compilation which I ended up writing later,
but like what's the story behind the story?
And when I realized all these Friday Fords,
I read what were the themes.
And so I went and extracted them.
I said, oh, each one of these things touches
one of these themes.
And this is actually the process I've used
to make huge improvements in my life
and what I've seen other people do as well.
The people I see killing it have these four elements.
Well then, at the same time, we were really struggling with the company was growing really
quickly.
Some people were growing along with it or even getting better.
Some people were kind of falling off the cliff as I'm sure you've seen as your organization
grows fast.
And I was super frustrated I couldn't figure out who was who and which was which and why
that was. And eventually I realized it was actually the same formula and that
the people that could grow with the company had built the ability to build their capacity
at an equal or greater rate to the organization. And that actually, we had been training around
these four things and we had been focused on this in leadership development. We just
not consciously, and I didn't have the words or otherwise. Once we had the words, we could really double
down on it. What changes in that context, same formula, but for teams, is that spiritual
is about helping make sure your teammates understand their values and what's important
to them because they're not going to become great leaders if they aren't introspective
or self-aware. I think level five leadership, as Jim Collins defines it,
requires you to be who you are and be comfortable with that.
A lot of us start out in leadership and we take a bunch of best practices from other people
that we saw and a bunch of things we hated about bosses that we had and we mash it together,
but it's not super authentic.
Intellectual capacity in the workplaces about creating this culture
of learning and feedback and growth and people who want to get better and want to improve
and otherwise. Physical and emotional is, again, are we creating environment that lets
people maintain good physical and emotional capacity? Are we destroying it? Are we burning
people out? How do we create an environment that is about results? It's not about hours
worked and then again, doesn't burn people out. And then emotional capacity in the workplace,
a big degree of that is psychological safety, right? Are we creating a workplace that is
psychologically safe? Are we getting teams that focus on the things that are vulnerable,
that are talking to their team and that focus on the pieces that they control
and not the pieces they don't control. And look, we see this a lot. And you've probably seen this
in organizations. And I think this gets fostered by leadership. There are sales teams, they've never
lost a deal that was their fault, right? And this gets permitted. We got screwed by the partner,
we got screwed by the client. They're just not even looking at what they did wrong or what they
could do better last time. And so that's something you either allow in your organization
or you don't allow in your organization.
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I love hearing about this stuff. It gets me so excited because as an entrepreneur,
all you want to do is just get your team more productive, working smoother,
having a better company culture. And this is all the stuff that you preach. And one thing
that I want to dig a little deeper on is this idea that you were just sharing about how your
top performers don't always stay your top performers. And as an entrepreneur, I've experienced this where I've had somebody who was
like a clear A player crushing it.
And then like two years later, what happened to XYZ?
Just making errors or whatever it is.
And I've been an entrepreneur for four years now.
A real, I was an entrepreneur when I was younger, but like a real renewed
entrepreneur for four years now.
You were born one. Yeah. I was. I had I was younger, but like a real renewed entrepreneur for four years now. You seemed like you were born one, yeah.
I was. I had a lot of day I was. But with Yap Media, and I've even noticed that people have like on and off years.
Now that some people have been working with me for four years, one year they're a rockstar, one year they're not. One year they're a rockstar, one year they're not.
So just curious to hear your thoughts about how we can scale with
our team. What kind of team players should we be looking for who can actually scale and
be top performers year over year?
Yeah, there's so many different ways to answer that. Let me start at a high level, which
I think we're coming off this extraordinary period. So for anyone who's 32 or under the
last 10 years before the last two years, they might think that that was normal,
but historically it was an aberration. It was free money. It was hyper growth. It was you didn't
have to make money. It was valuing the top line. And so the goal was just grow the business. And
if you destroy the people along the way, that's fine. My analogy is if NASA said, hey, we're going
to put a crew on Mars, then it flies to Mars, and they open it up and everyone's dead,
I don't think everyone would be cheering, right? But this was sort of how companies ran,
where we're just going to hit this goal and it doesn't matter. That's gone. People are burnt
out. The money's not there. We're not valuing the top line. So now we have to build companies by
building the people. If you picture growth as
like a wave, instead of being crushed by the wave, we need to ride the wave. And the way to do that
is make sure that they're building their capacity and growing with your business. And it's kind of
a win-win, not a win-lose. So to what you were saying before, my definition of an A player,
it's not an absolute. You've seen people grow into ones and out of ones in cycle.
It's the right person in the right seat at the right time.
And when your business is changing that much, the seat is changing.
And some people don't want that next job.
So some people, they're good from zero to five million, and they need to do that again.
But some people just aren't improving at the rate they need.
If your business is growing 40% a year,
the leader of each of those functions
needs to grow 40% a year just to stay at that job.
That's a really hard thing to do.
So I think we should do everything that we can do
to help our people grow with the businesses.
But then we also have to make those hard decisions
when the job just isn't the same job anymore.
And I think a lot of people, the job has changed, but they're afraid to admit that
and they don't want to do it and they don't want to give it up.
But frankly, that's where the leader has to come in and say,
I don't think you want to do this.
Let me help you find something else somewhere else.
This isn't the same job it was two years ago.
I love that.
Right seat, right person, right time.
That is so brilliant. I love that right seat, right person, right time. That is so brilliant.
I love that so much.
Okay, so in your book, you say that every time
you double a company size, you break 50% of your processes
and 50% of your people.
So my question to you is, do you feel like
that's inevitable or is that something that we can prevent?
I think you can prevent it,
but that's what coaches always told me.
And that was sort of why I was like, I don't want to do that.
I don't want to change the tires every two times around the race course.
So how do we focus on finding high aptitude people and creating a culture where we have
all these things, where we have introspective and learning and we're not burning people
out and they're growing?
What's exciting to me is when people always grow and take that next seat.
And when you build from your draft class, because it's just like sports, the overpaid
free agents often aren't worth the money.
It's better to build through the draft.
So the book talks about really all the things that we can do to try to give ourselves the
best shot of building from the draft.
The goal is to do better than that number.
I don't think it's fun.
You don't want to break half your people every two years, right?
I mean, you want to be in the battle with these folks and understanding that over time, yes,
people will cycle in, they'll cycle out.
The 50% rule was presented to me and a lot of this was how do we not fall into the 50% rule?
You talked a lot about how to prevent the employees
or focus on the employees, but how about the process piece?
What is your guidance in terms of preventing your processes
from breaking as you're scaling?
We have a core value of Excel and improve.
And I always explain it to people
that excellence requires improvement.
So if we have a best practice way of doing something
and you have no clue how to do it,
you probably should use that.
But you also need to be constantly looking at changing that or improving it.
The thing is, improve the operating system for everyone.
Don't just improve it to yourself.
That to me is the excellence and the standardization.
But we should always be looking at every process we have and blow it up and make it better and roll out the new code to everyone.
When you move away from excellence is when you're running 4.0 and I find 5.0 and hold it to myself and then Sally finds 6.0, right?
You want Sally to find 6.0 and then tell everyone running 4.0 and 5.0 to upgrade. So to me, everything
has to be revisited. I tell an onboarding culture story about one of our core values,
about one of our best traditions in the company
in this award ceremony.
And it just went from nice to not working
as we went from 10 to 75 people.
We had to totally reinvent it
to bring back that special piece of it again.
And then three years later, we had to reinvent it again.
So that's always gonna happen.
I totally agree with that.
Re-evaluating and always looking to improve your processes.
Even when things are going well, right? That is the time where you can do that I totally agree with that, reevaluating and always looking to improve your processes, even
when things are going well, right?
That is the time where you can do that because you actually have the time and there's no
fires.
And that requires that psychological safety, right?
It requires a culture where people can say, this is broken.
We need to fix it.
And they don't get the, it's always been that way.
It works.
Leave it.
Yeah.
So you have four components in Elevate for both the individual capacity and the team
capacity, spiritual, intellectual, physical, and emotional. And we talked about that previously,
but I do want to spend a little bit more time on each one of these areas. So let's start off with
spiritual. And I know that a lot of people cringe when they hear anything that has to do with,
I know you said it doesn't have to do with religion, but just they just cringe.
So what would you tell to people who are like, what does that have to do with business?
If you don't know what your core values are, you don't realize how much they're driving
your behavior in leadership and in life.
We just did this with a group of leaders and two of the people in the organization were
really struggling with each other.
The root of both of it was childhood experiences that strongly impacted their values and how
they behave.
So I can give you an example of this.
Let's imagine we have a lot of people, when we've done this process, they have a core
value of trust.
For most of those people, there were some violation of trust in their life that made
trust really important.
But that's their operating system.
That's how they operate.
They trust their team.
They keep them close.
They have a small circle.
What was happening was a leader who has,
and every time this has come up when you ask them this,
if someone on their team was a little bit late,
missed a deadline, couldn't be found at four o'clock,
that strikes like this is someone who can't be trusted,
and they put them in a penalty box and locked the key,
and these people didn't know about it.
So once they have that awareness,
and when they understand these things,
but they would go to their team and say,
look, Hala, you're my new employee,
trust is really important to me,
and I am going to give you trust,
and you are in my circle,
but by the way, once it's broken, it's broken.
And here are some of the things where that can happen. Well, now you're leading with that, and you're using that. So I think
there are a lot of these things that, again, I try to 100 words and I know spiritual, it
is just about understanding yourself, understanding your strengths, your inclinations, they're
all different for each of us. Honoring that, understanding that about other people, because
most issues are communication
issues, and then using that to your advantage to be the kind of leader that's authentic.
I am a totally different leader than the other people in my organization.
And I would say, I'll say to people, this is why you'll hate working for me, or this
is why you're like working for me.
It's the same thing.
So I'm just going to lay it on the table for you and you can decide.
It is really important when you're managing teams to have that alignment with core values.
I actually did an exercise with Darius Marchasade, who's our mutual friend.
We did this whole workshop with him. It was a three-week long process and we have core values
now. My team culture was always strong at YAP
because we started as a volunteer group
for my podcast six years ago.
And it was 20 people for two years worked for free for me.
And when we were volunteers, it was just easy.
We had a culture because we were just doing it for free.
We all had the same passions.
And as we evolved as a business,
I started to feel like we lost some of that culture
that was just ingrained in us because we basically all started this together.
So we started these core values, we rolled them out, and it's been so impactful to just
have clarity, writing them down, communicating them to your point when we're doing hiring,
we're judging people based on if they fit or not.
And it's just helped so much, I think, with reducing employee attrition and everything
like that.
Yeah, and Darius is really good, and producing employee attrition and everything like that. Yeah.
And Darius is really good, and it done some work with him on the business ones.
Yeah.
I ended up creating a course on the personal ones, which align.
If people understand their personal core values, they will align mostly if you get the right
person to YAP's core values.
So we did that with so many leaders.
And when they read Elevate and they talked about, okay, I buy this personal core value thing
I want to figure out mine. How do I do it? And I was like, it's not that easy
I have a whole process I do with the team like what can you share that with us?
I was like, I don't really have a great way to do that
So I turned it into our course and over 2,000 people have taken that and just figured out their personal values
Amazing work. Can people take it now? Yeah, they can go to CoreValuesCourse.com and I'll set up something if they get a discount if they put Hala in there.
Cool. Awesome. I'll put that in the show notes for everybody.
So speaking of getting to understand who your employees are and their own values and personality traits,
you actually are not a fan of personality tests, or at least the obvious ones.
How do you suggest that we evaluate our employees
and see if they align to our values?
Yeah, so I've taken all of these,
and I'm not a fan of them.
I actually, I love them, whether it's disk or values
or Colby or any of these things,
I just don't think they should be used for interviewing
because what happens is you have this bias
where people go for the same as them and you actually want a team that's different.
But it's super helpful for me to know that you are an S or I am a D or other because it helps with all the communication stuff.
So I don't think you should use them for hiring.
I know Adam Grant and some people said, look, I don't really see them as personality as much as they are your styles or your preferred form of communication or the way you
kind of operate. I don't look to put someone in a hole, but they are incredibly, we've done the
why stuff with Gary Sanchez. And when two people are in like a real argument, I first go to that
information. What are your why's? What are your, I'm like, oh, this is, this is why you're doing this.
Understand this, because there's some just natural conflict points between those two
different profiles.
And yeah, we've done a lot with Gary Sanchez and his Y archetypes.
I have found those to be the most accurate as to the behavior that drives people at their
core.
Oh, I got to look them up.
I've never heard of them.
I got to check that out.
He took Simon Sinek's now find your...
Simon got everyone convinced
that they should know their why,
but then going to figure out your why
is like not an easy thing.
And Gary developed archetypes,
nine specific why archetypes by interviewing thousands
of people.
And so I feel like Simon kind of wound it up
and Gary actually made it doable for people
because he gives you an archetype
and the strengths and weaknesses and all that stuff. Oh, awesome. I love that.
Okay, moving on to number two, which is intellectual capacity.
Can you talk to us about why creating a culture of learning is so important
and what are some actionable ways that we can facilitate learning within our organizations?
Yeah. So first, for all these things, people are the same inside of work and outside of work.
They're not really good with money at home and super energetic and walk in a work and are terrible
with budgets and exhausted. These things are consistent. And so I think learning cultures
and feedback cultures are how you get better and grow. So simple things like having a book club or
I have a podcast club because it's free.
We pick an episode, we listen to it, we talk about it, we talk about how we can do something better.
We also focus on what are healthy routines? What does a good morning routine look like? We do a lot of how Elrods' Miracle Morning.
Because again, if your people are well rested, if they're taking care of themselves, they're going to come to work better.
A lot of two is feedback and learning how to have these difficult conversations and
framing it when you're growing around.
This is about learning and not making the same mistake.
And so many people don't know how to have these conversations that they put them off
and then they lead to even worse conversations.
So we even have a whole module and we talk about some of it in the book around how do you practice having these
difficult
Conversations so that you don't wait too long to have them. Yeah difficult conversations are definitely gonna come up in business
All the time and it's really important to understand how to give feedback
Talk to us about how feedback can be really damaging sometimes if you don't know how to do it effectively
Yeah, most companies don't train and people don't train sometimes if you don't know how to do it effectively.
Yeah, most companies don't train and people don't train on how to give it and how to get it, right?
And a lot of feedback is way too personal.
One of the things you should never do is tell someone they are something or they aren't something.
I've talked to people who are five and 10 years later still have PTSD from being told they weren't strategic or they weren't funny.
Strategic is a perfect one.
Telling someone they're not strategic doesn't feel like something they can fix.
Explaining to them, hey, in the report to the client there,
these are the places where more strategic insight was...
Now, it may be true that they're not strategic,
but if you're trying to give feedback,
you need to explain what strategy looks like
and examples of how they can improve it. So it should always be depersonalized, just like in
parenting, you should never tell someone they're smart or not smart. You should can say it's
something they did was smart or something they did was not smart. And one of the frameworks I
like is really simple, SBO, situation behavior outcome. What happened? What did you do? And then
what was the result? What was the outcome? And why does the outcome matter What happened? What did you do? And then what was the result?
What was the outcome?
And why does the outcome matter for you?
This happened on the call of day.
And I think you really wanna fix this
because you're gonna lose the sale
or people aren't gonna wanna work with you
or not have it be sort of about me.
So that's the giving.
On the receiving side, particularly upward feedback,
the first time you're not receptive to feedback, it'll be the last time you get it.
And people will just go tell everyone else, you know, not you.
So I think you have to make it clear that your door is open and you're always
willing to feedback.
You have to just shut up and listen.
If you try to formulate your response as the person is talking, they can tell
you're not listening, you're getting into, you just have to listen.
Even if you don't agree with it, you just have to listen.
And then you have to thank the person. And then you can take your time to reflect, you're getting into it. You just have to listen. Even if you don't agree with it, you just have to listen. And then you have to thank the person.
And then you can take your time to reflect.
You can act on it.
You can follow up or not.
But doing those three things, like my door's open, just listen and thank them,
means that people will come and share things with you.
Otherwise, they won't.
And I would much rather have someone tell me a problem to my face
than tell everyone else about it.
Yeah. It takes some emotional intelligence to just be positive and process it afterwards.
And it doesn't mean you have to take all the feedback. It just means that in the moment
as a leader, you accept it and act professional and positive.
Yeah. That person feels heard. They don't feel like you're fighting with them and arguing
with it. So you just have to, again, eat the key, swallow it and just listen to it.
Yeah.
We've talked a lot about getting feedback on the podcast.
I had Kim Scott on the show.
I've had Heather Monahan talk about that.
And sometimes people recommend to give a compliment sandwich, right?
So say something nice, say the mean thing or the thing that needs improvement. Say something nice. And you're not really aligned with that, right? So say something nice, say the mean thing or the thing that needs improvement, say something nice.
And you're not really aligned with that, right?
So what do you think is wrong with that approach?
It's actually a worse practice.
And our training around this,
where we model fake conversations,
where players have to sit down
and they only know one side of the story
and not the other side and you watch what happens,
you see how poor it is.
Because how many conversations did someone have someone told you about? We're like,
yep, I talked to the Pala, I gave her her warning, she understands. And then Hala's like,
I thought everything was going great. And what happens is when you watch people do this,
again, we don't like to give hard feedback. So we warm them up with a compliment, then we kind of say the thing that we want to say,
and then we kind of end with a compliment.
And people just miss it.
They miss that that was the important part.
And I've done this training 100 times
after one of these scenarios, and we
ask the group of everyone watching,
and we say, how many people think that that person knows
that their job is on the line?
And no one has ever raised their hand after doing this training
because the default of the person is to launch that in.
When they do it again, it totally changes.
I have a couple of lines in the book,
and the last time I had to do this,
I just did this and I got in and I said,
this is going to be a really difficult conversation.
I need to tell you some things.
Now, there's no sugarcoating it.
There's times to compliment and otherwise, But when you're particularly were talking about a conversation where someone's job
might be on the line, you want to be really clear and make sure that they understand that and that
they aren't confused with good, bad, good. Totally. Because I could imagine how that could be confusing
and people actually remember the last things that you said to them more than the first and the last things and they lose the thing in the middle. Like,
that's a proven fact to your point. So you're basically leaving the most important part in the
part that's the easiest to forget. I totally agree that that's probably not a great way to do it.
Can you give us some real examples of giving somebody good feedback. What does that sound like?
I'll give you the example that I use in my training, and this is kind of, I like to use
law and order rip from the headlines. So years ago, we had an employee who was very cerebral,
and let's just call this person Jamie, and liked to think through things before answering,
but they were in a client service role. So several times in a week, they had been on a call with their manager and the client
asked a question and there was awkward silence for like 10 or 20 seconds.
So manager could say to Jamie, Jamie, there are two calls this week.
You sound like an idiot when the silent was so awkward for me, it was awkward for everyone
involved.
That's the classic personal attack.
It's bad for me. It was awkward for everyone involved. That's the classic personal attack. It's bad for me.
It's just being mean.
The SBO approach would be like Jamie.
I noticed on the call last week, twice,
there was an awkward pause after the client's
asked you a question.
I know that you're someone who likes to think through
something, but frankly, I'm worried that the client
thinks you're not gonna know what you're talking about
when you have that.
So let's think of a crutch phrase.
Maybe it'd be better for you to say, let me look into that if you need some time and just use that to buy yourself some time and come back.
Because I know you know what you're talking about, but I'm just afraid the client's going to be worried that you don't.
Totally different approach.
One is about the actions, how you can get better, approve why it's helpful to that person.
The other one is just a personal attack.
And I think that's what most people default to on First Infinity is the first one.
So basically you're saying, don't make it a behavioral thing with them or a personality thing.
Make it about the exact action and how they can fix it and just be precise.
Give the precise advice about that exact specific incident and don't label them.
Jared Ranere And why is it bad for them? Everyone cares about why things are bad for them. They
don't care why it's bad for you. So when we say something from a place of annoyance or like it's
bothering us, that sounds like why is it bad for them. They care about what? Like again,
Jamie, you're a really smart guy. I don't want clients to not think that you don't know what
you're talking about when you do.
So I think this is the type of strategy you need to bridge that gap.
That's wanting to help Jamie do better.
Similarly to the not strategic person.
Look, there's three or four times in the presentation where the client needed some strategy.
This is what it looks like.
This is what they needed to hear and what they got was tactics.
You want to criticize the actions or the behavior, not the characteristic of the person anyway.
And by the way, this is your job as a leader to develop your employees and the people on your
team. And so if you're afraid of giving feedback or you don't know how to give it,
people are never going to improve. And it's literally your responsibility to help them
improve in their careers. And when I look back at my career, I used to work in corporate and I remember I was a little bit
arrogant because I was really productive. I would always just rock everything. And I remember my
manager loved me so much, but he told me, Calla, your team members aren't going to like you.
You've got to be nicer. Basically, he used to tell me, you've got to be nicer. You're too focused, just like a machine. And that's helpful. But I
also think your weaknesses are your strengths. Right. And nicer is it nicer than characteristic,
right? So, yeah. Exactly. So to your point, it's like, what does that even mean? But
I appreciated his feedback because it at least allowed me to remember to think before I
speak or not topple over people if I could avoid it.
Right. And you could say, right, Holly, you're a superstar and you're a high achiever,
and so that's going to be threatening to other people. And so you're going to want people on
your team and to be supporting you. So here are some of the things you might want to think about
to do that, right? That's probably how you'd want to land that message.
Yeah. And he probably said it a lot nicer, but like my remembering is that like, you're
not nice enough, right?
I told you, I can give you a list of people they've said they can remember the person who
said to them. I remember a boss who said, wasn't it okay? We said, there's nothing you won't
waste money on. But they have this list. It's like a flashball memory of what they were
told.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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So physical capacity is the third one.
And this is about employee health and wellness.
So how can we have more work life balance?
Or what are the ways as leaders that we can foster that within our teams?
It's like the Hippocratic Oath in First Do No Harm.
So I tell the story of Marissa Meyer, right?
Marissa Meyer came into Yahoo.
She was heralded as this top employee at Google.
She bragged about her 130 hour work weeks and articles.
If you've done the math on that,
that's 18 hours a day for seven days,
so barely enough time to even sleep.
And bought 52 companies at Yahoo and got fired
and the whole thing was an abject failure.
Now, there's no question that Meris and Meyer work hard,
but hard work and smart work are different.
So I still think we have way too much focus on hours and inputs and not outputs.
So I think getting people focused on outcomes
and not celebrating heroes hours and inputs because we're not,
I mean, you're salespeople, you
are happy with they are making a lot of calls or if they're selling things, right?
Which do you want to do?
People need time off.
They need rest.
They need to step away from work.
You need a culture where it's okay to take a vacation and people cover you and you turn
off your phone and you come back rested.
But if I, the leader, and look, the leader emulates for everyone, there's a great example.
So if I'm going on vacation and I say, hey, team, I'm going on vacation next week.
But if you need me, slack me, text me, email me, I'll be on every day.
That clearly says one thing.
And then everyone emulate that behavior.
There was an email I saw from a guy at a venture firm.
He said, basically like the difference of I'm going on vacation, I'm going to be with my family. So here's my wife's cell phone and text her if there's
a real emergency and she'll find me. And if you need to reach me by email, please use
interrupt my vacation at thecompaniesomean.com, right? Sends a totally different message to the team
around taking time off. Another very simple thing I started doing years ago as
the leader, look, I would get up when I had little kids and I'd go through emails on a Saturday.
And as the CEO of the company, you get an email from the CEO and you feel like you have to respond.
So I started using delayed delivery. So if I'm sending something to anyone, particularly
if they're below you, and I don't mean that pejoratively, but I say that because I think people feel a really need
to respond to people above them in the org chart
rather than peers.
And it was like late nine hours or whatever.
I just said delay delivery until eight o'clock the next day.
This also can make you look like a hero on Monday morning.
Your sound asleep and like your emails firing off
stuff to everyone, But people appreciate that
because nothing's urgent. But look, a lot of our entrepreneurs and our brains either use that
tactic. The other tactic I did was I had a one note thing for everyone on my team. And when I
thought of that thing, I just put it in the bullet thing and I put it in under their list for our
next one to one. Or if I would send one email with the five things rather than constantly them getting my epiphanies
via email.
So I think people just appreciate
some of those boundaries.
And frankly, they'll be more energized.
I mean, we have societal burnout going on right now.
So you can try to work people to death,
but you'll have to find new people
and they're all tired too.
So I think it's much better to try to focus on outcomes, give people this rest and relaxation
and model behavior where they can have life outside of work, but then they come to work
and they're all in.
Totally.
Boundaries are so important.
I know we have a global team and so we use Slack.
And as entrepreneurs, a lot of us, we don't have the same boundaries
because we are the business owners, right? And to your point, you're making sure that
your emails are hitting in the morning. When we send Slack messages, we've got all these
little codes, like don't need to respond till Monday. And like, it's like a certain abbreviation
or just, you know, respond with an emoji or whatever it is, not needed until tomorrow morning.
So we make sure that we write that because with a global team, it might be midnight for somebody,
and I don't want to look like a crazy psycho boss.
Right. You're being respectful. You're also, if you make everything important, nothing's important.
Look, there are times when there's a big million dollar proposal and people need to work on the weekend.
They need to pull it together.
And I'm sorry, that's the trade-off.
I think everyone wants the flexibility in one way.
It's got to be both ways.
It's got to be when the business has a core thing, you got to rally around it, and that's the trade-off.
The problem is if you're constantly forcing people to do stuff out of hours when they don't need to,
it's hard to rally them around when it actually is something that requires that.
This is so true.
If you treat your team with respect, then once there's an actual fire, they're going
to want to help you till 10 p.m. at night because they just feel like, oh, I love my
boss.
I love my job.
And they care about what they're doing.
They don't feel like you don't appreciate them.
They're happy to be a firefighter if you are not the arsonist.
Good one.
Okay. So emotional capacity,
this is the final component of team capacity.
What are the ways that we can build openness
and sharing into our company culture?
Psychological safety, what is that?
We hear it a lot.
My definition is it's like trust as scale.
So if you and I have trust that we build up,
how does someone walk into a team
and feel that trust all around?
There are a couple ways to do that.
There's this exercise called the Johari window that shows that if you ever heard of it.
The two main ways are vulnerability and sharing.
Vulnerability is opening up, letting people know things about yourself, having these conversations, building that trust.
And then the feedback component is people know that they can speak up and they can speak truth to
power. And you talked about that earlier in intellectual capacity, just letting people know
they can say stuff. They can sense when they can walk into a meeting. There was a great tip I heard.
I think it was actually Kim Scott who said it. And they said, if you want to know if your team has psychological safety, give them something that's completely
impossible to do and see if anyone says anything. Fantastic. Just can't be done and see if someone
says something. I was like, that's kind of a great idea if you want to see whether people
feel comfortable speaking up on your team. The other thing is really getting your team
and organization focused on things that they control.
Again, when we talk about why we lost the sales deal,
we don't talk about external factors.
We call the client, we ask them for their feedback,
we ask what we could have done better.
We focus on the things that we control.
So think about when COVID happened,
we give way too much credit, I think,
to the initial kernel of something that we don't control,
then the whole spectrum that we say this thing happened
when it's really not true.
The stimulus was not controllable,
but the response was controllable.
So think about COVID happens, obviously not controllable.
It shuts down every restaurant in the world.
There's a whole group of restaurants who are like,
we're not going back unless we can do what we were doing
and how we were doing it and we're not changing
and otherwise, they're mostly out of business.
There was another group of restaurants that were like,
signed up for every delivery app.
We need to figure out how to do this.
Started selling wholesale produce to keep their people going,
built outdoor things and totally changed
their business model to survive.
They had the same thing, the thing they didn't control,
but they had choices about how they responded.
Waiting for the external in the world to change
is much harder than focusing on the things you control.
So I think leaders of great companies
get their teams inherently focused on what they control
and they just don't let them even use the excuses
of external and outside and otherwise.
Can you help further define this by comparing and contrasting an organization that has high
emotional capacity versus one that has low emotional capacity? How would they act differently?
You just gave one, I guess, an example with COVID.
There's some, a lot of partners that we work with and they have sales teams.
You've seen this a lot with sales
where there was a team that they had never lost a deal
that was their fault.
It was, we could have teed them up better.
It was the partner, they got screwed
because it was the end of the quarter.
The client didn't call them back.
The whole team, it was a cultural thing.
They would just always blame everyone else.
There's no way that team's getting better
or learning from the mistake versus the sales
leader who says, let's do a debrief on this deal. What could we have done better?
Did we wait too long? Was our pricing wrong? Did we ask the client for feedback?
I mean, I have had people ask for feedback before and then fight me on it.
If you're going to ask for feedback and fight it, I'm not going to give it to you.
Do we look at all the things that I literally, I literally like, why did you go with this other? I was
literally like, look, I'm telling you the truth. If you want to fight me on it, I don't
need to have this conversation. And then they focus on winning the next time. So again,
I do see it a lot in sales. There's another story I share in the book. We actually had
a partner, a partner that came in our industry. We do the services piece,
and then there's people that do the technology piece.
Unfortunately, some of the tech vendors
still have services,
and so there's some awkward conflicts at some point,
and then there's some pure play technology companies.
Well, as one technology company come in to the business,
they hired a big agency team,
they went and sat down with all the agencies,
they never bid for services,
and we started doing a lot more business with them
because they just really were doing a good job.
And this other one, we kept giving them feedback.
Your pricing's too high, customers want different feedback.
There's an awkward service thing.
And we were at a conference in London
and someone from that organization went up to our team
and said, I know for a fact.
We know and Slaught talked about in our organizations
that you take kickbacks from this other organization.
That's why you're doing so much business with them.
Hey, we had never taken, I was like, I'll give you a million dollars if you have proof
of that.
We had never taken any kickbacks and we had been very vocal about how there shouldn't
be conflicts of interest in our industry.
Basically what happened was they were losing a lot of deals to this other company.
Instead of actually changing any of the
factors about why they're losing the deals, it was just easier to make up this narrative
that we weren't working with them because we were getting kicked up. That, to me, is low
emotional capacity. I love that. So we love actionable advice on the podcast. And you have
this exercise called One Last Talk. Can you help us understand how that exercise can
build emotional capacity?
Yeah, there's a book on that if you're interested and we did this at a company event. This is
303 in the vulnerability world, not 101. So if you're trying to introduce vulnerability into
your organization, just little things. When you do a call or a team call, like, hey,
personal high from the weekend, personal low, professional
high, professional low. We did a quarterly thing. What was the one thing you screwed
up this quarter that you'd like back? Look, sometimes you find out something really bad
happened to that person that weekend, and that's kind of what's in their mental space.
So mix people up in meetings, start with, how's it going? How are you doing? What's going
on? That's the 101 version.
303, one last talk was we had four employees that were coached by Philip McKernan, who wrote the
book at our actual annual company event, and they gave these one last talks. And these are
the speech you would give the day before you're leaving the world and the thing that you haven't
said, but you need to say. And they were deeply emotional and vulnerable and things that people
had not shared anymore and discussed in front of the entire company.
And there just wasn't a dry eye after any of these stories.
I mean, one was about someone who had the brickageen and how weighed on them.
Another was about someone who came out.
Another person, I was leaving their family at a very young age.
But the ripple effect at the retreat the next two days
of people who were just like started having real
personal conversations with people that they had worked with
for five years and just didn't really know
anything about them.
I say actually the one downside of it was
we had a hard time putting the genie back in the box.
At some point stuff was coming up that we were like,
we're not going to deal with this.
Yeah, the initial reaction was incredible. I think those people felt seen and heard,
but it just modeled for everyone else that it was okay to talk about these things in your life.
And so it was really powerful. Again, don't recommend that as a first step. I think you have
to have a high degree of psychological safety in your organization to do something like that.
Yeah. And I think what you're saying is pretty basic in terms of having that human element
and things that you do at work, like making it where you do care about people's lives
and what's going on with them. I know with our company, we have daily huddles for all
our different teams and we start off with, what's your personal high for the day? What's
your recognition or is like success story?
It just gets people warmed up, gets people talking. So I totally agree with that.
Yeah. And you often find, look, I had one of these yesterday. You know, there's lots of,
hey, how's it going? And you just mean that generally or to a client. It's always a good,
and or some people know really how's it going. Some people say, and you know what,
yesterday they were like, not good. And I have this, here's the personal thing that's going on in my life. It was sort of a checking
all, but that's what we talked about for half the thing. That was what on their mind.
And if I didn't ask that question, I would be like, why is this person being short and
aloof with me today? And did I do something wrong? But that's just where they were emotionally.
And I think I was happy to have that conversation and try to be helpful if I could.
Okay. So my last question for you, Robert, this has been such a great conversation.
We're talking about how to elevate
teams and build capacity within teams.
We've got to make smart hiring decisions.
In my opinion, making smart hires can make
or break you as an entrepreneur because it's so expensive.
Very hard to fix that hiring.
Yeah.
It just screws you up,
especially when you're going fast.
You need good employees that can scale with you.
So what is your guidance for hiring best practices?
What is your approach?
First read Jeff Smart book, Who?
Because he's the smartest guy on hiring in the world and he's kind of the expert.
We built a lot of our things around that.
What's his name?
Jeff Smart, you should have him on.
First of all, he's hysterically funny and he's the top.
He built the McKinsey of sort of hiring consulting firms.
Okay, love it.
Might have heard of Top Grading. His dad wrote that book. He was born into this business.
I happen to make an intro. So, one is, first of all, make sure everyone is agreed on the job
description and what good looks like before you post it. I've seen a lot of people,
hey, can you have some advice? I want to hire a sales and marketing person. Uh-oh, I'm sure sales and marketing both want different things.
So make sure, super clear on the job description,
hiring should all be behavioral based questions.
Jeff will say, if you ask hypothetical questions,
you'll get hypothetical answers.
And we break ours down into half is around our core values,
and we have behavioral based questions
around all of our core values.
And then half is around the actual job. And there's some exercise or work product or whatever
that mimics the work they would actually have to do. And we try to make it clear that it's
not valuable. We're not trying to get free work. And people say, oh, I missed that or
I didn't. And like, this is the job, you're going to have this same sort of timeframe
to get this back to a client. We give them a client report that has a lot of errors in it.
We see which things they fixed and they don't fix.
The people that are natural at that are good at it.
We do 50% on aptitude, 50% on values.
Do reference checks.
Ask hard questions.
Don't just give the two people they gave you.
For senior roles, you have LinkedIn, do some back channeling, people hire people
that used to work here all the time
that know us that we work with.
I'm shocked that they don't ask us on a couple occasions,
I would have been like, no comment,
and they could have saved themselves
a lot of time and money.
So verify that what people are saying to you is true.
And in that process itself, don't ignore the little things where they
have pain to get scheduled with. Did they show up on time? Did they write a thank you note?
How did the person behave and operate during the process? And then another best practice that we
got, and by the way, you should try to score everyone and make these questions numerical
so that you can objectively, you should evaluate a couple candidates at a time,
but have someone in the hiring meeting
that's disinterested, that's not part of the team
that's hiring, that represents the company hat,
because the people who want to hire are often
really need the job.
They really need that whole field,
and they're kind of, and that person's supposed
to represent the company.
They're like, you got legs and arms, let's go for it.
They're supposed to be like, look, you keep wanting to hire Sarah,
but like you told me detail oriented is important.
And I'm looking at the things here and detail scores are really low.
So it really helps to have that person in that room.
And adopting this question is the last thing.
Is this person better than 90% of the people?
They raise the bar for the company.
That really forces you to just bring this person in, raise the bar for the organization,
and everyone has to answer yes to that.
So that's some of them.
I talk in the book too just about if you want a higher high aptitude people, I have a couple
of tips around that, the people that are the fast learners, because that's about are they
good for the company and the culture?
Couple tips are one, look for people that were promoted in place. These days,
a lot of times people are lured away and offered promotion they're not qualified
for by a new job. If the people that worked with them wouldn't promote them and they couldn't do
better in the same place, I don't think that's a great sign. Look for people who are voracious
learners. They're learning things. They're improving things, they're telling you about the lessons they did or otherwise. Then this one took
me a long time to learn too. But particularly for candidates that are 10 years into their
career, 30, 40, if they left jobs a lot of the time, why they left a job is important.
If people pulled them that worked with them before, that's awesome. Well, then Halib pulled
me here and then she went to another company and pulled me there.
If they're 10 or 15 years into their career
and they've never worked with this recruiter before
and it doesn't seem like you're working
with anyone who worked with them before,
that's a big red flag.
Even that the recruiter that worked with them last time
isn't working with them before.
So you shouldn't be 30 or 40 or mid-career
and be totally outside of the network that you've been in looking for a job.
That's kind of a red flag for me too.
So many good insights, Robert.
I have to say this whole interview, I'm like, oh, I should be doing this.
I should be doing this.
Giving me a lot of ideas.
One percent a day.
That's all you need.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's lots of stuff to implement.
I highly recommend you guys go get his book, Elevate
and Elevate for Teams. Robert, we end our show with two questions that we ask all of
our guests. The first one is, what is one actionable thing that our young and profitors
can do today to be more profitable tomorrow?
I love the 80-20 rule. So I would say, go look at your clients, team, whatever, and
you will find that 20% of the people
are responsible for 80% of the outcome. That's where you should focus. And you can stop doing a
lot of the stuff where 80% of the effort is getting 20% of the outcome. It's very hard to
escape the 80-20 rule. If you don't believe me, walk into your closet and look at your clothes,
and you wear 20% of your clothes, 80% of your time. Everything is 80-20. The whole world is 80-20. What is your secret to profiting in life? This
can go beyond business, beyond finance, whatever comes to mind for you.
Look, and this is, I guess, the core of affiliate marketing. I thought about it.
I've tried everywhere to build mutually beneficial outcomes.
Win-win sounds so trite,
but I think in everything we've done,
whether it's between the organization and the team or partnerships or
the core model of what we do,
try to focus on outcomes where everyone can win and not win-lose.
I think that works in the short term,
but it's no fun in the long term and it doesn't work.
I really focus on, I's say, mutually beneficial outcomes.
I think that's super smart.
Robert, thank you so much for this amazing conversation.
Learned so much about how we can elevate our teams, build capacity within our teams.
Where can everybody learn more about you and everything that you do?
Everything is totally integrated now at robertglaserglaszer.com.
So the books are there, the podcast there,
the Friday 40 email if you want to join it in the course,
and I'll get you that code as well.
Like I mentioned, you are a part of our podcast network.
So his podcast is called Elevate,
and he's got a super engaged following.
So if you guys want to learn more about entrepreneurship,
tell them what they'll hear on the show.
Yeah, we really focus on a combination of CEOs and people that have done it and been in the
trenches as well as world-class thinkers and writers and authors around aspects of performance,
where if you want to get better at something, then they're the person that can tell you how to do
that. So yeah, it's the Elevate podcast. Join wherever you listen to your podcast.
Amazing. We'll stick all of those links in the Elevate podcast. Join wherever you listen to your podcast.
Amazing. We'll stick all of those links in the show notes. Robert, thank you so much
for your time today.
Thanks for having me, Hala.
I loved this conversation with Robert because it was so practical and he had so many helpful
things to say about how we can grow, scale, and build better businesses, even in challenging environments.
I personally took away so many lessons today,
but one that's top of mind is the fact that we talked
about how top performers likely
won't always be your top performers.
And I've personally experienced this before.
At one point, I'll have an employee
who's absolutely crushing it.
I'm always saying what a rockstar they are.
And then suddenly, they seem to be really falling flat
like they're in a rut.
And I've also seen these people become top performers again
if I put them in the right position.
And so what can you do to help these performers
stay top performers?
Robert says it starts by recognizing
that this kind of change happens all the time. When your business is growing, it's often evolving right under your feet.
And the same people who were great when you had a dozen employees sometimes just can't
keep up with the same role in a 100-person organization.
And as a leader, you have to recognize this and make the tough call to say to them, I
don't think you want to or are able to do this job, or you need to figure
out a place within the company that they will thrive.
But it's not inevitable that your business will fracture as it grows. Finding the right
people is key. Robert compares it to building through the draft in sports. If you can find
high aptitude individuals who are curious, reflective, and interested in building a culture
of learning, then you'll likely in building a culture of learning,
then you'll likely have a better chance of adapting to new pressures as you scale up.
You also have to nurture your team, treat them with respect, and only cry
fire when there's an actual fire. As Robert put it so well,
they'll be happy to be your firefighter if you're not always the arsonist.
It also helps to figure out what strings you can pull to improve their satisfaction and
performance.
For example, Robert is not a big fan of the compliment sandwich.
And although a lot of people have come on the podcast and recommended that strategy,
neither am I.
Sometimes, people miss the meat of the sandwich or focus more on the last thing they heard.
Sometimes it's more effective just to be straight to the point.
Thanks so much for listening to this episode.
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Before we go, I did wanna shout out my production team.
I'm so grateful for Jason, Amelia, Greta, Sean,
Hisham, Prakhan, Kree, Ambika, Ashutosh, Garima,
the list goes on and on.
You guys are amazing.
This is your host, Halata, aka the podcast princess,
signing off. you