All in Entrepreneurship

Omerisms Podcast - Episode 79

This month's podcasts focus on the topic of mindset, and the kinds of traits and ideas we need to embed to achieve what we want.

In today's episode, I speak to the importance of being an optimist, to fight cynicism. Many view unbridled optimism as a weakness, because it requires a health measure of vulnerability. To the contrary, I believe it's a superpower.

Authenticity Matters

Authenticity has become a rare commodity.

I mean, at first blush, you’d think it would be abundant in society, personal or professional. Because when what you see is what you get, there are no illusions, no need for personal estimations or second guesses. What you saw would, in fact, be what you got.

But in a world driven by social media, the lure of the instant, ADD-fueled soundbite, and the much-discussed finality (and hence, importance) of the ‘first impression’, most of us are on our toes.

Cultures Don't Get Created Overnight

Culture isn’t created overnight. You can’t mandate it.

You also can’t leave it be and assume a positive productive culture will create itself.

Culture needs to be defined and cultivated, which means a few things:

It has to be intentional. It requires a clear definition i.e. we need to be clear as to what we want it to be.

It has to be actively pursued - we need to have a plan to cultivate it.

We Have To Be Here To Get There

If you compare a song off of Radiohead’s first album, Pablo Honey, and their third album, OK Computer - for example, a song like “Anyone Can Play Guitar”, with “Let Down” - you can hear a real sonic difference.

From the complexity of the songwriting to the musicianship, right through to the production work, you can hear an increasing level of sophistication. Essentially, you can hear the growth and evolution of the band over the years.

I Don't Know

You don’t need to have all of the answers. I don’t know how to get there is actually fine as a response.

As leaders, though, we think that isn’t an option. We think we need to know exactly the way there.

But the reality is we won’t - not all the time anyway, and certainly not when it comes to big ticket changes that we’re putting in play.

Omerisms Podcast - Episode 76

This month's podcasts focus on the topic of mindset, and the kinds of traits and ideas we need to embed to achieve what we want.

Today's episode takes on the topic of letting go - and how difficult it is when we feel we've been wronged. Yet, it doesn't help us to "hold onto our grudges like little pets". It's far more important and helpful to move on.

War Stories: Golf Lessons From Melbourne

I started playing golf back in 1996, while I was on a long term consulting assignment in Melbourne, Australia. I needed something to do on the weekends by myself, so I took a few lessons (not enough) and then started to play a local course a couple of times a month.

I remember one Saturday, I went out to the course with my friend and (former) colleague, Ben, and, as is normal, we were asked to pair up with another couple of golfers, who we didn’t know, so that we’d form a group of four.

Thinking About Value

Value is in the eye of the beholder. That seems like a straightforward statement, but it’s a hard one to truly grasp.

There are certainly tangible criteria that can be applied to the price of a particular product or service - its material inputs, the resources applied to convert those materials into some sort of finished product, and the related overhead needed to make all of that happen.

The Thing About Getting Older...

I don’t mean to oversimplify (though I’m about to), but it seems to me that the biggest thing about getting older is that you begin to run out of excuses.

What I mean by that is that, as the years go on, as our experiences educate us, and as we start to realize what we value, we realize that the only reason we aren’t where we want to be, is because of us. Of the choices we’ve made.

Judging Celebrities...And Ourselves

Our issues always come from somewhere. What I mean by that is that, there’s always a root cause or a set of incidents of some sort that drives us to behave in specific ways.

That’s not to suggest our behaviors are always justified, rather that there’s a reason behind them. Something that has happened to us, or that we’ve experienced, that’s led us to interpret that experience in a particular way, develop particular judgements (or ideas or perceptions) and then act (or react) accordingly.