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  • Good morning BelieveNation

  • My name is Evan Carmichael, my one word is #Believe

  • and I believe that Entrepreneurs will solve all of the major problems in the world

  • So today's message is BE PATIENT, over to you Simon Sinek

  • Entpresso music playing

  • (Simon Sinek) I talk to so many smart, fantastic, ambitious, idealistic, hardworking kids

  • And they're right out of college, they're in their entry level jobs

  • And I'll ask them "How's it going?" and they'll say, I think I'm going to quit

  • And I'm like "Why", and they'll say to me, "I'm not making an impact."

  • I'm like, you know you've been here eight months right?

  • They treat the sense of fulfillment or even love like it's a scavenger hunt

  • Like it's something you look for.

  • My millennial friends, they've gone through so many jobs

  • They're either getting fired, I mean, it was mutual.

  • Audience laughs

  • Or they're quitting because they're not making an impact, they're not finding the thing they're looking for...

  • or they're not feeling fulfilled; as if it's a scavenger hunt.

  • Love, a job you; find job from, is not something you discover.

  • It's not like "I found Love, here it is" I found a job I love...that's not how it works.

  • Both of those things require hard work.

  • You are in love because you work hard every single day of your life to stay in love.

  • You find a job that brings you ultimate joy because you work hard every single day to serve those around you

  • and you maintain that joy

  • It's not a discovery

  • But the problem is the sense of impatience

  • It's as if an entire generation is standing at the foot of a mountain

  • They know exactly what they want; they can see the summit, what they can't see is the mountain

  • This large immovable object.

  • That doesn't mean you have to so your time

  • That's not what I'm talking about.

  • Take a helicopter, climb, I don't care. But there's still a mountain.

  • Life, Career fulfillment, relationship, are journeys.

  • The problem is...

  • this entire generation has an institutionalized sense of impatience

  • And do they have the patience to go on the journey, to maintain love

  • to feel fulfilled

  • or do they just quit and on to the next. Dump and on to the next, ghost and on to the next

  • (Evan) Am a big fan of modeling success.

  • Am a big believer that you can shortcut your path to success by finding what other people have done

  • to achieve that success, learning from them and applying that to you own life, to you own path to get there faster.

  • I love finding shortcuts, I love finding hacks

  • I love finding all the productivity tools and team and everything you can do to climb that mountain faster.

  • but to Simon's point, there is still a mountain

  • There's still a lot of work that has to go in. It's working smart and working hard.

  • It's not just one or the other to go an accomplish your goal.

  • If you look at my YouTube Channel as an example since we're watching here all together

  • You know, I've made 5000 videos for this channel; 4000 of them are public and a 1000 plus of them are not.

  • They're practice videos, they're demo videos, they're test videos

  • I sucked at the start, go back and watch my first video and look how bad it is.

  • Somebody recently left a comment on one of my videos that I recorded Five years ago and she said...

  • Oh my, Evan look how far you've come, five years later, you sound and look different in so many good ways

  • And that's awesome to hear and also really frustrating.

  • You know. I am mostly the same Evan that I was five years ago.

  • My belief system, my values, maybe I've learned a little bit more, gained a little bit more experience.

  • But why am I so much better now on camera than I was way back then?

  • Well it's because I practiced.

  • What I had four, five years ago, compared to what I have now, the difference is 5000 videos

  • You know, that 1000 videos that haven't been published.

  • Those trying and errors and failing and on those thousand videos

  • that never go released are more than what most people ever create

  • Most people who start a YouTube channel, they'll make 3, 4, 5, 10 videos and quit.

  • cause it's too hard, cause it's too challenging, cause they don't want to climb that mountain.

  • Cause they don't want to put in the work.

  • Well here's a thousand videos that never saw the light of day and 4000 more that are going.

  • Now, can you get there faster than me, sure.

  • I'm looking at Alex, I'm looking at Lilly who's been helping me on some of the videos.

  • They are already better than when I was when I first started.

  • They're already better than I was making a thousand videos in. You can get there faster than me.

  • You can model success. Maybe you also have, just more natural talent.

  • You can rise up the ladder faster than other people around you.

  • If you have more natural talent, if you model success, if you have a deep passion for what you are doing. You can get there faster.

  • But it's still a long road.

  • You still have to be patient. You still have to put in the work.

  • And I think that's what people often get too frustrated by.

  • Because they want the immediate result. They want the immediate success and if they don't get it,

  • then they quit.

  • And so understand that if this is a deep passion of yours, if this is something that you want to commit

  • potentially for the rest of your life to doing because you care about it so much

  • then expect to suck at the start, expect it to take a long time

  • expect to work on trying to improve your efficiency and productivity and

  • skills and resources to get there as fast as possible.

  • But expect to be committed, stay patient,

  • 'cause if you are, whether it takes you 100 videos or 5000 videos or more

  • the equivalent in your industry, you'll get there.

  • So the question of the day today is, I'm curious about your reps.

  • I'm curious how much are you putting into your business.

  • How much are you practicing daily, to get better at whatever skill it is that you have that you're bringing

  • I'm curious about your schedule

  • Leave it down in the comments below, I'm excited to see what you guys have to say.

  • I also wanna give a quick shoutout to Laytina (*Laynita)

  • Thank you so much for picking up a copy of my book:Your One Word.

  • It really really means a lot to me and I sincerely hope that you are enjoying the read.

  • So thank you guys again for watching, I BELIEVE in you, I hope you continue to believe in yourself and whatever your one word is

  • And I'll see you again tomorrow morning for another shot of Entpresso.

  • Entpresso music playing.

  • (Malcolm Gladwell) So a bunch, a group of really brilliant Psychologists in the field of Expertise Research

  • have sat and tried to figure out,

  • how long do you have to work at something before you become really good...right.

  • And the answer seems to be, it's an extraordinarily consistent answer,

  • in an incredible number of fields, and that is, you need to have practiced, to have apprenticed,

  • for 10,000 hours before you get good.

  • So every great Classical Composer, without exception,

  • composes for at least ten years before they write their master work.

  • Mozart

  • I mean, he's composing at 11, but he was composing

  • garbage at 11, I mean, he doesn't produce something great until he's like 22 or 23.

  • (Inaudible) No. 9 I think, '71

  • If I asked you, how long did it take you, when you were doing this job before you felt comfortable and good at what you were doing...

  • (Interviewer)10 years at least

  • (Gladwell) 10 years, and the same with me; when I; And it's an incredibly consistent finding

  • And it's really important because it says that we are far too impatient, with people.

  • When we, when we, when we assess whether someone has got what it takes to do a certain job

  • we always want to make that assessment after six months or a year or, and that's ridiculous, you know.

  • The kinds of jobs we have people do today are sufficiently complex

  • that they require a long time to reach mastery and what we should be doing is setting up

  • Institutions and structures that allow people to spend the time and effort to reach mastery

  • not judging them prematurely.

  • (Seth Godin) Patience, is for the impatient.

  • That in fact, when you're getting started and your in-laws are making faces at you

  • and you're not sure if you're going to be able to pay the rent.

  • And you don't know why you are living in Brooklyn to begin with

  • and you're gonna have to move back to Florida

  • It's easy to say "You know what, I need to go faster to pick up these scraps and pick up these scraps "

  • And sometimes what that does is it gives you the foot up to get to the next level but sometimes what that does

  • is, it just makes you a scrap collector.

  • And that one of the things we see when we look at the work of people who have put

  • really big ideas into the world, who have built online platforms right is

  • is that they got there by being patiently impatient or impatiently patient (which ever one you want to juxtapose)

  • That if you look around at the blogs you read or the people you respect online

  • or the organizations you wanna work with, the myth of the overnight success is just that; a myth.

  • That, you know, the much vaunted Twitter was a failure, complete failure for two years, nobody used it.

  • And if they took the mindset that, well if it doesn't work in two weeks we gotta go do something else

  • you never would have heard of it.

  • (Reed Hastings) You know China is a very special place and if you look at the big Tech companies

  • Apple's done very well, Microsoft hasn't lost too much, I think, you know, Google's lost a lot

  • So it's quite a bit of variation despite all three of those being talented, long term oriented companies

  • And when you look at Apple, one of the amazing things is, when they did the iPhone

  • uhhh, they negotiated, talked and built relationships for 6 years before the iPhone was allowed to come to China

  • so, from 2005 to 2011

  • and that took a lot of patience, and now, that's one of their largest markets in the world for the iPhone.

  • And so what we take away from that is a sense of great patience

  • So it may be soon that we have a license to China or it may take a couple of years

  • but we're gonna be very patient

  • And we're looking forward to a time, you know, a decade or two decades from now when the Chinese

  • middle class will want to embrace the kind of content that we have.

Good morning BelieveNation

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