The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett XX
[0] Did you know that the DariVosio now has its own channel exclusively on Samsung TV Plus?
[1] And I'm excited to say that we've partnered with Samsung TV to bring this to life, and the channel is available in the UK, the Netherlands, Germany and Austria.
[2] Samsung TV Plus is a free streaming service available to all owners of Samsung Smart TVs and Galaxy mobiles and tablets.
[3] And along with the Dyeravisio channel, you'll find hundreds of more channels with entertainment for everyone all for free on Samsung TV Plus.
[4] So if you own a Samsung TV, tune in now and watch the Dyer of a Cio channel.
[5] right now.
[6] In the diary of a CEO, we have hundreds of questions that have been left by our guests and we've put them on these cards.
[7] And on these cards, you have the question that's been left in the diary of a CEO, the name of the person who wrote the question, and if you turn it over, there's a QR code.
[8] If you scan that code, you can see which guest answered the question and watch the video of them answering it.
[9] Every time I've done this podcast and every time we've asked the kind of questions we ask here, I feel a tremendous sense of affinity to the guest.
[10] And our aim with these cards is that you can create that sense of connection through vulnerability at home with the people you love the most.
[11] And I have some good news for you.
[12] As of today, you can add your name to the waiting list to be the first in line to get your own set of conversation cards at theconversationcards .com.
[13] That is theconversationcards .com.
[14] You had some 22 or 23 jobs before you started your own business.
[15] Yes, I did.
[16] Jobs from everything from being a receptionist to a waitress to everything in between.
[17] We often look back at those jobs that didn't pay us a lot and that the world doesn't hold in high regard.
[18] Some people might think that they are a waste of time or they were like necessary.
[19] What's your view on when you were a receptionist and a waitress?
[20] What role did that play in your overall success?
[21] I think whether you have a meaning, job or an important job is what you're learning.
[22] I mean, there wasn't a job where I didn't learn a lot.
[23] For me, I would take any job, not based on pay, but gee, what could I learn?
[24] What could I learn?
[25] Because that made you more valuable.
[26] I never really thought it made you more valuable to be paid more.
[27] But hey, I haven't done this before.
[28] Let's see what this is about.
[29] And you learn skills.
[30] I think I learned more through my waitressing jobs, because I always had a few at once.
[31] You know, you could always get a waitress job behind a counter.
[32] I think I learned.
[33] I think I learned more about people waitressing than building my business, honest to God.
[34] You have to size someone up.
[35] Your territory is your counter.
[36] You have to make them happy.
[37] You want to upsell them a little bit.
[38] Maybe you say, you know, you can give the second cup of coffee for free, but how about a slice of cheesecake is really good today.
[39] You learn how to hustle.
[40] You learn how to be organized, how to get the containers in order, how to make sure they're filled when the customer steps out, how to get that person something to drink while you're working on this person.
[41] I mean, I learned.
[42] I learned so much in every one of those jobs and you know what's great about having a lot of jobs you start to get a profile of what you're good at what you're not and i in short order after maybe seven or eight jobs not that i knew what i was going to do for living but i knew what i was good at i knew what i was good at getting along with people and making them smile i could talk to somebody and make them happy absolutely and i also knew that i was efficient i could create a system in anything i would see the diner counter all wrong, not running right, I would talk to the boss say, you know, if you did this with the maple syrup and changed sugar, and I could, like an executive, I could rearrange the whole counters, you know, in an efficient manner.
[43] And I started learning that those were my two gifts, people and efficiency.
[44] And if you think about any business, those are really big ticket items.
[45] If you could choose people, motivate people, get along with people, make them get along with each other, plus create systems to grow a big business.
[46] I mean, the minute you have more than a half dozen people, you need systems.
[47] And my companies were always so well organized that they ran like, they just ran like a Swiss clock.
[48] Is that a good analogy?
[49] Everything was in its place.
[50] Nothing had to be duplicated.
[51] It was fast forward.
[52] And so I was able to build very quickly, which I had to do because we had big people in my market.
[53] And if I had built and replicated systems at a normal pace, I would never catch up to them.
[54] So I had to do double, triple time.
[55] And what's your answer on that one?
[56] Systems.
[57] Systems get you moving forward, get a business like a machine.
[58] And that was a gift I got from my menial jobs.
[59] Thank God I worked.
[60] Imagine if I hadn't worked and went out into the real world thinking I was dumb that I couldn't do anything, just because I couldn't read or write.
[61] Thank God, I learned I could be a lifeguard.
[62] I learned I could be a tent salesman.
[63] I could be Barbara Buttons calling for solicitations eight hours a day.
[64] I could be all those menial jobs, a hot dog salesman, sell more hot dogs than the next guy.
[65] I mean, I had confidence from every one of those jobs.
[66] Like, look how cool I am.
[67] Maybe I wouldn't win respect by everybody.
[68] Well, who cares about the hot dogs?
[69] But in my book, I knew I sold more hot dogs than he sold on his.
[70] you know so so no thank god for the jobs you learn so much by trying different jobs on you know it's so important at that age if i'd asked you what you wanted to what your dream was what would you have answered i wouldn't have answered the question i wouldn't have answered the question i had no idea i would say i just want to work i just want to quote work it didn't make a difference what i was working at i just knew that when i was working i felt capable that's all and conversely then what are you bad at i think as you said it's very important important to know strengths but also weaknesses you know what i'm bad at a bad at math numbers terrible just terrible really i don't even understand i i took algebra four times four times two years in summer school never pass it they finally just gave me the grade to go through um i'm very bad at math i'm bad at legal i'm bad at committee meetings um bad at listening to a blow heart who just goes on and on doesn't cut to the chase i'm very bad at impatient I want to know what you want from me, and then you tell me how you got there.
[71] I don't want to hear how you got there, and then what you want.
[72] I always want to cut to the chase, so I'm impatient.
[73] I've learned to hide it because you can't be so visibly impatient with people.
[74] But as long as they tell me what they want on the front end, I could hang in there for the long explanation after, because I've already concluded what I'm going to do, you know.
[75] So that's what I'm bad at.
[76] But lucky for me, I've always surrounded myself with people who are opposite to me, you know.
[77] And by the way, I shouldn't really say I'm bad at numbers because I had a business partner, my 10 % business partner, Esther, my whole life, I made her my partner.
[78] She was great at legal and finance.
[79] And she used to spend hours when we wanted to open one or two new offices doing the numbers to see if we could afford it.
[80] And I used to come into her office and say, what do you think?
[81] She says, I don't think we should really do it.
[82] I said, well, let me tell you why we're going to do it because you really need to beat the next guy.
[83] And let me tell you, if we have $80 ,000 and the desk produces only 42, it's going to take us about nine months to actually meet our overhead, and we'll have to cut back on the advertising, and we'll have the managers work for free.
[84] And she'd say, what?
[85] And it worked every time.
[86] So I must have had a taste for numbers in that kind of a way.
[87] I could always see the picture on numbers, and I'd be right.
[88] It was bugged the crap out of her because she had all the numbers.
[89] but yeah but I'm not good at adding up the numbers at all a lot of people think I think it's really liberating to hear that they probably exclude themselves mentally of being a business person because they are bad at numbers oh gosh I think numbers are the least important thing in business by far I look at all the entrepreneurs I've invested in Shark Tank I am telling you the most successful I hope I'm not giving anybody the short haul here but the most successful are not good at numbers.
[90] They're exceptional at people.
[91] I think if you're great at people and you have ambition, you have the two magic cards.
[92] It's a succeed in business.
[93] You do.
[94] That's what it's about.
[95] People and ambition, the drive to get to the finish line.
[96] Did you know that the driver's CEO now has its own channel exclusively on Samsung TV Plus?
[97] And I'm excited to say that we've partnered with Samsung TV to bring this to life and The channel is available in the UK, the Netherlands, Germany and Austria.
[98] Samsung TV Plus is a free streaming service available to all owners of Samsung Smart TVs and Galaxy mobiles and tablets.
[99] And along with the Dyer of Aseo channel, you'll find hundreds of more channels with entertainment for everyone all for free on Samsung TV Plus.
[100] So if you own a Samsung TV, tune in now and watch the Dyer of a CEO channel right now.