BigDeal - Ex-Amazon VP: Do This at Work to Get Promoted Fast | Ethan Evans
Episode Date: June 3, 2026You work harder than half your team. You deliver results. But somehow, the person who talks a good game in meetings just got promoted ahead of you. Here's the truth: hard work doesn't get you promoted.... Visibility, advocacy, and understanding the game do. Ethan Evans is a retired Amazon VP who spent over 15 years building billion dollar businesses inside one of the most demanding companies on earth. He went from getting fired twice early in his career to running Prime Video, Twitch sponsorships, the Amazon Appstore, and a t-shirt printing business that now does over a billion dollars a year. He worked directly with Jeff Bezos, survived public failures, learned how to navigate corporate politics without losing his soul, and retired early to teach others how to do the same. In this episode, you'll learn: The magic loop: how to turn your boss into your biggest advocate by making them successful first Why invisible performers lose to visible performers every time and how a weekly status report changes everything The exact script to ask for a raise that gets results without threatening to quit Good boss versus bad boss: why consistency beats likability and how to tell the difference in an interview How to give difficult feedback that actually lands: professionally firm, personally warm The career killers nobody talks aboutJeff Bezos's philosophy: strategically patient, tactically impatient, and why Amazon banned PowerPoint for six page narratives ___________ (00:00:00) Introduction: Why Half Your Talent Wins and You Don't (00:00:56) Corporate Politics: The Game You Didn't Know You Were Playing (00:08:28) The Magic Loop: Turn Your Boss Into Your Biggest Advocate (00:27:20) Invisible vs Visible Performers: Why Hard Work Isn't Enough (00:16:30) How to Actually Ask for a Raise and Get It (00:06:13) Good Boss vs Bad Boss: Consistency Over Likability (00:42:42) Giving Difficult Feedback: Professionally Firm, Personally Warm (00:51:28) Career Killers: Betrayal, Gossip, and Breaking Trust (01:04:51) Jeff Bezos: Strategically Patient, Tactically Impatient (01:11:05) The Six-Page Narrative: Why Amazon Banned PowerPoint (01:18:06) Building Billion-Dollar Businesses: Prime Video to T-Shirt Printing (00:58:22) Burnout Is About Vision Loss, Not Hard Work (01:24:48) Hiring A Players: The Reference Check Hack Nobody Uses (01:32:28) Final Advice: Know What You Want and Make the Deal ___________ MORE FROM BIGDEAL 🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@podcastbigdeal 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bigdeal.podcast 📽️ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@big.deal.pod MORE FROM CODIE SANCHEZ 🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@codiesanchezct 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/codiesanchez 📽️ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@realcodiesanchez OTHER THINGS WE DO 🌐 Our community: https://contrarianthinking.typeform.com/to/WBztXXID 📰 Free newsletter: https://contrarianthinking.biz/3XWLlZp 📚 Biz buying course: https://contrarianthinking.biz/3NhjGgN 🏠 Resibrands: https://resibrands.com/ 💰 CT Capital: https://contrarianthinking.biz/4eRyGOk 🏦 Main St Hold Co: https://contrarianthinking.biz/3YfGa8u Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Burnout is less, it turns out, about hard work.
It's more about losing your vision.
You don't only know where you're going.
I'm just going to keep my head down and work hard.
I call this work hard and hope to be noticed.
Hope is not a very good strategy.
Why isn't the people with half your talent seem to be winning all of the time?
Ethan Evans should know.
He's a retired Amazon VP.
He's going to give us the exact framework he used to climb from getting fired twice early in his career
to running multiple billion dollar businesses.
What do you see Jeff Bezos do differently?
He often said we need to be strategically patient but tactically impatient.
So it's feeling this urgency of how have I moved my business forward as far as I possibly can today
and yet realizing that building something of real value might take 10 years.
There's someone listening right now.
They get to take one piece of advice from this podcast.
What is the one thing you would give them?
Know what you want.
Know where you're going.
Everyone talks about climbing.
the corporate ladder.
Yeah.
But it's much more than a corporate ladder.
I think it's like climbing a corporate ladder while somebody's trying to pull it from underneath
you and somebody else has cut it from up above.
And there's all these politics.
And so you've navigated the politics at the highest level of the game.
What do you wish you knew about corporate politics when you started that you know now?
Boy, I think the thing I wish I had known most about what's been called corporate politics is
it's just other people trying to get ahead.
Like, they're, they're just starting with what do they need and what do they want.
And sometimes if you're in their way, it's not personal.
They don't even notice.
It's just your accidental roadkill.
Sometimes it's intentional.
So one thing I wish I had known is just figure out what other people's motives are.
And that doesn't mean they have like a hidden or deep or dark motive.
Just sometimes their motives don't align with yours.
The other thing you said is you called a corporate ladder and that's what it's always been called.
I've heard a new analogy I like better, which is the corporate climbing wall.
Because it's wider. You can go up, you can down, you can go sideways. There's many routes to the top.
And I think that's the new way of looking at it. It's not just one path. I guess the key question is, why is what they are doing working for them?
That's the insight is stop being frustrated and start asking, well, why is the corporation rewarding that?
Yeah. How can you tell if someone is going to be your advocate or is actually going to be your adversary in the workplace?
Yeah, well, one way, of course, is relationship.
If you can be friends on any sort of topic, commonality, common place you went to school, common sports team you like, kids, whatever, it's more likely they're going to advocate because we take care of our friends.
The second thing, though, is people help those who help them.
And I think I made a lot of my career effectively by deal making, by finding people that I could align with what they wanted and help them get what they were.
and then I would sometimes talk to them privately and be like, hey, I will help you get this,
but like I'm looking for a little help here. And most people are very willing to, hey, you help me,
I'll help you, because there's no harm in it. And so if you can't do that, though,
and someone wants something completely opposite of what you want, then there can be a problem.
The other thing could shoot down is style. If there was a case, you know, where like I'm very
outspoken and driven and you run into somebody who's very consensus-based and wants to be cautious,
that can lead to friction right away. Because I think a lot like you, I'm like, let's go,
let's make a decision. And they're like, let's study it. Now, of course, I'm like giving a little
liltie voice, which probably isn't fair, but that's how it felt to me. And of course,
they're like, this guy's crazy. So that can lead to conflict where I'm pushing them past their
risk threshold and they see me as reckless. Meanwhile, I see them as like, oh my God, would you
just go.
Yeah.
Can you think about a story about how bad it can get?
The worst story I know of that I've seen is when someone has a step back, when one of the
leaders has a failure, I've seen people who are in a competitive situation use that as like,
ooh, kick them while they're down.
Like, because they're on the rocks.
They may have been a good performer.
They may be a good performer again.
You've got this one moment.
if you don't like them to like dog pile on top of them and finish them off.
And a couple times I've definitely seen people who seem very unassuming and like they had nothing
to say like all these fangs come out right when they see the, you know, they see a little blood in the
water maybe to use a shark analogy and they start the feeding frenzy.
So I see now on people who struggle is finish them off while they're down.
And that to me seemed like give them a hand up.
Yeah.
What is good to know. I mean, it's one thing, what we think should happen, and then there's reality. And so if you always live in what should happen, what sounds nice, what's poliana, what's rose-colored glasses, you're not going to get far in life, forget corporations versus startups versus being independent. And so I think this is so important to talk about because people think that everybody acts like them. People think that everybody asks, quote-unquote, good or everybody's going to do the quote-unquote right thing. And that's just not human nature.
So can I interject here?
I rant at people almost.
Every time you use the word should, you're giving up agency or in your terms that you like ownership.
Every time I think, oh, Cody, you're my manager.
You should be looking out for my career.
What I've just done is stop looking out for myself and put it on you.
And now I'm reliant on you to do something, which I don't control.
So I actually teach people anytime they start thinking about what someone else should do,
they should step back and say,
okay, how am I going to make sure that happens?
Or what can I do if they don't?
Because as soon as I get into what should happen,
which is what you mentioned,
I'm waiting for someone else to do this right thing
that I don't control.
What do you think is the difference
between a good boss and a bad boss?
I think a good boss is consistent and transparent.
They're clear about how they're judging or what they expect.
And then they stick to it,
even when things get tough.
So you will hear some bosses who say things like,
I want you to push, I want you to take risks,
but then something goes wrong.
And they're like, oh, I didn't mean that risk.
And they throw you under the bus.
That's terrible.
That's a bad boss.
The good bosses are like, hey, okay, I told you to do this.
It didn't work out, but we'll clean it up together.
So I think consistency and transparency, good inconsistency is brutal.
because you just don't, it makes you hesitant, right?
It makes you unwilling to take a risk because you're not sure what ground you're on.
I'd rather have hard standards I disagree with than fuzzy standards that I don't know.
If I have to pick, I'd rather be working for a boss I don't agree with, but who's really clear,
than one who sounds agreeable, but then shifts with the win.
Let's see somebody's just starting at a company and they're trying to kind of get the lay of the land for the players.
How do you know if you work for a good boss or a bad boss?
First, good boss or bad boss are people leaving or are people coming?
Because reputation travels.
And if the first signal of a boss is are they gaining talent or losing talent?
If people want out, probably a bad boss.
If people want in, probably a good boss.
Beyond that, though, my favorite trick, of course you can talk to your boss.
You should be trying to build that relationship and ask them what they want.
But if they're not very forthcoming, talk to your peers, ask them, what's a pet peeve?
Or I see a flattery is great.
I can say, Cody, I see you get such great results from our manager.
How do you do that?
You share a secret.
And it's flattering.
And most people like to talk about themselves.
So odds are, even if you wouldn't be like, I'm going to tell you exactly how to be
as successful as I am.
And now you'll be my competitor.
You'll be lured in by like, oh, someone wants.
to hear my secret. They think highly of me. Blah, blah, blah. It's a social engineer.
That's really, really smart, actually. Yeah, it's, you know, I remember, like a lot of this reminds me,
you have a philosophy called the Magic Loop. Yes. And I would be curious if you would explain that to us.
Sure. So the Magic Loop got its name from the idea it works so well. It can be magical.
And it began, I sort of discovered this. In my very first job, I got a new boss. And she was nice,
but didn't understand our technology.
I was a young engineer.
And I said, look, I could teach you about it.
And I didn't have any plan.
I just, oh, well, if you don't know, I'll teach you.
Well, that started a relationship where she saw me as helpful and being on her side.
And she took me under her wing and over the next two years promoted me twice and kind of kickstarted my career.
And of course, I started thinking like, this is pretty good.
I wonder if there's something more here.
and that's where the essence, the magic loop came from.
The idea behind it is simply build a collaborative member relationship with your manager.
Find out what they need.
This is, of course, in corporate America where you have a manager.
Find out what they need and try and help them with it.
And then presuming you're successful, the second thing you can do is have a conversation with
them and say, look, it's really great.
I'm helping you.
I kind of like to do this.
I'd like to become a leader, learn this technology.
or get a raise or get on this project, can you help me with that? And good managers will invest
back in you. Even I would say most managers will take care of those who are helping them.
You can't have the problem that a truly bad manager, you know, kind of is this evil cackling,
like, this is great, you're doing what I want. No, I'm going to keep you prisoner. You can figure
that out though pretty quick and move on. So the idea of the magic loop is get in this virtuous cycle
of, hey, I help you, you help me. And so, for example, I have an employee who started with me at Amazon
as an entry-level engineer, really. He had four years of total experience in his career. He stayed with me
eight years, was promoted three times, and then went out on his own. He founded his own company,
something, you know, unsure near and dear to your heart. After that, he took a job back in the
corporate world, and now he has a far bigger organization than I ever had. He runs,
a 3,000-person global organization for a household named bank, you would certainly know.
And that's all him working with me to grow his career. You know, I could see this guy was a rock star
and I just made a deal with him and said, look, you support me, I'll support you, we'll do this together.
And then at some point I set him free and he flew like a bird. Interesting. And so does that go back
to like the law of reciprocity, basically? So if you give somebody something, they're going to
give you something and return almost from human nature? Yes, absolutely.
The key insight is when you give a gift, even if you give it with an open heart,
without expecting anything, most people feel a little bit indebted and want to pay you back.
So that's the beginning.
But the second thing is, in a corporate world, there's a real practicality to that.
I've surveyed thousands of managers by having them raise their hands and ask them,
how often does someone on your team offer you help?
I'll even put you a little bit on your spot here.
will motivate your team when they watch this.
How often do people come knock on your door here at Contrarian Thinking and say,
Cody, I just have a little extra time and I wonder what else could I do to help you?
Yeah, like negative five.
Right.
That's not fair.
Actually, there are, but you know what?
The people who do that, they get promoted and they make more money.
Here's the key to those people make an immediate impression on you the first time they ask.
Oh, yeah.
It's so rare.
Right.
Because it's in this insight, you are no different than thousands of other managers I've talked to.
they all say the same things. Number one, it's so rare to be asked. Number two, it makes an immediate
impression on me. And number three, oh God, I wish it happened more. And so by being that person who
goes and asks, you can almost always trigger this reciprocity. Because you're a leader. Tell me,
do you have lots of worries about your business? Of course. Okay. So if someone, this is a little
off color, but I basically say, look, there are two types of employees. There are those.
who bring their manager bags of poop and lay it on the desk and say, hey, I found this problem.
Here, Cody. And then there are the rare people who come in and say, Cody, what do you need?
Oh, I see you have a bag there. It looks pretty smelly. Let me take care of that for you.
And those are the people you want, right? And so overly graphic, but, you know, be a poop taker,
not a poop bringer. I think that the part that has lost a little bit today in the world is that
it's so much easier to just talk about how bad bosses are and to say that they're narcissists and
they suck and it's corporate and the man's against you and they make more money and you make less
and they use all your work. And all of that might be true, but it's not going to help you make more
money. And so for most people, less than 10% of people own a business. So 90% of people will
never own a business. If that's true, you got a fucking boss. And so if you have a boss,
you might as well figure out how to manipulate the system. And I could never figure out. And I don't
mean it negatively manipulate. Just manipulate, meaning to move something in a direction that you'd like.
And I think it's so interesting because if we were to do like a shorts clip and clip the part where we say like
how to make more make more money from your boss, it'll do so much worse than is your boss a bad boss or a good boss?
Just just human nature. And so people like a train wreck story for sure. And they like to hear.
And of course, I've had I've had and I've seen terrible boss.
and terrible behavior and that's common.
But you're right.
This goes back to what I said about should an agency or, you know, ownership, which we both
care about, ownership and the sense of owning your own destiny.
If you're sitting around complaining about how unfair the corporate system is, you're stuck.
And what are you doing?
Yes, all these unfair things are true, but plenty of people still succeed.
So what are you going to do about it?
If your boss is so bad, change bosses.
If you believe all bosses are bad, they do what you did.
You found your own business.
But if you find a good boss, then grab hold of them.
And this is why I mentioned good bosses always have talent followings.
They change jobs and they bring people with them because people are like, I don't care where I work.
I care who I work for.
So I'm coming with this person.
Yeah.
And I think, you know, what we've realized in our company is like, you're not really a leader if you are not going to bring people along with you.
It's like the number one interview question I have for executives, which is, let's say that we have an ability to hire a couple of people underneath you. I'm not positive we do, but if we do, who do we have to bring from your other organizations in order for you to succeed? And I can always tell if they're going to be a good leader. If they're like, I don't care, pay me slightly less. Bring Bob, Sarah, and Matt. We need these three. Or at least Bob. And if they can name nobody, then they're really just a manager that nobody wants to follow. And so it's almost the inverse, too. Everything you hear.
about how to make your boss better is also how do you become a better leader and a boss?
Yeah, and the first thing I would say, if you really gave me that challenge is I would say,
look, I need these three people.
Feel free to pay me less short term until you're convinced because you'll want to pay me more
long term once you see what we do together.
That's the like ironclad answer, I think, is my team and I will outperform.
And I know you're big on performance incentives.
I can take the bet that with this team I have a.
better chance of hitting my own performance incentives, which is why I think we both believe in
performance incentives. Yeah, 100%. I'm curious, like, I know that there's a component of
advocacy to getting promoted or getting passed on, but let's say, you know, you're listening to
this and you just haven't been able to get a promotion, or you're too scared to ask, or you're
ready for it, but you're not sure what to do next. What is the difference between somebody who will get
promoted and somebody who will get passed on?
So I think the difference is not hard work. Lots of people work hard. Instead, it's does your work
produce results? In the end, particular corporate America is based on returning money to shareholders.
It doesn't care about anything else. It cares about driving profits, which means growth. So if you can
figure out, as opposed to all the work that I could spend time on, what's going to drive up our results that
matter. That can mean, of course, driving down costs. It can mean increasing revenue, making
customers happy. But something that turns into money, you do those things that drive results.
And in the end, results are what companies want more of. And so they'll promote to get results.
And they will promote even people they don't like if the results are enough. Yeah, that's a great
point. Yeah, if we flip the question and invert it, I guess my question for you would be like,
what things should you never say to your boss if you want to make more money or get promoted?
I've seen people at Amazon actually tell Jeff Bezos, you run an evil company while working for it.
Like, why are we evil?
And in all hands, a guy, you know, said, we seem to avoid taxes.
Why are you such a tax dodger?
You know, Jeff was good about handling that question on stage.
But obviously, these are things you don't do.
The other thing, I think, though, is anything that makes you seem more out for yourself than
understanding you have a role in the corporate good.
Everyone knows that, sure, you want to be paid more, but the thing not to say is what I,
I want.
And instead, here's what I'm going to do.
And I'd like to be rewarded as a part of that.
Like, I'd like commensurate award with the value I bring.
That's what works.
Talking about, well, I deserve more.
I would like a fast promotion. Why aren't I moving up? The self-centeredness almost never works.
Yeah, it's a good point. I think it's counter to a lot of advice I hear on like TikTok these days. It's like, if you don't ask for what you want, you're not going to get it. And that is actually not true. I don't think by and large in good organizations, I feel like if you can show your results consistently without asking for it, you can make more money. I mean, I see it. We promote people all the time. And we give people.
salary increases all the time when we just see their perform it.
Because as a leader, you're like, I don't want to lose this person.
I don't want to lose them.
I want more of that.
Yeah.
And I want to also hopefully show, you know, I can't tell others that I gave that person a raise,
but they'll figure it out.
Yeah.
I want them to see who's getting a raise.
Yeah.
That said, I do think asking matters.
How do you do it, Reddit?
Yeah, there is a way to ask.
My favorite way is don't bring it up as you versus your boss.
Instead, Cody, if you were my boss, what I,
I would say you is not, oh, Cody, I want you to promote me because that puts it, personalizes it.
Instead, I would say, you know, my career is naturally very important to me.
And I would like to know how important it is to contrarian thinking.
And why I need to know that is, unfortunately, if it's not as important to contrarian thinking as it is to me, then I need to take that in consideration.
And I've done two things there.
Number one, I depersonalize it.
Now, you're the owner of contrarian thinking, so it's a little tighter.
But if you were just a manager here, I displaced it not as you versus me, but hey, I need to know what the company values me.
That takes you out of it personally.
And then I have very politely said, you know, if contrarian thinking isn't going to support me, then I have to consider if it's the right place for me.
But I haven't ever threatened you.
If I say, Cody, if you're not going to promote me, I'm going to bounce.
Yeah.
you're like,
hmm,
peace out.
See,
yeah,
exactly.
I mired you
because you're like,
yep,
good luck at that.
The door's over there.
You know,
don't let it hit you.
Yeah,
you know,
it's interesting because I think you're right.
That probably works well
for non-owners.
If somebody came to me
and said that,
I would say,
I don't know how to quantify that.
I'd be like,
what do you mean important to me?
Like,
I wouldn't hire you and pay you money
instead of pay me money
if I didn't want you at this company.
Yeah.
So how would,
how would you explicitly do it? And maybe not, I'll take my owner hat off and just pretend like I'm a
manager. But like, do you have a script or a framework where you're like, say this if you want to make
more money and show them this if you want to make more money? Yeah. So first thing is I would time it to
where I've delivered something. Yeah. Right. Don't, don't come in on a neutral note if you can avoid it.
And certainly not after a problem. Come in on a high. And so then what I would say is I would say,
hey Cody, we just had some great results on the XYZ project, and I really appreciate the feedback you gave me.
And what I'd like to do is I'd like to grow my career and know how I could deliver more of that from you.
And as a part of that, I'd hope that I could get a promotion and, you know, a significant equity and compensation increase.
Could we talk about what I could deliver where that would make sense for you?
So good. It's so good leading with the value on exactly what you get in order for the value and exactly what the company.
gets. It's like, if you show me you're going to make me more money, I'm giving you more money.
No problem. And it's even easier, I think, at smaller companies, harder, sometimes at bigger
companies, because you have the budgets and things. Yes. They have all kinds of rigidity
levels and who are you comparing to and how many people do we need at that level and salary
bans. You're freed of all of that. If someone's super valuable and you think there's worth 20%
more or for that matter three times as much, you can make that decision as the owner.
What's the most ridiculous thing most people don't understand about like pay in big corporations?
Oh, I would say one thing they don't understand in big corporations is how much variability there is.
So one thing I did that Amazon wouldn't like, but I was playing both sides advocating for my employees.
I had an employee who was making less than half what was possible in his role.
And he got an offer from another huge.
company. So we were at Amazon, he got an offer from meta that was a big raise, but I knew we could
match it. And so I just coach him and said, look, you got to ask for this and show your other
offer and we'll get it for you. So bottom line, and these are big numbers. He went from making about
$300,000 and making about $3,000 of a million in one jump. That was because, you know, I was actually
coaching behind the scenes to help him because I really wanted to keep them. And I wanted to drive the
Amazon corporate machine to make an offer to match meta.
We lost a lot of people to meta because they outpaid us at that time.
But what he didn't understand was any idea that was available.
You know, he thought like, oh, there's no way Amazon will ever match this offer for
meta that double this peg.
It was right there.
So I think people don't realize what's possible under the right conditions.
That's actually a great point because how many people leave.
I mean, I remember early on in a company, we had a young woman who's saying, I won't say,
make a Marlboro or whatever. But she left. And the reason she left, she was making $90,000 here.
And she was a junior content person. And some bonuses, et cetera, to come with it. And she left for a
$100,000 offer that was $10.99 instead of W2. So didn't come with health insurance and all the other things.
So it was worse, probably. It was worse. But what was fascinating is, one, she didn't realize the
difference between, she just saw the $100,000 difference. And I think she actually liked her job. She
just wanted to make more money and was a little scared to ask for it. One thing Ethan keeps coming back to
is that doing the work is not the same as owning the outcome. In my experience, there's no form
of ownership more rewarding than business ownership. That's why we created something called Main Street
Millionaire Live. It's a virtual event where we will show you how to find, fund, evaluate,
and own cash flow and small businesses. Exactly what we're talking about here. Having the ambition is one
thing. But if you don't have the knowledge from experienced owners at every step of the game,
you'll never actually do it. And so you've got to figure out, you know, hey, are the numbers
I got from this tire shop telling the full story? Is seller financing the right move? Could AI
actually improve these margins? Ethan just told me that his trainer actually bought the gym that she
worked for. At MSM Live, I'm going to break down how we've taught thousands of owners how to do
this, how we've bought hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars in businesses just from normal
people, maybe like you, using creative financing and show you how to evaluate businesses like an
investor. I think even if you want to stay in corporate America, owning something on the side is how
you change the game entirely. So if you want to go full owner mode or just curious about it,
grab your ticket below at MSM. Live. I'll see you there. Okay, back to my conversation with
Ethan Evans. You know, had some management issues at the time. Didn't have a great leader on top of
her, so that's my fault. But what was so interesting to me is like if she had come to us and said,
I want to just make this much more, here's a couple things I think I could do. Is there any way to
get there? We probably just would have said, yeah, let's right size this. And again, that is our fault
for not maybe continuing to right size her as she grew proactively. Now we try to do that.
But I think before you make a jump, just if you like what you do, asking and telling what
you're going to do additionally, you might be shocked what you get from your current company.
Well, so two things there, if I can point them out first.
What you said, if I can paraphrase, is we as the management should have been on top of that.
Well, true. Yeah.
So she was waiting for you to do what should have happened, but it didn't happen.
So she just left.
That's the mistake is she wasn't asking.
Second thing is, just statistically, 70% of employees never ask for a raise.
This is probably foreign to me and you because we're a little aggressive.
but 70% never ask.
And yet, of the 30% that do ask, 70% of them get something.
They may not get what they ask for.
So, oh, I want, you know, I want to go to at least 100,000.
Well, maybe they say, well, we can't do that.
We can go to 97.
But you get something.
And so asking almost always pays off.
And of course, you know this.
Same way you teach all of your audience to negotiate for businesses.
If you just ask, it's probably there.
Yeah. It's so true. You have this philosophy about invisible performers versus visible performers. Can you talk about how being visible and high versus invisible and mid can sort of change your career? Will you break down that philosophy? Yeah, absolutely. So here's the basic idea. Most managers are trying to reward their top performers. But the thing people forget about managers, managers have their own career, their own life, their own, you know,
partner and children, they're not noticing everything. And so if someone is doing a good job
advertising their work, making it visible, they may be seen as a much higher performer than this
person who's sitting silently. The number one thing I hear people tell me is, oh, I'm just going to
keep my head down and work hard. And I expect my hard work will be rewarded. And I call this
work hard and hope to be noticed.
And to follow on to that, hope is not a very good strategy.
So there are things you can do.
They're pretty simple to make your work visible.
The most obvious in a corporate environment is just send out a status report.
Just write a little note at the end of every week or put it in Slack and say,
hey, here's what got done this week.
And compared to the people who don't do that, it's just like going in and offering help,
they'll immediately jump to the front.
I love to study psychology.
And one of the things about psychology is humans can't avoid reading.
Once we learn how to read, if you put words in front of us, our brain reads them.
We can't basically not read.
It's why billboards work.
We're driving down the highway.
We don't care.
But there it is.
And suddenly we know chick-fil-a at the next exit, whether we wanted to know or not.
The same thing happens with that status report.
It comes into your inbox and like, oh, it's Ethan saying what he did this week.
And somebody else, your Barbara, isn't there.
And right there, week after week, what you're getting is, oh, Ethan worked, Ethan worked, Barbara, who's Barbara?
And that's what happens.
Such a good point.
Also, as a leader, I love status updates.
Because I think one of the fears that your leader has and all leaders have is that their team actually isn't doing anything.
And it is a fee, especially when you're an owner, you're like, I have these resources.
They're finite.
I have to allocate them places.
And then I got to go chase down.
Am I allocating them appropriately to the right people?
And, you know, if you're any good at running a business, you're often thinking, well, I have
a million bucks to put here or here, which one is going to deliver me better performance?
And even at a company as big as Amazon, you don't get on limited budget.
Nope.
And so it's really interesting.
Now I have almost all my direct reports, well, all my direct reports.
And then everybody who's working on key projects for me, send a weekly update.
But what is almost just as bad is when you say you're going to and then you don't do it weekly.
And then your manager has to chase you.
I feel like that is there's almost like, I don't know if you have a philosophy that's.
You've been doing this longer than I have.
Why is that worse almost?
So, well, it's a busted expectation.
In other words, if I didn't ask you for it or we didn't agree, then maybe I wanted it.
But like, I can't really blame you.
Yeah.
But when you say you're going to do it, then you don't.
This is, this is letting me down.
and it's a way that feels more personal, like you broke a promise.
I actually say the same thing in the magic loop,
which is the only way to screw up this loop is to go to your boss and say,
how can I help you?
And they say, oh, do this and then you don't do it.
Because that's much worse than if you just kept your head down and never gone in their office
because they weren't thinking about you.
But now you've put yourself on their horizon and let them down.
And they will remember that much more than if you had not ever showed up.
So that status report you don't get when you're expecting it or when you've been clear that you want it,
that's a much bigger black mark that someone who just doesn't do something on their own.
Yeah, that's really good.
But what a simple way?
Like if you want to make more money, what do you do?
You send status reports weekly.
You update your manager about what you're working on.
You show the results that you've had.
And you call it being strategically annoying, basically.
Absolutely.
Are those the four? Or is there anything else that like, if you want to make more money,
you should absolutely do?
I mean, another good one is bring solutions or proposed solutions.
The last thing I would probably add to your short list is if I have a problem that I'm not
sure how to solve or that needs your approval because we're going to spend money, make the case.
Don't just come and say, oh, Cody, would you pick between A and B?
But instead, look, say, we face A and B. It's a debate in the team.
Here's the advantages of A. Here's the advantages of B.
I recommend, but you tell me, because in the end, it's your money.
What I'm doing there is making it super easy for you,
but still letting you make the choice.
Now, if you're a really strong lieutenant,
if I have a great relationship with you,
I might be so bold,
this is like playing the advanced level of the game,
to say, hey, Cody, we looked at A and B,
and I know how you think,
and so I've gone ahead because of these reasons
and made the call A.
it is still reversible.
If you disagree, call me back, but otherwise just know we're already running.
And at this point, you're like, this person is magic.
They're doing what I would do for the reasons I would do it and making me money.
And all I have to do is like, well, nothing actually, right?
Just read the email and collect the check.
That's where you're trying to get to.
But that takes a relationship where I, where you and I have enough trust that I can make decisions for you by proxy.
And I'm sure you have a few people like that.
Definitely.
Well, why do you think it is that this is so rare, too?
I'm not sure how much more work it takes or how much more intelligence it takes.
But it's one really rare, I think, for people to come with solutions, not problems, writ large.
And it seems really hard for people to come and actually take the responsibility to say,
I'm going to do X or Y.
Well, a lot of people have a ton of fear of being wrong.
I remember very early in my career.
I was still in school. I was working on a project as a graduate student.
I ran into a guy from our facilities department.
We needed to do something like drill a hole in the wall.
And I was like, let's do it here.
And he said, it sticks with me like glue.
He said, I ain't making no damn decision.
Right?
Like he was just terrified that someone would tell him you did it wrong.
And he was much older than me.
So I was just 18, 19, 20.
And I was like, I'll make the decision.
Do it here.
So that's part of it is people are afraid.
of being wrong.
And some of them have been smacked for being wrong.
How could you do that?
You know, you didn't have the authority.
Because there are controlling people who are afraid to delegate.
And so they learn fear.
The second thing is when it comes to like coming up with a solution or proposing something,
I don't want to be blamed is a stronger thing than I see the reward.
So I think what differentiates people at Amher.
Amazon, we had an ownership leadership principle, which is part of our Amazon runs. It has a set of
principles. And at one point, they were considering removing it. And I led the fight to keep it. And
some of the words in it that I helped create say, an owner never says that's not my job.
And what happens is people feel like, oh, making this decision or taking this risk, well, that's not
my job. I'm a content producer or I'm a negotiator. It's not my job. I don't.
And what we want, of course, as founders or leaders in a company is people who see,
okay, I might not be the right person to do this work.
But since nobody's doing it, I'm going to jump on it either and do my best job or find who should own it.
I'm not just going to leave it there.
I'm like, oh, not my job.
You know, alligator arms, right?
T-Brex.
Yeah.
There's this great meme that I saw.
And it was like a little lifeboat.
and a life boat had like holes in it over here and cracks there and a broken sail. And next to all
the things that were wrong with it, there are people all around the boat. But next to all those
issues, it was like, not my job. Somebody else will deal with that. I don't want to be the one to bring
that up. All these little excuses. And then it talked about how there are two types of people,
sort of the people who fix and the people who ride. And the people who fix always end up being in
charge and the people who ride always end up behind. And you have an idea that's a little bit like this.
like two types of managers, umbrella managers versus funnel managers.
What are the difference between the two?
Well, the basic idea is, you know, shit runs downhill.
And the manager is either an umbrella over the team kind of covering for that and
getting it out of the way so that the team can work.
Whereas funnel managers look like a funnel and they're catching all the craft,
passing it by themselves and like, hey, you deal with it.
You know, my boss is mad about this.
You'd better fix it.
My only job is to like pass the blame to you and then push you to work harder.
So that's the main difference.
And I've definitely seen both of these.
Yeah, those are stories I can tell.
They come in to a case where I failed Bezos.
We can talk about that maybe later.
Tell me now.
This sounds great.
I failed Jeff twice in my life, like big public failures.
The first one was when we very, the very first time we began prime video.
Before it was even called Prime Video, we were going to start showing movie and TVs,
and he asked us to come to an all hands of the company and demo the product.
Well, to shortcut the story, I got on the stage, and we had a bug, which happens with lots of software.
And you probably know the old movie Office Space, like a red stapler scene.
So we wanted to show that.
And I'm standing there with microphone.
Jeff's in the front row, and all of Amazon is behind him.
And I say, okay, so this is office space.
And everybody starts laughing.
And it's the scene's funny, but not that funny.
I turn around and you can actually see me go and turn upside down because it's playing
upside down on the screen.
So I'm holding the mic.
I'm brand new at Amazon.
Here's Jeff Bezos and all of my chain of management.
What do you say?
And I said, well, obviously we have some problems.
I'm going to go work on those.
And the interesting part about this is Jeff has a lunch after the all hands where he takes all the presenters to lunch.
And so we get through this meeting.
I go to lunch.
I walk into the room.
It's big room, conference room size.
And he's there alone.
Well, it's just no one else has arrived.
But like I bolt for the farthest possible seat, you know.
And he sees me.
He's like, no, no, no.
come sit next to me.
And I'm like,
okay, shit's about to get real.
He says, look,
he could have said anything.
What are you going to do?
What's the problem?
Why did that happen?
What he actually said was,
I just want you to know,
I'm not worried about this problem
because clearly you are.
And then we had lunch.
But, you know,
of course,
that sent me back.
Like,
oh my God, Jeff Bezos is behind me.
You know,
like super energizer bunny.
And that became prime video.
So the second story is where the umbrella manager comes in.
Fast forward almost 10 years.
I've risen in the company.
I have a big team.
We're launching something for Jeff.
And it doesn't, again, it doesn't work.
And in this case, we've been working all night to launch it for a morning press release.
Well, Jeff gets up and we haven't done the press release because it's not work.
And so he's immediately on email.
And he says, like, what's going on?
And I reply to him, you know, he says, where's the press release?
I replied to him and say, well, we have some problems.
And I'm thinking, get in the shower, get on your treadmill, anything.
I'm going to fix these problems.
And he comes back and says, what problems?
And starts auditing and digging.
And my goose is cooked.
Well, Jeff's mad.
He's mad that we fail.
It's reasonable, right?
We've led him down.
But one of his executives decides not unreasonally, like my job is to play the heavy for
Jeff and make sure Ethan knows he fell short. So this number two in the company comes marching into
our physical space. And the case of an umbrella manager, my boss was a guy named Paul Ryder.
And Paul goes and puts himself physically in front of that manager and says, who's his direct boss
and says, look, if there's any problem here, address it with me. This is my team and I'm solely
responsible. And that's an umbrella manager. Now, the funny part of this story is the executive says,
Paul, that is really good leadership. And I appreciate that. Now, I need to talk to Ethan.
Please step out of the way. So it didn't work. But like, he made the try.
Oh, my God, that would be so horrified. I don't think, I mean, I remember when I was working in
incorporate my like version of Jeff Bezos. His name was Jim Bowen. Actually funny, J.B. But he was so
impressive to me that the idea of letting him down in anything was sort of crippling. And so I could
only imagine how you would feel being called out in public because Jim was pretty, he was pretty
ruthless in a good way, though, about public feedback, basically. And so,
I've sort of taken it underwing in that.
Not everybody can handle it.
I try to only do it to like executive level.
But, you know, he would kind of say in front of everybody, everybody's going to get to learn from this.
Like, that was wrong.
This is a huge mess up and you have to fix it.
And we're still friends to this day, I think, because to your point earlier, he would hold such high standards that I got so much better through that relentless sharpening, even though it sucked in the moment.
And I think maybe a lot of people today don't realize what a gift it is to have people who are hard on you.
you. Because if they didn't think you were going to be able to fix it, they would have just
been like, well, whatever. I'm not even going to talk to Ethan. He's not going to fix this.
That's right. You know, absolutely. And I know that in that case, there was a behind the scenes
discussion of, do we need to remove Ethan here? Because this guy who was charging through Paul
told me that later in a meeting. He said, we were discussing whether or not you could still be here.
But the way you stepped up and the way you communicated, we gave us. We gave us.
the space and you fixed it. So you still screwed up, never do that again, kind of, you know,
pounding the lesson home, but you get to keep your job. And, you know, they were making a
decision. And definitely it was like an eye-opening breath when he's like, well, we were considering
whether or not the fire you're like, what do you think the right way is to give really difficult
feedback to somebody? So they actually listened to it. Well, a couple things. Pricy is better if it's
going to be that hard. You're just going to lose trust from a lot of people. If you have a,
we're considering firing you discussion of public. Everybody's, we're like, what kind of jerk are you?
So it's got to be in private. But I think clarity. What happens with hard feedback is people are
afraid of the potential confrontation. And so they don't want to say something that might get
blowback. Well, that's not fair. This happened and that happened. They don't want the argument.
what I've learned to do is I call it being professionally firm while being personally warm.
So what I would do in a case like this with you is I would say, Cody, I need to discuss something that's going to be difficult.
And I want you to know that like I'm always behind you, I'm telling you this in order that you can succeed.
That said, this last screw up didn't show enough attention to detail.
and we can't have any more of them.
And I need to tell you,
this does, you know, more of this
is not compatible with staying here.
Right?
Or I could use other words, right?
But it could lead to the end of your job.
And I don't want that for you.
And so the trick is to show human warmth
for the fact they care about you,
but a very unmistakable line of this performance doesn't fly.
And most people,
if you've built the trust to where you believe
that I do want to be.
to help you, then you can hear almost anything if you believe it's coming from a position of help.
If you believe it's coming from a position of condemnation, that wasn't good enough.
I need better.
You, I start pointing my finger and like, you didn't, you this, you that, and I'm not involved.
And the reason a lot of people do that, they get into the blaming style is they can't risk
confrontation without getting themselves worked up.
first so that they're ready for a fight. Because if you push back, you're like, that's not fair.
And you're not supportive. They don't know how to handle that. And say, well, we can talk about that,
but this is still the objective performance. They can only do that if they're ready for a fight.
And that makes them aggressive, which you feel. Do you feel like a lot of people get feedback?
Like, do most managers have hard conversations with their team? So, according to what,
everyone says no, right? The constant feedback, just like I said earlier, managers don't get to ask
if they want help. Almost every employee will say, I don't get any real feedback. There are some
reasons for this. The biggest thing, though, is as a manager, I'm busy asking myself, how important is
this feedback versus if I make you upset, do I want to deal with that? And then, what if you quit? Like,
how do I give you this feedback in a way that you feel like, okay, I've got to address it,
but I can, as opposed to, oh, that meant get out.
And now I'm going to have a hole.
So they're trying to figure out how to like, well, it's called sandwich feedback, right?
I'm going to say something nice to you.
Then I'm going to slip in a little bit of like, oh, you could do this better.
And then I'm going to say something else nice.
Well, the problem with that is most people, they hear that there's a criticism in there,
but they don't hear action.
I have to change. I have to do something different. They don't hear that part. And that's again,
managers aren't trained to do this. Well, let's look at your corporations. You know, when you worked
in corporate history, how many of your managers had actual training, would you say, and how to be
good managers versus they were just top performers on the trade desk or wherever and got moved up.
The only company I think did a really good job of that was Vanguard. Vanguard has like pretty incredible
corporate training. So yeah, probably less than half.
for sure. Yeah. And I would say it's normally even less than that is that a top performer in an
individual role gets made a manager because they wanted and they're good at what they do. And so it's
assumed, oh, you're a good engineer. You're a good designer. You can manage designers. Well,
there's no proof of that. Yeah. And even if it is true, you certainly haven't been told how to give
good feedback. And so you're left, you know, there are cases where I've hurt people because I had to
learn on the job and I did it badly because I didn't have the skills in the training.
And so to your point of feedback, I once had in my very first job, one of the very first
performance reviews I ever gave, I thought very deeply about where can this person improve
and what do they do well. And I gave this, I was young and this employee was older than I was,
which is already awkward. Like I'm reviewing someone, you know, significant than my senior.
Well, I did, in my opinion, a pretty good job actually noting strengths and weaknesses.
What I didn't at all do was understand the relationship dynamic here.
And so I pissed him off and he fought me and undermined me the rest of my career there.
Because I, you know, I embarrassed him, right?
Here's this young kid telling me I need, like, you know, he, because I wasn't trained in how to give that feedback to
build the relationship to say, hey, could I share a couple things, you know, could I share a couple
things to help you? Which is the last point I'll make. It's a great trick. Ask for permission.
I can come to you and say, could I share a couple of things I've noticed. Would you like some
feedback? Great trick here. You're almost never going to say, no, actually, I'd rather blunder forward
blindly. It's a very good point. But then once you say yes, you also keep a
like, oh, I don't want to hear that. So it kind of sets you up for being open to it because you opt in.
What about political correctus in a corporation and politics in a corporation? And Lord, we've seen a lot of that over the last, let's call it 10 years.
How do you manage that in a company? And what do you allow or not allow?
I'm a big believer that what the leader exemplifies is what they get.
So if they see political correctness and they say, well, that's very politely worded,
but please share what you really think.
That will encourage more transparency.
So I think saying, oh, we don't do political correctness.
Don't do that is tougher than exemplifying.
Bezos had this thing where he taught we don't want people.
to succumb to what he called social cohesion.
And he wanted people to be willing to debate.
And so he exemplified that.
And the big example was he would tolerate debate.
I had a manager of a vice president who was arguing with Jeff about something.
And the CFO, because it was going on and on a little bit, said, stepped in and said, Jeff, do you want me to shut this down?
Like right in front of my boss, basically, do you want me to tell him shut up so that you don't have?
have to. And Jeff said, no, this is how we learn. And they went, you know, six more rounds. Of course,
Jeff still won because he's the CEO. But he explained his logic and defended it. And that later that day,
I heard other leaders broadcasting that example of you wouldn't believe what happened today.
You know, Jeff agreed to go extra rounds with his VP because they said, this is what I want. I want people
who will push back.
Those examples spread.
That's actually what I would call good gossip.
That storytelling of, look, the leader is for real.
The leader really does want this.
So that's how I think you get rid of political correctness is you have to live it.
And you have to get your leaders to live it.
And then if they live it, it will die.
The temptation to be afraid to say anything and we have to be super inclusive
and bring everybody into a big group hug.
I don't want to exclude anyone,
but I also don't have time
to come around and, you know,
sort of politely say,
do you have anything to add?
Yeah.
You know, say it or don't.
Yeah.
And it's not, again,
I respect their quieter people and give space,
but only to a degree.
Yeah.
What are the career killers that you can do
that people will remember forever in their jobs?
Betrayal is the number one.
Any sort of, and to some degree, that's the letting me down where you promise something, like,
I'm counting on something and then it doesn't show up and it makes me look bad.
Anything that hits people's ego or identity is actually more than raw performance.
If you lose me money, I'm upset.
But if you make me look bad, I'm furious, even if I can't admit it, right?
So if you leave me hung out to dry where I feel foolish or I feel incompetent, that's going to be,
the number one thing.
The second thing is
anything that leads me
to distrust you more generally.
I see you,
you know,
cheating on an expense report
or behaving inappropriately.
Again,
anything that makes me
question you as a human being
is probably deeper
than things
that make me question
your performance
because performance,
maybe you can get better.
Maybe I can train you.
Maybe you can learn.
Whereas if I start
to distrust you,
there's really no
path back from that, right? It's a little bit like how many marriages recover when a partner
cheats, right? It's just usually kind of over. Yeah. That same thing. Yeah, it's true. I don't
think people realize the harm that happens from like lying, cheating, stealing, and that betrayal
component. Even, you know what the other one is actually, too? The gossiping. Yeah. I feel like
leaders. Break in trust, though. It's not maintaining my confidence.
it's another betrayal.
Yeah, that's true.
That's true.
You know, you see it a lot in corporate cultures, but the, you know, we're going to gossip
about this person but then present another face, I think is a really fast way for you to get
fired or to never be put in a position of power.
And it's, you know, it's interesting because I had a meeting with some of my leaders.
There's a little gossiping going on from some of their teams.
And I had to sit down with them and say, you know, one of my favorite rules from Dave
Ramsey's company when I went and went to his headquarters.
And I have a lot of respect for Dave in many ways is they have a no gossip.
policy. It's really aggressive at their company. And if you're, if, you know, you do it and another
team member hears you do it, they'll just say, hey, we don't do that here. But if it happens
another time, you're let go from the company. And I said, I really think this is by and large
a good philosophy because it can be really toxic. And, and one of the leaders said gossips is just
natural. And I said, it is. You're right. But if we are the ones that stop it every time, it will
become a lot less natural. And so, like, I think you have to be okay saying, hey, we just don't do that
here. We don't have, we don't have the energy for it. That's not part of our corporate culture.
You know, if you want to gossip about things, don't do it here, but that's, that's really not
going to be who we are. But even given that feedback in real time, I think, is really hard.
And yet it's how you perress. Well, the closer, the closer piece of feedback is to the event,
the more likely it is that'll change. Like, holding it, you can hold it in private.
it if necessary, but as soon as you can pull someone aside, because a day or two later,
it just doesn't connect the same way. This is the whole, like, if we touch a hot stove, we learn
very quickly not to do that. But there's no one who smokes who's unaware of smoking is bad for you.
The thing is, it's bad for you 20 or 30 years from now. And so that long feedback means that no one,
you know, that's a someday problem that might happen. The same thing with feedback is if I did something
And then I'm telling you like, hey, last week you gossip and you're like, what?
What did I say to who?
Oh, really?
It's just, it's too faint.
So it is tough to say, hey, just quickly, we don't do that here.
I do think leaders need to be strong on the culture if they want it.
Because the culture you exemplify is the culture you get for sure.
Let's talk about that.
Because, you know, you're at one of the greatest companies of all time, certainly of our
lifetime. What is your take on that? Like, what is the culture of Amazon that led to such
massive performance? So there's a couple of things. Number one, Amazon was unabashedly hard
driving. And some people definitely with justification would call it a sweatshop. But it was very
clear that Amazon was a place where you were expected to work very hard. And it was okay.
If that wasn't for you, no problem goes somewhere else. But we're not going to slow down.
or lower our expectations. We won't be, you know, we'll probably judge you a little if you leave,
to be honest. But, but the truth is, like, we'd rather you leave than you stay here and complain about it.
So part of it was hard work. The second thing, though, is Amazon was really great on pushing authority to do
things down and giving autonomy to small teams. They had this idea called a two pizza team.
And the idea was that no team should be bigger that can be fed by two pizzas. And that's,
And that team should know what it's all about and be able to go do it itself.
So what they tried to, the way to understand Amazon is not, oh, a million employees,
but rather 100,000 of these little teams.
And so it was in many ways a collection of startups.
Like my first team that built this version of Prime Video that failed at the demo was only seven people when it began.
We were told, go figure out how to put Amazon.
and the online video business.
Now, that same team today,
the whole team globally would be several thousand,
but it's still going to be divided into these little pieces
working on each individual part of the larger system now.
And that's what made Amazon strong is you had these little teams.
Jeff, in fact, got a lot of pushback on this that's worth sharing.
We brought in a VP from Microsoft, big platform.
company and that guy had an argument with Jeff.
We said, so many of these teams are repeating work.
This independent team is doing things similar to this one and this one's building overlapping
technology.
Why don't we have a platform team, you know, and we'll make everything central and we'll organize
it centrally.
And Jeff thought about it and thought about it.
And he wrote on the board a math equation, two is greater than zero.
And he said, I'd rather pay to get two of something because I find when I force people to
collaborate too soon, they gridlock and argue about priorities and what I actually get is
nothing. And so I'd rather pay for two than get zero. And if we're so lucky is to get two
working things, that's a first class problem we'll deal with later, as opposed to trying to
force central planning on this huge organization and getting nothing. Interesting. A lot of people
talk about burnout and work-life balance. You were able to work at a lot of these companies for a
long time. How do you work really hard to make a ton of money without burning out?
Burnout is less, it turns out, about hard work, although you can overwork to the point of physical
exhaustion. It's more about losing your vision. You no longer know why. You know I'm going to know why.
You know I'm going to know where you're going. The great thing about Amazon, as I mentioned,
is we had lots of autonomy. And so you could feel like I know my mission, it's to build Amazon,
on video, prime video, or it's to build the gaming efforts.
And I'm in charge of my own destiny.
I'm a little bit of a mini CEO.
And people under me own their own pieces.
So I feel like I'm in control.
And sure I'm working really hard, but I'm not laboring without reward or clarity.
And that's the bigger cause of burnout.
Now, I guess one thing I share with people, you do have to set your own boundaries.
just at Amazon, but anywhere. It goes back to that corporations are driven by profit.
And while you as a leader in a small company might be enlightened enough to say to somebody,
hey, you're burning yourself out, like, I'd rather you dial it down and not burn out.
Big corporations are machines. And if I'm paying you $100,000 and you'll work 50 hours,
great, but if you'll work 60, even better. And if you work 70, why wouldn't I let you?
And the corporate machine doesn't have any sense of like, oh, you're working 110 and you're losing weight and, you know, the machine doesn't know.
And so you have to protect yourself and say, you know, 60's my limit.
Because the corporate machine will just say, this is a great deal.
You're working twice as much as anybody else for the same money.
I love it.
It will, in fact, lure you in because he'll say, oh, you're a high performer.
I'll give you a raise and a promotion.
And so it encourages you keep salary.
sacrificing your health and I'll keep paying and promoting you, it will never stop and it will
drive you, it will let you drive yourself right off a cliff. So you have to draw that line.
So how do you figure out what boundaries you need to set to still make a ton of money,
but not burn yourself out? Well, most work is wasted. So this is about calling your shots.
I would even challenge you, you know, what were you doing last Tuesday morning?
Yeah, you don't know. Me neither do I.
The point being,
only most of our work is wasted.
The way to be affected is to be better at ruthlessly looking at what's going to return money, where are the priorities.
I know you talk to people correctly about have metrics, have a quick report that shows what's moving the needle and what isn't.
Most people don't have that.
And so they're just working on whatever came in in their email and whatever someone,
else is asking for, they're not really dialed in on, I own this business, whether internal
to a company or I own my own small business, what are my key metrics? And is this work really about
that metric or is it just something someone else wanted me to do? It's such a great point. Yeah,
I think the thing that helped me was I started call, I call my CEO every day who's Mark. I don't
know if you've met him, you'd like him. I call him every morning. I say, this is what I'm working on.
And obviously I have like longer term priorities and a to do list and all of that.
But it's a check in with somebody else.
I'm like, I think these are my top three priorities.
Has anything changed in the business that I need to like pivot from this?
And because I can talk myself into just about anything or I can let the day happen to me.
And so my husband, he prefers to talk to his little AI.
So every morning he's like, I have the stack ranking, give me my top three.
And then he sees if he's right or the AI's right on like what he thinks he should be executed on that day.
But otherwise, you become no longer the architect of your day, but rather, you know, a construction worker on the site.
Yep.
And you might be building the roof before the foundation, which is problematic.
Or, frankly, you know, getting more water.
Yeah.
Right?
But I thought you said something really interesting there, which is you're no longer in control of your day.
You're letting your day happen to you or your exact words.
That's where most people burn out.
and overwork is they're letting the day happen to them.
And they're very busy but low impact.
And that's the big difference between what gets people promoted.
It's also what lets people work only.
You know,
I think we probably both at least know of Tim Ferriss.
I mean,
for sure.
You know,
the whole four hour work week theory,
I never got down to a four hour work week.
But the point was,
what's actually going to make a difference?
And what else is just filling up your day
with someone else's nonsense?
And that's why I asked,
what did you do last,
Tuesday, in hindsight, if you were to go back and look at your calendar, maybe Tuesday, you're like,
oh, we nailed it, but maybe be like, you know, a week later, I, yeah, if I hadn't done that,
it probably wouldn't matter. That auditing your past of how much did I waste and being relentless
of I'm not going to let that happen again, I'm not going to let somebody pull me in to waste work.
Makes a huge difference. You're an engineer by background, right? Yeah. I mean, it seems very systems
thinking of you, you know, and with our team, I was realizing, for instance, we held an event and
we had one of our event planners. I saw she was potting succulents for the event. And I thought,
wow, what is our prioritization that we think becoming florists is the highest priority for a
business acceleration event? Like, buy some flowers, hire somebody to bring them in. Wow,
how have I miscommunicated so badly what our priorities are that that's where we're spending our
time, right? And so it is interesting. You almost have to systems think everything you do every day
as far as like, what are your main? I don't really believe in one more star because I think it could
take your business too far in one direction or the other. We call them the two oars. So sort of what's
our quantitative and qualitative metric to make sure we have like good top of funnel and good
conversion and whatever we do. But every day, I'm sort of asking myself, is the thing that I'm doing
leading to one of the two oars? And if it's not, why do I think that's my top priority? I guess.
I guess I'd be curious. I mean, I have to ask you about the goat, but like, what do you see Jeff Bezos do differently than everybody else as a leader?
Yeah, so Jeff had a few things. He really did differently. I think the biggest thing I take away is a little bit complicated, but he often said, we need to be strategically patient, but tactically impatient. And what he meant by that was really valuable things take time to build.
So his signature business, of course, is Amazon Web Services.
Well, now it's, you know, over 15 years old.
It took a long time to become this big billion dollar business and now hundreds of billions.
So you had to work on it for a long time.
That's being strategically patient.
Tactically impatient, though, is he pressed those teams every day of what did you get that today?
How did you move us closer?
So it's feeling this urgency of how have I moved my business forward as far as I possibly can today.
and yet realizing that building something of real value might take 10 years,
building something of enduring value.
He was really good at that.
You know, I learned so much from Jeff.
I can certainly go on if you're like.
Yeah, tell me more.
So Jeff was often asked, and I think this is a really good question for the era of AI.
He was always being asked as a technology leader,
what's going to be different next year?
What's going to be invented?
And he's, he had this insight where he said,
you know, that's an interesting question, but I prefer to try and think about what's not going to be
different. Because if I know something is going to be the same next year and the same five years from now,
I can build a business on that without worrying about the sand shifting. So his big insight about
Amazon's retail business where you buy things as opposed to AWS was, look, customers are
always going to want three things. They're always going to want lower prices. They're always going to
always going to want more choices, more selection, more options, and they're always going to want
more convenience, which sort of translated to faster delivery. So if you look at Amazon's history,
it greatly broadened what it sells, it pushes to have the lowest price, and it sped up, you know,
first there was free shipping, but it was slow, then there was prime, then there was one day prime,
then there was same day. He said, those three things are never going to change about people. And so I can
build a business by focusing on what's not going to change.
That's great insight.
What did you personally take away from working with him?
Like, how did he make you a better leader?
Or what did you take where you're like, God, I've never heard that before.
And now I'm going to do that.
Jeff and his team developed the idea of focus on the customer, not the competition.
Be relentlessly focused on what your customer needs and a competition will take care of itself.
It will do it.
It won't.
So many people get so, particularly in big business and Amazon can get into like, well, what's Microsoft doing and what's Google doing?
And what do we need to do to stay ahead of meta?
And that's all kind of churn.
You're guessing you don't know.
You're starting these hypey efforts because they're starting hypey efforts.
Jeff's viewpoint was, we have customers.
What do they need?
How do we invent something new on their behalf?
So a signature invention there would probably be the Amazon Kindle.
He could see like, oh, music has gone to MP3s.
Movies are starting to go online.
What's going to happen to books?
Oh, they're going to become digital.
People aren't going to want to read them on their computer.
We need to do better.
And that was his relentless focus on books or our business.
We would have to figure out how to invent the next generation books.
And that was him thinking about what does what does his customer need.
You know, I saw this line from Elon Musk that I loved. It was basically like, the line was something like, as a leader of a company, your job is basically to see through the continuous compounding lies in the business and find the truth. And I think what he meant is like, you have all these reports coming up to you that are a representation of what people want you to know and also what they think. And neither of those things may be total truth.
And I could only imagine at a company as big as the ones that you've been at how real that is.
Like, as a leader, how do you find the truth in your business units?
And how do you figure out where the series of like compounding lies is if you even agree with this sentiment?
I completely agree with compound and lies.
It's you said earlier you could talk yourself into anything.
Well, this is a company doing it at a larger scale, talking themselves into believing their own PR, talking themselves into, oh, this.
is a great idea. It's manifest destiny. I think the way Jeff partly got at this was driving hard on the
numbers. So, okay, well, if it's manifest destiny, you know, show me the numbers. Like, what are the
trends or not like, what's the market research, but then what are we seeing? He would wait a very
long time for a business to go profitable if he could see the line. But if the line wasn't leading
there, he would be very hard. Like, hey, you know, this line never gets there. Like, it never comes
into, you know, what's the plan? He would drill really hard on the numbers. The second way, though,
I think you figure this out is you go talk to people on the front line. You go talk to the individual
engineers or the individual people delivering services because all the managers in between
are kind of reporting up things that make them look good. They're not trying to lie. Just no one
wants to be the bearer of bad news. It's unpleasant. If you go all the way down, so I always
maintain some contacts with people many levels below me. When I had a big team, I would still talk to
people who were five, six levels in this giant organization removed from me. And that's because they
would tell me things that I, you know, just wasn't expecting or had no idea. And you get this little
bite of reality that threw all these layers of filters. You know, Jeff hated PowerPoint. And the famous
story why it's old now, but when the space shuttle Challenger exploded, they went and found
the PowerPoint slide had been used to justify the launch. And this PowerPoint had like
seven levels of nested bullets. And the tiniest bullet in the smallest font basically said,
we have a launch risk that could make it blow up. And every bullet going outwards, you can go
find this slide made that a little nicer and of course bigger.
So if you look at the headline, it's like launch readiness, shuttle ready to go, you know,
men, it got slightly more real and smaller fun of like some pre-launch issues.
And as you got down, it finally, in a tiny friend was like, hey, you know, if this goes wrong,
it'll blow up.
But all of the stuff above it had been, we're ready to launch.
looking backwards, it was clear.
Jeff felt that the slideware had misled the decision makers.
And he got that idea from a professor who analyzed it,
but he brought that to us and said,
we're not going to do that.
We're not going to bury things in slides.
Is it just easier to bury things in slides because of the graphic nature,
as opposed to when a brief all text is sort of equalized?
That's partly, but there's two more things going on.
I want you to think a minute about the name Microsoft PowerPoint, even if you use Google
slides, it came from PowerPoint.
What was it about?
Its name is about making powerful points.
So it's a sales tool.
So in that case and in most others, the people running the slides, A, they're controlling
the narrative, and B, they're using it to make their points.
So the Amazon meeting style was to start with a six-page narrative.
So six-page narrative, six pages of writing.
Yes, there's no way to make one thing bigger than the other,
but the other thing is, and this is a weird thing about our meetings,
everyone would sit quietly and read for 20 or 25 minutes out of an hour.
And you'd see these, a Jeff and everyone else with a pen making notes on the document.
But it was a way to drive deep thinking without someone at the front of the room
controlling the pacing and telling you what to think.
instead you had to think on your own.
And that, Jeff told me once, you asked what I learned from me.
He said, whenever I read one of these documents, I stop on every sentence and ask,
do I believe that?
Okay.
Now I'd read another.
Do I believe that?
And so he was constantly questioning, like, do I believe what this is saying?
And there was no one in his ear kind of moving it along saying, yeah, make a decision.
You could see it's, you know, going to make us money.
he could just think quietly to himself.
It's really good.
We did steal.
I mean, everybody stills everything from Amazon, but we did steal this.
Our leadership meetings were becoming really circular.
And they were losing all their signal to noise.
And we were saying so many things, but really transferring very little knowledge.
And so we started with a leadership brief.
We only take 10 minutes to read it.
So maybe we could expand upon that.
But what happens after that?
I don't think a lot of people talk about, we all have talked about,
We all have talked about the Amazon brief.
But then who controls what happens next?
And are there different people in the room that have different roles in the meeting?
Good question.
There aren't different people with different roles.
Another thing I learned from Jeff, he always spoke last.
Because he realized very quickly that even though he wanted strong leaders who would disagree
with him, once the great Jeff Bezos says, I like this idea, everyone else is more
us going to line up behind that. And so fun story, we used to play a game, which is can we get Jeff
to speak out of term? Because we knew, because we wanted our project approved or whatever,
that if we could get Jeff to say something, the rest of the room would kind of quiet. Damn.
But Jeff knew, you know, Jeff was very good at staying quiet. And sometimes, I'll talk about other
people in the room, but sometimes the whole discussion would happen. And then Jeff would come in at the end
and say, I love this, we should do it.
You'd be like, oh, why'd we have to go through all that?
But there was a good reason for it.
Other times, you would come in at the end and say, no, this is not.
Here's my three thoughts.
But other people in the room were expected.
Whenever you were in one of those rooms, you were expected to pretend it was your business
and that your goal was to figure out what was being described in this document.
and was it a good idea or not and how could you improve it?
And then give your best thinking.
Now, it wasn't meant that you should just always talk.
Some people wouldn't say a lot.
Some people would.
But there wasn't any particular speaking order.
What would happen is after it was all read,
we would actually say, it's another super detailed thing,
should we go line by line?
And so you would start reviewing the document from the top
And the person who owned the document or the meeting will be like, any questions on the first paragraph?
If there were, you discuss them.
Any questions on the second or any comments?
And it was very methodical.
And I think that's also why Jeff felt it was better than PowerPoint.
I'm not sure exactly how many words are in six typewritten pages, but it's thousands.
If you think about the typical PowerPoint deck, five or ten words a slide, maybe a 15 slides.
I'm giving an update on my business that's, you know, 300 words.
It's very superficial.
These narratives were very dense.
And they often had appendices as well, like extra information in case you had a question, like,
oh, here's the whole financials of the business or here's all the mock-ups.
So it's very, very detailed.
And would you do that at every type of medium that you have at Amazon?
It was not every meeting.
It would kill you.
But it was every meeting.
that was a big product decision or big product update.
So it was our annual plan every year and any proposal for a new product, a new business.
I started a couple different businesses at Amazon where I had to write these six
pagers and say, I want to start a business.
One of the businesses I helped start was our t-shirt printing business.
So I had to justify like, hey, we've never printed t-shirts before.
Why is this a good idea?
and why should we do it?
And what's going to be the consequences?
And three of us work together to create that six-page brief.
You know, now that's a more than billion-dollar business at Amazon.
But it started with a six-pageer.
I mean, I'm sure you're used to it by now.
But how cool is that?
How many businesses you've built?
I mean, I think I just used Prime Video last night.
How many people do you think you've touched with Prime Video?
It's got over 100 million, I think, active monthly users.
Yeah.
And then, and that's, I don't even know how many billions of dollars that things does.
Then you've got this other business that does a billion dollars a year.
How many billion dollar businesses do you think you've built inside of Amazon?
I've tried to count that up before because, of course, I'm curious.
And I think it's about five, five or six billion dollar business.
T-shirt printing, some of the sponsorship business at Twitch TV.
So the gaming website, Prime Video, Prime Gaming.
and I ran the Amazon App Store,
which was a billion-dollar plus business.
So those are five different businesses.
And, of course, they're all over the place, right?
The thing I love about Amazon is video game, you know,
social media sponsorships and T-shirts.
Like, you can work in so many varieties.
And that's why I say corporate life can be your training ground
to then go out in the world.
When I think about my own business, which is training and coaching, one of the things I do is steal from video games.
Video games, I'll try not go on too much length, but they have this idea in free-to-play games.
Do you play any games on your phone ever a little bit?
Not a gamer.
Yeah, not a gamer.
I mean, I do it just to see how they work so that our tools get better.
Like, I'll mess with Duolingo because the gamification is so good.
And it makes people actually want to learn something that's pretty miserable, aka languages.
Yeah.
So in most games, they have several levels where you can pay.
You can pay a little bit to get something small and you can pay more.
And the idea here is you're stratifying people from,
I don't want to pay at all.
I'm just going to sit back and play the free game to,
oh, I'll spend a little bit of money because that's what I have or how much I like it.
To I love this.
I want everything.
And I'm going to open my wallet and dump it all out for you.
well the great thing about the virtual world
is you can you don't have to have one price fits everyone
it's not like you know a Ford F150 is $30,000 and that's the price
it's like you have the choice to sell the same truck for $1,000
to someone who that's all they'll pay and a million dollars to someone
who wants the luxury version I learned all that video games
I use it all in what I do today where I have different offerings at different levels
The real point here, though, is the things I learned at Amazon make running my own small business way easier because I've seen this big scale.
And I think that's probably you took some lessons you use here from all your time on Wall Street.
Oh, yeah. I mean, there's no way this company would be successful.
And we're still tired by the tail only five years in, you know.
But if I hadn't been in corporate for a long time, because I learned how to take money and make more of it.
I learned how to, how do I have risk callers?
What's an appropriate level of risk to make?
How do I attract A players and keep them, especially the really good ones?
And I mean, you're a perfect example.
You're obviously hyperqualified, couldn't have started your own business, but you ended up
staying at these companies for a long time.
And so I guess one of my last questions for you might be, like, what does it take to attract
A players?
How do you get people who are better than you to work for you?
besides just paying the millions of dollars.
I think it's mission clarity.
People want, you know, we talked again about Arthur Brooks.
People want to know why what they're doing is going to be interesting, exciting, world-changing.
It doesn't have to be world-changing in all ways, but it has to be somehow I'm making a mark that's going to be remembered.
You mentioned Elon Musk.
While I was at Amazon, I got a call to go work at SpaceF.
I'm very transparent.
So I went with a little bit of hesitation, I went told my boss,
hey, I'm going to be gone tomorrow and I don't lie to you.
I'm going to go interview at SpaceX.
And it was really funny because my boss said,
oh yeah, I've talked to him about a job at Tesla.
We didn't get along, but you go see if it works for you.
And I was like, okay, well, you know, the fact my boss had gone for an interview,
okay, now I'm on good ground.
Well, it wasn't a fit for me either.
But the point about A players is my explanation, my boss was, look, Elon Musk is trying to put people on Mars.
That's putting my name in the history books of the world.
If that's the right job for me, I have to go for that.
And even if I was worried my boss would be mad at me that I was going to go interview somewhere else.
I said, look, I mean no offense.
You know I love Amazon.
But right now my job at Amazon won't put my name in the history books of the earth.
and this job with Elon might.
And so I have to go see.
Now, wasn't the right fit,
but I think that level of mission,
I jumped in a heartbeat if it had been the right fit
because of that chance to make such a difference.
And I think people need to see that somehow,
which is you're not just paying me for my time.
If you just want me for my time,
you're going to have to pay a lot more.
It's got to be so much money that I'm telling myself,
well, the difference is my yacht's going to be a,
Amazing. Right.
Also, who wants a yacht? That I don't understand. I mean, much love to business in his...
I guess, you know what? If I was as famous as he was, I'd probably want a yacht because people never leave you alone.
But the monetary thing's never been that interesting for me, actually. I like funny. Don't get me wrong. I like it a lot. I want it.
Love our company, make it a lot of it. But if that is the only reason why to keep working, that would be super boring to me.
And that's not his reason at all. You have to understand for people like Jeff, all all, all, all, all, all,
costs are zero. Right? He spent, I think, 500 million on that yacht. He's worth, you know,
200 billion more like all costs are zero. So what's the difference? But that's not why he works.
He's trying to make, he's in fact said he's trying to work on things that only his grandchildren
will see value from. He's trying to work on things with a long-term horizon. Now, whether or not
you agree with him and what his priority is separate issue, but he's driven by a vision of the future he's
trying to create. One, he doesn't even believe he'll survive to see. Yeah, that is another level.
How can you tell if somebody is an A player or not? I mean, how many people do you think you've
interviewed? Over 10. I've interviewed, Amazon keeps good records on this. I've interviewed over
2,500 people. I've gone through, I estimate about 10,000 resumes, but I know I've done 2,500
interviews in my career. So how do you tell who is going to be an A player who is not? Oh, I wish I could do it
perfectly, because of course, I've mishired people. The biggest,
thing we've learned to look at. And with leaders, you can do this more because they have some
sort of track record, is almost always looking what they have done predicts what they are going to do.
So how much can you dig into that? My favorite trick for figuring out A players is everybody
knows to give three references, if you ask. My trick was I would call a reference and say,
hey, who else knows this person that I could call? And that way I would get out of their list of
chosen references. Because they know somebody else who knows them, they'd be like, oh, well,
Cody worked with him. And then I would call you, and you're not expecting a call. You haven't
agreed to give a reference, but I'd say, I am considering hiring, you know, whatever Mark Smith,
I know you worked with Mark. Would you give me a little bit of insight? And usually you'd be the
one if you're like, Mark is awesome. Whereas you're like, well, I could talk about Mark.
with that. That was my real way to tell who was an A player, is what were people who weren't sort of
the listed references going to say about them, plus what were their accomplishments?
It's not even the interview process. It's like the follow-up process afterwards for references
that really shows. In the interview, you also get information. Basically, in the interview,
I'm getting enough information to know, are you worth making all those calls?
Right. Do I see the signs that you've done good work? You can explain your work. You face hard decisions. So I was often hiring leaders. A big question to your point about hard feedback is, have you ever had to let someone go, walk me through that? Because it's sort of a watershed moment for a leader. Have they sat down across from someone and said, I'm sorry, but today is your last day with our company and dealt with that? Because it's the ultimate hard message. So, um,
It risks the person freaking out.
You know, I remember an employee that we terminated who, you know, started shattering things at his desk.
And, you know, you just, and fear of that reaction means it's very hard.
So if people have gone through that, it's one big signal.
So I would get some of those signals in the interview.
but then the final follow-up was,
are they really that good?
I remember at least one case early in my career at Amazon
where we were discussing the candidate at the end of the day
and we realized we had missed something.
And I called the candidate at his hotel
and said, hey, we missed something.
Can I come to your hotel and ask you a few more questions?
Sadly, we didn't end up hiring the candidate.
Another super interesting case, we were debating an executive candidate or vice president.
And Amazon had this idea of what was called a barraiser.
So a barraiser was someone who wasn't going to work with the candidate.
They sat outside the team and their job because they weren't invested in the hire.
They didn't have a hole to fill.
They could sit outside it and really evaluate the process.
Well, the team was debating and was unsure.
and I Google the guy.
And the first result was him badmouthing his previous company.
Yeah.
But again, this is digging beyond the interview.
Yeah.
Right?
You got to, like, in the interview, he seemed like a well-spoken person.
And we were getting close to hiring.
And then when I just said, hey, why don't we stop for a minute and look at this?
Like, everybody read this link.
He was done.
So another rule.
Never.
You asked what you can do to really, you talked about gossip.
Well, gossiping about your company.
Whenever I speak about things Amazon doesn't do well, I'm very diplomatic about it.
100%.
Because Amazon made my life, and I understand that in a company that size, there have been bad managers
because there's literally a million managers in the company.
I'm sorry, 100,000 because there's a million employees.
You're going to have some bad eggs, and they've done some awful things.
but overall a company is miraculous.
And they're also transparent.
This is our hardworking culture.
If that's not you,
please move on.
Yeah, I totally agree with that.
I feel the same way.
Like if you say one negative thing about your employee,
like your past employer in the interview,
even if it is Joseph Stalin,
like I don't want to hear about it
because you always know the best predictor of future behavior is past.
So if you're talking badly about this,
you're going to talk badly about us, and that's just sort of how it goes. And, you know, even hopefully when I talk, I'm like, well, this employee did this, but that was my fault because I didn't catch it. So, you know, that, like, taking ownership portion is so important if you actually want to be perceived as a winner. Yeah. You know, and I know when we, I worked at Vanguard and Goldman and State Street all really big companies.
Enormies. Right. Nothing as big as Amazon, but I don't talk back.
about them except to say when I wasn't a culture fit.
Right.
Like Vanguard for me was too communal and they have a culture of, you know, if you stay there
forever, you're very unlikely to get fired and you can have really continuous growth but
quite slow for comparative to a Goldman, which would be very fast, but if you're not very good,
you're gone, you know, 20% every year.
And I prefer the Goldman to the Vanguard.
Now, does that mean Vanguard's bad?
No, it's an incredibly profitable company forever.
But Goldman just fit me.
And so I do think it also shows like really incredible, a player mentality for you to say, like, this culture just wasn't the right culture for me.
Yep.
And that's exactly.
There'd be a lot of people who'd be like, Cody, how can you speak well of a place that cut 20%?
What a brutal, you know, capitalistic, awful, blah, blah, blah.
And trying to lure you in to say, oh, yeah, they were awful.
No.
That was who they were.
It was well known.
Yeah.
Is that great behavior?
Well, that's that's kind of your choice.
Like no one made you work at Goldman.
Oh, exactly.
So if you opt in,
deal with it.
And if it becomes too much for you,
go somewhere else,
which obviously ultimately you did,
whether it was for that reason or more opportunity.
Yeah.
But don't trash them for who they are,
as long as they're not lying about it.
Right?
If they're saying, oh, we always take care of everybody
and then cutting 20%,
then that's a place you might call them out.
That goes back to what.
you talked about before, which is the leadership transparency aspect is the most important,
and that sort of runs all the way through to a company. The last thing we always talk about
when we hire, I always anti-s sell them. I tell them all the terrible things that'll be about
working here because the last thing I want is them to change their entire livelihood,
come here, and then be shocked at what they get. Yeah. And that would be a real tragedy.
It's a double tragedy because they're unhappy, but now you've invested and brought someone
in and you have to fill your role again. It's much better to tell people,
Here's all the ugly stuff.
And in fact, there is psychology, interestingly, that if you tell people all the ugly stuff and they say, I can handle that, then when it bothers them, they'll be like, well, I chose it.
They'll actually do bad it.
That makes sense.
Okay.
So let's end on this.
There's someone listening right now who is growing in their corporate career.
They get to take one piece of advice from this podcast.
What is the one thing you would give them from all of your lessons at some of the best companies of our age?
I think know what you want, know where you're going and work with your manager to get there, right?
Make a deal, build that relationship and say, look, I want to go here.
How can I help you and you help me get there?
That almost always works.
That's so underrated.
Your Twitter's amazing.
Your ex is amazing.
I love following you there.
Is that where you like people to go to follow along or if they want coaching or more
greatness. I think the best place to find me is LinkedIn because it's the sort of professional
network. I write there every day. And in fact, the original writing is on LinkedIn and is transported
to Twitter. So I'm glad you love the Twitter, but it's a mirroring of LinkedIn because I serve
corporate professionals and that's where they are. I want to thank you for being here because I'm
taking notes and thinking about what I want to do differently right after this. So I know for the person
listening, they're going to do the exact same thing. I think it's really rare. And you
already know this for people who are corporate and really successful to then go share this stuff,
not normal.
You know, I know you've gotten backlash for it.
And I know you've also gotten incredible things for it.
So just thank you for sharing and sharing without being too politically correct, because that's
not very useful to people who are in the midst of all this today.
So thank you again.
