Chief Change Officer - Erin Diehl: The Fail-fluencer Behind The Business of Joy—Laughing Through Limbo — Part Two

Episode Date: November 19, 2024

Part Two. Today’s guest is Erin Diehl, founder and CEO of Improve It, a company that uses improv to help teams grow and thrive. Like me, she’s also a top podcast host! From a young age, Erin dream...ed of becoming a talk show host. Why did she choose that path? And how did her journey lead her to combine improv and business? I told Erin, “You’re in the business of joy.” But beyond joy, we also talked about failure. Erin calls herself a “failfluencer”—a blend of failure and influence. This two-part series dives into her unique approach to joy, failure, growth, and learning. Key Highlights of Our Interview: WTF: Worst Terrifying Failure “2020 was my crash course in failure. The pandemic forced our in-person business to pivot entirely online overnight. At the same time, I juggled new motherhood, supporting a recovering parent, and trying to keep my business afloat. It was my WTF moment: my Worst Terrifying Failure.” This breakdown captures the essence of the MOVE ON methodology: 1. Marinate: Sit With It, Not In It Failure isn’t something you can brush off overnight. Take the time to sit with your worst terrifying failure—your WTF story. Reflect deeply. Walk, journal, or simply allow yourself to process. It’s about feeling without rushing to fix. 2. Own It: Forgive and Face the Thought Worms “Own your part in the failure, but more importantly, forgive yourself. We repeat 80% of our negative thoughts daily, so break that cycle. Recognize those thought worms for what they are and stop letting them dictate your story.” 3. Verify the Lessons: What Will You Take With You? “Failure comes bearing lessons—two or three takeaways that you can carry forward. Identify what you’ve learned and how you’ll avoid the same pitfalls in the future. This step transforms failure into wisdom.” 4. Evaluate: What’s the Plan? 5. Observe the Growth: Prepare for the Next Chapter 6. Embrace Failure as Part of Change Connect with us: Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Erin Diehl Chief Change Officer: Make Change Ambitiously. Experiential Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives Global Top 3% Podcast on Listen Notes World's #1 Career Podcast on Apple Top 1: US, CA, MX, IE, HU, AT, CH, FI, JP 2 Millions+ Downloads 50+ Countries

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi everyone, welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer. I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Oshul is a modernist community for change progressives in organizational and human transformation from around the world. Today's guest is Aaron Steele, founder and CEO of Improve It, a company that uses improv to help teams grow and thrive. Like me, she's also a talk podcast host. From a young age, Erin dreamed of becoming a talk show host. Why did she choose that path? And how did her journey lead her to combine improv and business?
Starting point is 00:01:17 I told Erin, you are in the business of joy. But beyond joy, we also talk about failure. Erin calls herself a fell flu-lenzer, a blend of failure and influence. This two-part series dives into her unique approach to joy, failure, growth, and learning. No more waiting, let's get started. I understand one of your key workshops focuses on failure. And you even coined the term Bell Flu Lensers, a blend of failure and influencers. I love to dive into this topic but from a personal perspective. Could you share your own experiences with failure?
Starting point is 00:02:26 Not so much the workshops you facilitate or the lessons you teach, but your personal journey. How you've dealt with, navigated, and grown from failure over time. If you like, feel free to share specific stories and give us an overview of your journey with failure. Either way works. Yeah. So this is actually a keynote that I do called F words at work. And there's no
Starting point is 00:03:00 swearing, Vince. Okay, there's no swearing. Spoiler alert, the F words are all about failure plus the frequency of failure equals the fundamentals of success. And truly the reason I even created this is because I was living a crash course myself in failure. I created this content in 2021 and it was coming off of the pandemic in 2020. I'm sure you can remember, I'm sure our listeners can remember where they were in March of 2020
Starting point is 00:03:32 because it was a global pandemic, right? No matter where you were in the world, you were affected by COVID-19. And so at that time, myself, I was going through a period of time which I call the three P's. And I could also call them the three PUs because it was the stinkiest period of my life. I had just delivered and had given birth to a miracle baby boy. And when I say miracle, Ben, it's a miracle. There was a lot of science involved, if you will. My husband and I went through many years of infertility.
Starting point is 00:04:07 We also had a shared genetic mutation, and it was a really long battle to conceive our son, and he had just been born in July of 2019. And so I came back to work in December of 2019, and then at about two months of work when she double hockey broke loose and as a business started to pivot and pivot so my first was pivoting and we were pivoting so much I was legit taking everything that we had done in person is completely in person completely
Starting point is 00:04:42 face-to-face completely human to human, professional development company had to become completely virtual overnight in order to survive. And so on top of being a new mom and figuring that out, I was perpetually pivoting our business, which led to my second P, which is people pleasing, which is a pattern I've had my whole life. I grew up moving around a lot. And so how I got people to like me was being a giver and a pleaser.
Starting point is 00:05:13 And I also use comedy as some of the mechanisms I use to please people. I was the person that was the clown, right? That walked in and made you laugh. And in 2020, I really saw this pattern take over. And I was at the time giving to this newborn miracle, who was my son. I was giving to my family and my mom, who was recovering from a stroke, by the way. I was giving to my team who was careful for their jobs.
Starting point is 00:05:43 I was giving to my peers who were small business owners who were closing their doors, laying off their staff. I was giving to my clients and helping them navigate these contracts that we had with them and how to figure out our next steps. But I was truly giving and giving to everyone except myself, which led to the third P, which was pain. And I'm not talking about, ouch, I stubbed my toe,
Starting point is 00:06:09 tight pain, I'm talking about chronic pain, pain that lasted for two years, that was in my back and shoulders, that was undiagnosable by doctors, that was undiagnosable through x-rays and blood work, and chiropractors couldn't crack. And this pain made me cry myself to sleep at night. It was physical pain like I'd never endured before. And it was pain that I later realized
Starting point is 00:06:33 was due to these unprocessed emotions that I had been sitting with for years, from years of infertility, from the anger I had at the pandemic for taking away my identity and my business, pain from people pleasing and not even realizing that I was doing it. And so I had to set off on a self-healing journey because this period of time, the three P's was what I call my WTF story, my worst terrifying failure. Again, I'm not swearing here, but that worst terrifying failure ultimately led me to my
Starting point is 00:07:10 greatest success. And I was able to heal myself through a lot of healing work, which I can get into. But I was able to do that without surgery, without medication, without doctors. I was able to dissolve my pain. I was able to come into a new line of sight for myself, which I call the three P's, robo-brunner. And I ultimately went from pivoting people pleasing in pain to this life of purpose, which is helping people understand their own failures and how to move on from them. I have a serious toll
Starting point is 00:07:51 on my priorities. I understand them. I even have an organizational chart for my priorities now. And I have the third P, a deep sense of peace, and that is something that I've never had in 40 plus years of walking this earth. But it was ultimately that three piece story that guided me to this place. And that's what I'm here to teach people is that failure isn't the end. It's not a door closed.
Starting point is 00:08:18 It's opening you up to something greater. And I sit here today and say this story without tears and without heartache because I've lived it and say this story without tears and without heartache because I've lived it and now I'm through it. But when I was in that story, it was so hard and every day felt like an uphill battle. And physical pain on top of mental pain is not something I would wish on anyone. So I share that to say you can change. There's such a thing as a mind-body connection, but you can also be the catalyst and the inspiration for other people.
Starting point is 00:08:50 But you have to give to yourself first. Ultimately, that story guided me to write the book that I wrote and released in February of 2024. I can talk about that too, but it was that healing that allowed me to be in alignment to write that book to help other people live the life they were meant to. I haven't read your book yet, but failure answer concept resonates deeply. Just before this, I was interviewing an other guest, and we talked about transitions. Not just career changes, but life-changing events.
Starting point is 00:09:31 In her case, two years ago, she survived a severe car accident that left her paralyzed. She shared how she endured the physical and mental pain, learned to walk again, rebuilt her coaching business, and even started a podcast within just two years. Coincidentally, your experiences also highlight resilience and failure intertwine. I call this lifting human intelligence. That is, the ability to reflect deeply on who we are and transform setbacks into meaningful insights. And while these three words, like
Starting point is 00:10:24 fail, learn, grow, may sound simple on the surface, developing that level of clarity through real experience is far from easy. What stands out is not just the lesson itself, but the process of sustaining pain, making sense of it and transforming it into a systematic approach others can understand and apply. The pain itself is real and unfortunate, but it often opens door to growth. As I told my other guest, failure, if managed well, can become one of the greatest opportunities for transformation. Would you agree? Yes, I'm so with you and I have a methodology that I use and this is something I teach in my keynote.
Starting point is 00:11:26 I'm happy to share it with you that has really helped me and it's helped me with that story and more what I call WTFs, Worst Terrifying Failures that have come since then. Can I share that with you, Benz? Sure. I think that's a great way to web things up. I always discourage hard-selling on this show.
Starting point is 00:11:48 But this isn't about that. It's about sharing the lessons you've distilled from the real, sometimes painful, life experiences. Lessons that listeners can take away and apply right now. So as a closing thought, could you share a method or approach from your work that anyone can try? Something practical, educational, not just inspirational, that could help listeners facing their own dilemmas, whether they are in career transition, dealing with personal challenges, or simply feeling stuck. What's one step or exercise they could use to figure themselves out and take that first step forward. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:47 And I definitely want to point out it's not a hard sell. It is a tangible tool that I want to give you for free. That is something that I've used with my human intelligence and life experience to get me through these failures. And I think anybody listening and anyone going through any type of moment where they're beating themselves up, they don't know how to get through it, they don't know how to see the light at the end of the tunnel, it's a tried and true method and it's called this.
Starting point is 00:13:14 You ready? Move on. Okay. And it is an acronym. Move on. And I'm going to break it down down because honestly this method is so easy to remember because obviously you want to move on but the M in the move on stands for marinate. So when you think about your worst terrifying fail, actually
Starting point is 00:13:38 Vince I'm gonna have you do this with me so I just want you to close your eyes for just a moment and everybody listening just close your eyes for just a moment. And everybody listening, just close your eyes. I don't want you to think about your worst terrifying failure, your worst fall on your face flop, that story that comes up when you think about failure, when you hear the word failure, and it could be one circumstance or a series of circumstances, like my 3P's story.
Starting point is 00:14:05 It could be something where you were at home or at school or at work. I want you to think about who you were with and where you were when this happened. Okay, got it? And then what we're gonna do is we're gonna apply this story to this move on methodology.
Starting point is 00:14:25 Okay, so take this story now called your WTF story, your worst terrifying failure, and let's start with the M. So the M is marinate. And so whatever this failure that comes up for you is, you've got to take the time to sit with it. Marinating is not like a steak. It doesn't happen overnight. You're probably going to need days, weeks,
Starting point is 00:14:50 maybe even months to process. So sit with it within every way you feel comfortable, whether it's just going on a walk with no music or sitting in a meditation or journaling, but really allow yourself space to feel and process that failure. And then you move to the O of move on, which is own it. And it doesn't mean that you give full responsibility to anybody else or to yourself. You're just acknowledging that you were a part of this and you are forgiving yourself for those negative thoughts
Starting point is 00:15:31 that you've been thinking. Because here's a really fun fact for you. The average human thinks between 50 to 80,000 thoughts a day. Of those 50 to 80,000, this is from a study from the National Science Foundation, of those 50 to 80,000 thoughts we form what are called thought worms. We form 6,200 thought worms and of those 6,200 thought worms, what percentage of those would you think are negative? What do you think percentage-wise of 6,200 thoughts, what percentage of those thoughts do you think are negative?
Starting point is 00:16:05 I would say definitely over 50. So should be between 80 to 90%. Yeah, it's 80%, which is so good. Yeah, it's 80%. And then what's worse is that we are repeating those same negative thoughts 95% of the time. So the O is so important because you have to own it and then you have to forgive yourself because you're a human being. We all do it.
Starting point is 00:16:33 It's part of the human experience. And then the V, you're going to verify the lessons that you learned. What are the two to three things that you're going to take with you from this experience? How are you going to get through that experience? What are the things that you won't do in the future? And the E is evaluate the next step. So you're going to put together an action plan. It could be two steps. It could be three steps. It could be one step, but whatever that action plan is. And then the O is that so it's sitting in the again and marinating on what you just processed, the things that you're going to take away, the action steps you're going to put into motion because the N is the next failure.
Starting point is 00:17:18 There will be another one. And then this time you've got another tool in your toolkit to help you move on from it. And this time, you've got another tool in your toolkit to help you move on from it. And you've also got the where all and the know all to see that this is part of life. When you allow failure to happen for you, not to you, you can bring it into the scene of your life. And we say this in improv, there's no mistakes, only gifts. You can start to look at failure as opportunity, an opportunity for innovation, and change is a good thing,
Starting point is 00:17:48 which, you're listening to this show, you believe in change. So, that's the move on methodology, and I hope whatever failure was in your mind, Vince, it helped you work through that, and I hope whoever, all of our listeners today, whatever that failure story was, that WTF, you were able to apply that, and write it down and think about how you can come back to it. I can tell you exactly why I connected with that question.
Starting point is 00:18:16 Because I experienced it myself. Honestly, I think 82-90% of my thoughts on any given day being negative. It's just the way our minds work sometimes, especially when uncertainty is evolved. When we think about the future, we tend to naturally default to worst-case scenarios, even when more often than not, things turn out far less catastrophic than we imagined. Yet those negative thoughts can feel overwhelming, very loud, disruptive,
Starting point is 00:19:01 and hard to ignore. Personally, I have to deal with that noise every single day. I hear it, but I remind myself to focus, to move forward despite the chatter. That's why I really value your advice. It's practical and it's something I know I can apply right away to keep that noise in check. Love it. Yeah, and know you're not alone in those thoughts.
Starting point is 00:19:30 I do it too. I've caught myself many times today. Just know you're not alone. I think I do have a gift for your audience if you're open to that. It's an affirmations list. It gives you a literally a list of 50 affirmations that you can use, and they're not cheesy. They're really good affirmations that you can use
Starting point is 00:19:51 to pull yourself out of a funk, so I'd be happy to send it to you. The second thing is, I just wanna say this. If today made you laugh, it made you smile, it gave you food for thought, and it gave you a positive piece of energy. My only ask is that you pay it forward to somebody else today.
Starting point is 00:20:10 We need more laster, more levity, more positivity in this world. And so my goal is joy. Ben, you led me to. My goal is joy. And the greater we feel, the more we attract into our life and my goal every single day is to feel good and if I don't feel good I can't make you feel good so make yourself feel good today and then pass that joy on. Just a couple of weeks ago I released two episodes with a guest who wrote a book called Generosity Wins.
Starting point is 00:20:46 He is a seasoned CEO who talks about how actions and mindset of generosity not only enrich others but also create greatest success in life and career. One powerful idea he shared was how a single generous action creates a ripple effect, encouraging others to replicate it and in turn making the world a little better. Of course, we can't measure the full impact. There's no way to track every ripple. But the concept is the same as what you are seeing. When we experience joy or positivity in our lives, we have the chance to pass it on.
Starting point is 00:21:40 In his example, even something as simple as a smile can spark change. Smiling in a stranger, a colleague, or a friend might seem trivial, but it can create a moment of positivity that ripples outward. It's a reminder that small actions often have the biggest impact. Yeah, I'm here for it. I love that. A often have the biggest impact. Yeah, I'm here for it. I love that. A smile goes a long way. You never know who has not had a smile today.
Starting point is 00:22:12 So even that simple act of kindness can really pay it forward. And I'm here for your guest. I love that guest. And I love that you're spreading it to Vince. So thank you so much for the opportunity to talk with you. Thank you so much for joining us today. If you like what you heard, don't forget,
Starting point is 00:22:35 subscribe to our show, leave us top rated reviews, check out our website and follow me on social media. I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Until next time, take care.

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