Chief Change Officer - From Parking Cars to Parking Purpose: Robert MacPhee on Living a Values-Driven Life — Part Two
Episode Date: November 22, 2024Part Two. In this 2-part series, we sat down with Robert MacPhee. From parking cars to co-piloting lives, Robert has gone full throttle with his best-selling book Living a Values-Based Life A former r...ight-hand man to Chicken Soup for the Soul’s Jack Canfield, Robert now helps people figure out their life’s GPS—or rather, their VBS (Values-Based System). Why are we so bad at knowing what we actually value? How can aligning your actions with your core values make work feel less like work? And why does he have such strong opinions about clarity? Robert dishes out wisdom with a side of wit, helping us tackle life’s big questions with plenty of “aha” moments and a few laughs along the way. Key Highlights of Our Interviews: Why It’s So Hard to Define Our Own Values “Most people’s initial list of values often reflects what they think others want to hear. We’re so conditioned to impress others or meet external expectations that it’s challenging to pause and ask: What truly matters to me? The real magic begins when we strip away external noise and align with our authentic priorities.” How a Values-Based Life Can Improve Work “Clarity about values doesn’t just make personal life better—it’s transformative for work too. Aligning your actions with priorities like contribution or integrity can help you show up fully, even in challenging moments. That alignment makes work feel purposeful instead of draining.” Do Values Change Over Time? The Short Answer: Yes. “Values aren’t set in stone—they evolve with life stages and circumstances. For instance, what mattered to you in high school may be worlds apart from what tops your list in your sixties or seventies. Life experiences, like becoming a parent or caring for aging loved ones, naturally shift our focus, making values an ongoing conversation, not a one-time declaration.” Keeping Values Visible “The importance of keeping your values front and center can’t be overstated. Whether on your phone, bathroom mirror, or bedside table, revisiting your values regularly keeps them aligned with your current life stage. A daily reminder to reflect, re-anchor, and adjust ensures your values stay relevant.” _________________________ Connect with us: Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Robert MacPhee 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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Hi everyone, welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. I'll show it is a modernist community for change progressives in organizational and
human transformation from around the world.
A few years ago, I joined a growing venture as the Chief People Officer.
It lasted just six weeks.
To that CEO, I may have seemed incompetent,
but I knew exactly why I had to leave so quickly.
It was a major clash of values. I believe in being true and ethical in both
words and deeds, while he thrived on a man-made facade of showmanship and hypocrisy. Knowing my values made the decision clear.
This experience ties directly to today's guest, Robert Maxey. He's the author of Living a Values-Based Life and the creator of the leadership model called
Excellent Decisions.
In this two-part series, we'll dive into what values really mean, Why they matter for leading fulfilling careers and lives? And why figuring out our
values can be challenging? We'll also explore how to make our values visible and sustainable
in a world that's constantly changing. If you feel stuck in your current workplace, it's not
necessarily your fault. Often, it's just and a tribe whose values resonate with yours.
That's where true happiness and success lie. Let's dive in.
My follow-up question is about what happens after we identify our values. Even if we genuinely figure out and believe in them, whatever those values are, like honesty, humanity, the next step is the hardest, practicing them consistently.
How do you advise your clients to implement the values in daily life?
For businesses, this could be challenging, but equally difficult for individuals, even with the best intentions, staying mindful
and consistent isn't easy.
How do you suggest we monitor and sustain our actions to align with our values?
Talk is cheap. I believe talk and talk and walk the walk matters when it comes to implementation of
values.
If I were your client asking, we've identified my values, what do I do next?
How would you guide me? I'm so glad you brought that up
because without that approach,
without saying how do we apply this,
how do we put this into action,
how do we implement it,
it's all really just an interesting conversation.
And you brought up a really good point.
Sometimes people can get caught up
in the words that really sound good
and will make a good impression on someone else.
When people are first doing this work, we live in a world where we're trying to impress
other people and make other people happy so much of the time.
Sometimes it's a really big stretch for people to really be honest with themselves and say,
what really is?
Aside from what anyone else might think, what is really most important to me?
And for most people that takes a period of time.
Their first list might reflect what sounds good to other people.
That's just normal. That's just the world we live in.
But where the rubber really hits the road, where this really makes a difference in people's lives,
is when we start to apply it.
And this is one of the beautiful things,
this is one of the reasons why I think
our values-based life approach,
where we are taking values and dividing them
into these two categories, why it's so useful
is because it's actually pretty easy to apply.
Once we have these two lists,
we can literally look at those lists
and in any moment, we can self-assess
how we're doing in the areas or the qualities and characteristics that are on that list.
For instance, again myself, I can look at my list of priorities and say, okay, I have
declared that my relationship with my children is number one on my list.
How am I doing?
How are my relationships with my children?
How much, how's the communication?
How much time am I spending with them?
Do they know, do they really know
that I love them unconditionally?
Do they know that I'm here to support them
in any way I possibly can?
And I'm really blessed,
because I can ask those questions,
and we'd have to double check with them
to be 100% sure, but I'm very confident that I can ask those questions and we'd have to double check with them to be 100% sure.
But I'm very confident that the quality of those relationships that I have with my children
is really good.
I put the time and attention into that because I know it's always on the top of that list
when I look at it.
And I'll go right down the list and I'll say, contribution is second on my list.
How is that going?
And honestly, that's an area I'm putting more time and attention in because this values
work I feel like can be such a huge contribution to individuals, to organizations, to the world.
Just imagine if more people, what if everyone was really clear about what their highest
values were?
Imagine how that would change just like the political
discourse for starters, like what a difference
that would make if people were coming from a place
and acting from a place of real clarity
about their highest values.
So again, we can look at our priorities and say,
how do I wanna shift my time and attention
to create more of the results
and more of the experiences that I want? And the same thing with the ways of being. I can look at my list and attention to create more of the results and more of the experiences that I want.
And the same thing with the ways of being.
I can look at my list and I can say, I've said that it's my intention to be really humble.
How am I doing with that?
Am I being Mr. Know-it-all?
I have all the answers and telling everyone else what they should do?
That doesn't sound very humble.
Or am I really showing up in my relationships with other people and listening and asking questions and being curious and genuinely wanting to support, then I'm
doing pretty good.
Like, I can literally look at all the items on my list of highest values and I can self-assess.
And we actually, we use a process in our work called the four A's as an implementation process.
And it starts with this assessment.
And the second A is area.
It's assessing or choosing an area to focus on.
Like I told you with my priorities, I might choose contribution as an area to focus on.
I say I want to make a bigger contribution.
What actions can I take?
There's that third A. That's the next thing we're
going to look at and say, what is an action I can take? What are multiple actions that I can take
that will allow me to make an even bigger contribution? Because making a contribution
is really important to me. And then the fourth A is accountability. Because it's one thing if I say
Because it's one thing if I say that I'm going to take an action to make an even bigger contribution, but if I declare that action to you and I know you're going to check back with me and say,
hey, remember you told me that you were going to get on five podcasts a week to really get your message out there?
How's that going?
That level of accountability is going to create the opportunity
for me to be even more likely to complete those actions that I'm saying I'm committed to take.
Do values change over time with new experiences and perspectives?
Oh, absolutely. Yeah, I think the simplest way for anyone who's listening to this conversation and thinking
about their own values and what they might be.
You can think back to an earlier time in your life.
I'm in my 60s.
I can think all the way back to college or high school.
And what was important to me at that time in my life has changed.
So it's just, it's situational to some degree and I think as my life
progresses and I get into my 70s or my 80s and I'm retiring and the things that
are most important to me, some might change and some might not, but they're
definitely not fixed. I had a fascinating conversation with someone this week who
I had just talked to about this whole values conversation about 2 months previous and I was catching up with her and she
was telling a story about how her mother is not well her
mother had a fall and was requiring quite a bit of
attention and care and help and so this has become a big
priority for her so literally just a couple of months ago it
it wouldn't have even been part of the conversation about what
her highest values were.
But all of a sudden, that got changed.
Like the world situations, the circumstances,
the events that were happening in her world
forced her to alter her values,
to alter where it was most important for her
to put time and attention.
So her family and her relationships
were probably already on her list,
but that specific relationship and caring for her mother
and making sure her mother had the care that she needed
had been bumped right up to the top of the list
because of the specific situation and circumstances
that were happening for her.
So just in terms of navigating through our life from one stage to another, when we're
single, our values might be different than when we get married.
When we're in school, our values might be different than when we get a job and we start
our career.
If we have a job and then we decide we want to be an entrepreneur, our values might change.
So that's a long answer.
I probably could have just said, yes, values change.
But those are some examples of all the situations and circumstances and just stages of life
that would lead to values changing and explains why this is an ongoing conversation.
I would love to say that someone could read my book and declare their values and those
will be their values for the rest of their life.
But it's really a case of one of the things I spend the most time doing is encouraging
people to keep their list of values in front of them, keep them visible.
Have it on your phone, have it on your bedside table, have it on the bathroom mirror, whatever
it is, but have it somewhere so you keep revisiting that list.
I actually have mine in my phone
and I have a daily alarm that goes off reminding me
to just take five minutes, take a breath, relax, go in,
revisit those values, re-anchor into them, remember them.
And in some cases say, you know what?
For this week or this month or this stage of my life,
I'm going to make an adjustment here.
I'm going to make a little change.
There's something going on in my life that feels like it's calling me to alter my list.
And we can do that at any time if we keep revisiting and clarifying what our highest
values are.
As you were sharing, I couldn't help but think,
it's not just about the different stages of our lives
or the roles we play.
For example, I transitioned from corporate life
to entrepreneurship, moving from a world
of abundant resources to one where I'm spending my own money testing ideas
and navigating uncertainties. Big changes like these influence our values. Now one could
argue that if I value honesty, it should stay constant regardless of my circumstances. True, but even the interpretation or perception of honesty evolves over time.
As I play new roles and build up different experiences, I found that how I uphold honesty adapts.
For example, with certain people or situations, I might feel the need to stand firm in my
values, but with others, especially those who don't operate, honestly, I might decide it's not worth engaging or holding them to the same standard.
It's not about abandoning my value, but recognizing when and how to apply it.
This evolution, I think, speaks to how our brains collect data and adjust over time.
Sometimes it's a conscious recalibration.
Other times it's our minds engaging in what I call self-justification,
helping us rationalize our actions in ways that align with what we want to believe.
So when values may shift,
the interpretation and application of those values
change as we grow and learn.
Yeah, but I think this is a really good example
that you brought up a couple of times about honesty
because it points out a few things.
One is just because honesty is not on my list
of my top five most important ways of being
doesn't mean that honesty isn't important to me.
And for some people like this process
of narrowing down their list,
we generally go through a process
where we do brainstorming and we tap into
a deep heart energy to get beyond just our mental capacity
and really tap into what's really most important to us.
And we gather all these words that describe
our ways of being and how we wanna show up in the world.
And we have honesty and integrity and commitment
and kindness and care and love.
And there's all these wonderful, amazing words.
And then I feel like I'm torturing people
because I say, okay, now pick your top five.
And sometimes it's really hard for people
and understandably because how it feels
like you're saying no to some of these amazing qualities
and characteristics, but we're really not.
A couple of things we can be aware of and something that we can do. these amazing qualities and characteristics. But we're really not.
A couple things we can be aware of
and something that we can do.
One thing to be aware of is we can do
what's called borrowing values.
Again, I'll use example from my own list.
I told you I have values on my list,
like calm and peaceful and caring and kind and humility.
These are the words that come up over and over for me.
And I'm also an entrepreneur.
I run a business, like this work with values.
I'm coaching people and I'm doing consulting
with organizations and I'm getting this work out there
and trying to make this big difference.
And you know what the truth is sometimes,
being kind and caring and calm and peaceful
is not the most important quality and characteristic.
Sometimes it's things like discipline and strength and focus and things like that.
Like those are the qualities that I need to bring.
If I really want to make a bigger difference, if I want to make a bigger contribution,
if I want to build a successful organization, which is also on my priorities list,
I can borrow those values situationally.
I can bring them in.
It doesn't mean I'm no longer going to be humble.
It doesn't mean I'm no longer going to be kind and caring.
It doesn't mean I'm no longer going to be calm and peaceful,
because I feel like those are actually
very valuable qualities and characteristics
in running a business.
But I'm also going to be strong, and I'm going to be be strong and I'm going to be disciplined and I'm going to be focused
because those are also like really important for this area that I'm focusing on and creating
the results and the outcomes that I really want to create.
So we can borrow values.
We want to make sure they complement each other.
We want to, we don't want to say I can build this really successful business and make a lot of money
by lying and cheating and stealing.
That's never going to come out of the type of values work that we do.
But in my experience, being strong, being disciplined, being focused, does not conflict
with being kind and caring and with being calm and peaceful and with being humble.
It's almost bringing in extra team members to get more done.
Like that strength and discipline and focus
is gonna help me create the results that I want
in that area called contribution
or building a successful organization.
Robert, we've got a lot of good stuff today
in our interview.
Any final message you'd like to share with the audience?
I think the message that I would want to finish with would be actually an invitation.
And what I find when I have these conversations about values, they're usually very interesting
and intriguing to people.
Most people understand the importance of values, and we've talked about some real specifics
around values here, and I think probably gotten people
to understand even better how important values are,
and hopefully this approach of dividing values
into two categories and getting really clear
about what our highest priorities are
and what our most important ways of being are.
Hopefully people can see how valuable that would really be.
So the invitation that I would want to leave people with is to do two things,
to begin to explore what your own highest priorities are
and what your own most important ways of being are.
And you can do that by first asking yourself a question,
to begin to explore what your highest priorities are. And you can do that by first asking yourself a question to begin to explore what
your highest priorities are. You can begin by setting a timer for three to five minutes
and taking a blank sheet of paper and asking yourself the question, what is important to
me over and over again? Just ask yourself, what is important to me? And write down whatever
answer comes to mind.
Don't question it, don't judge it,
try and put them in order,
don't wonder where it came from.
Just ask yourself the question.
Let your brilliant mind do the work
to capture as many answers as you can
in three to five minutes to that question,
what is important to me?
And from that, you can then start
pursuing this conversation about maybe that top five list and what are the most important. is important to me. And from that, you can then start pursuing
this conversation about maybe that top five list
and what are the most important.
But the first step is to capture the answers
to that question, what is important to me?
And then the second part of the invitation
would be on the ways of being side.
And the first step I invite people to take
is to finish a sentence.
And the sentence is, it is important to me to be blank.
And you can do the same thing three to five minutes with a blank sheet of paper and just
fill in the blank at the end of that sentence over and over again.
If it was me, I would be saying, it is important to me to be kind and caring.
It is important to me to be kind and caring. It is important to me to be humble.
It is important to me to be peaceful and calm.
And I might borrow those values I was talking about.
It's important to me to be strong and disciplined
and focused.
But take those three to five minutes
and answer that question and fill in the blank
at the end of that sentence.
And then you've taken the first step on
this journey to being able to clearly articulate what your own highest values are. And from there,
you'll be able to start thinking from that place of knowing what your highest values are, making
decisions based on those values, most importantly saying no to the things that
are not on your list, and then taking action.
Again, like you said, and I'm so glad you did, implementation, application, putting
it into action is where we really make a difference.
And without that, it's really just an interesting conversation. I like your quote. Without implementation is just a nice conversation.
Thank you so much, Robert. Thank you for having me. When I first saw Chief Change Officer, I knew
that you and I needed to have this conversation because values are such an important part of
making the changes that we want in our life. So I'm thrilled we have the chance to do this.
an important part of making the changes that we want in our life. So I'm thrilled we have the chance to do this.
Thank you so much for joining us today. If you like what you heard, don't forget, subscribe to our show, leave us top-rated reviews, check out our website, and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chan, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.