Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - #277: The Most Important Question You Need To Ask Yourself To Level Up! With Ryan Leak, Executive Coach, Best-Selling Author & Motivational Speaker
Episode Date: December 13, 2022In This Episode You Will Learn About: Putting yourself out there Giving your best (even when it’s really difficult) What you can learn from no Chasing failure to reach your dreams �...� Resources: Website: www.ryanleak.com Read Leveling Up Listen to Followership with Ryan Leak Email: ryanleak@gmail.com Facebook & LinkedIn: @Ryan Leak Instagram & TikTok & Twitter: @ryanleak Youtube: @RyanLeak Overcome Your Villains is Available NOW! Order here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com If you haven't yet, get my first book Confidence Creator Show Notes: STOP talking yourself out of your dreams! If you never give things a try, you’ll NEVER know what incredible obstacles you might overcome. Keep moving towards things that scare you, because it will keep you motivated! Ryan Leak, best-selling author, and motivational speaker is here to encourage us to give our best self to EVERY opportunity. Go above and beyond for the tasks right in front of you, and before you know it you’ll be crushing your biggest dreams! About The Guest: My guest today speaks on some of the BIGGEST stages all over the world. Ryan Leak is an executive coach, best-selling author, and motivational speaker that inspires over 50,000 people every month, and trains over 20,000 leaders every year! He’s widely known for two documentaries: The Surprise Wedding and Chasing Failure. Ryan is also the CEO of the Ryan Leak Group, LLC, a leadership development firm in Dallas where they work with leaders and teams all over the world. If You Liked This Episode You Might Also Like These Episodes: Empowerment Is At Your Fingertips! With Craig Siegel, Keynote Speaker & Performance & Mindset Coach START Vibrating on a Higher Frequency With Heather! How To Make Life Happen FOR YOU With Dean Graziosi Co-Founder Of Mastermind
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Way too often we pre-calculate failing and just abort mission all together.
We literally talk ourselves out of our own dreams every single day.
They're predicting, according to my assessment, I will fail, therefore I won't even try.
You can't sell a book that you don't write.
You can't get people to listen to a podcast you won't record.
Even this morning, it was like, hey, are you going to do a book tour?
I'm like, well, what if I go to a Barnes & Noble in New York and nobody shows up?
No, like, you got to put yourself out there.
I think the difference between people who are successful and people who don't get all that they want from their life is that successful people were willing to go sit in the bookstore and be by themselves.
I'm on this journey with me. Each week when you join me, we are going to chase down our goals.
We'll overcome adversity and set you up for a better tomorrow.
I'm ready for my close.
Hi, and welcome back. I'm so excited for you to meet my guest today. Ryan Leek is an executive.
coach, bestselling author and motivational speaker that gets to inspire over 50,000 people every month
and train over 20,000 leaders every year. He's widely known for two documentaries, the surprise
wedding and chasing failure. Ryan is also the CEO of the Ryan League Group LLC that is a
leadership development firm in Dallas, Texas. They have the privilege of working leaders and teams
all over the world from NBA teams to Fortune 500 companies. Ryan, thank you.
you so much for being here today. Yes, it is my privilege to be here with you. Okay, so I get a lot of
DMs. You're an incredible speaker and guys, just a little behind the scenes. A very good friend of
both of ours, Jordan Montgomery, who you know was on the show earlier. If you haven't heard
that episode, go back and check it out. Introduced us on text. And in typical fashion, I'm being
sarcastic with people. I didn't even know Ryan. I didn't know who he was yet. And I'm saying,
gosh, Ryan, you're not even active on this thread.
You better be on the PST time zone because this is pretty lame of you.
He hits live video on his camera and is literally about to take the stage in Atlanta for Chick-fil-A in front of thousands of people.
And I was eating my word.
So all I want to say is this man takes the biggest stages in the world and speaks more than anyone.
So, Ryan, so many people DM me all of the time asking, how do you get into this?
speaking, how does a speaking in career even materialized? And I know we were talking about it a little
bit off air, but can you give us that backstory on how you ended up where you are today?
Yeah, for sure. You know, I grew up in the church and my dad was a pastor. I just thought my dad did
a great job of just adding value to people's lives. And he got to, he was so involved in the community.
And I just was so mesmerized that people would come together every single Sunday and hear him talk.
And I thought, man, what an awesome way to impact somebody's life.
life and you don't use stages to beat people up. I think you use stages to encourage people and build
people up. And so I just kind of enjoyed it. And I just kind of had a knack for it and I was pretty
comfortable in front of people. And I just tried to work on my craft and just serve people and
trying to add value as best as I could. I started speaking out a bunch of churches around the country.
One day, an executive from a, what was the name of that company? They were a credit union.
They said, hey, will you come and just do like our staff development day?
And I was like, sure.
And so I did.
And I just, I'm a proponent of give your best to the opportunity that is in front of you.
Not the opportunity you want in the future.
No, the opportunity that's in front of you, you're given an opportunity to speak to 10 people,
go crush it with those 10 people.
You will never crush it with 10,000 unless you crush it with what's,
in front of you. So I just tried doing that every single week, whatever opportunity I was given.
I just tried to give my very best to it. I remember getting invited to speak at a conference in
Atlanta in the event planner say, hey, you got seven minutes. And I felt disrespected by that.
I felt like seven minutes. I'm flying all the way here just for seven minutes. Like really?
But then it was just like, no, dude, give your best to seven minutes. Crush the seven.
Like, this dude had never heard of you before. And you have to kind of own.
that. Some people, it's like you're a household name in their household, but then their neighbor
has no idea who you are. And so you've got to have, I think, a self-awareness in that. And so
I went and I just tried to grand slam that seven minutes. And when I did, he called another friend
who had me speak to 45,000 people six months later. He said, hey, I just had this guy speak.
He did something in seven minutes I've never seen before in my life. And so I always encourage
people give your best to the opportunity that's in front of you. You never know who's watching.
You never know who's in the crowd. You never know whose kid is in the crowd. You never know
whose mom is in the crowd. I just consistently try to give my best in whatever room I'm in,
it could be a boardroom, it could be an arena, it could be a church. It doesn't matter. I just try to
give my best. And it's helped me build a pretty great career. There's a great Abraham Lincoln quote
that I'm sure I'm going to botch, but it's something like this. Ask me to speak right now for
one hour. I'll take the stage. Ask me to speak for 30 minutes. I need two days. Ask me to speak for
anything under 10. I need months. It is so much more challenging to be incredibly concise and
tight versus to get up and storytell. So that's really impressive that you were able to pull that off on the
spot. I get asked to do all sorts of stuff. You know, I just, again, oh, is,
It's becoming an old adage.
Stay ready so you don't got to get ready.
And I work with a lot of athletes right before games.
And so you have a very short window of time to impact them
and give them a thought that doesn't throw them off,
but inspires them to play,
but also gives them something to chew on about their life.
And it's difficult.
But I think it's a muscle that I've just tried to work on over the years.
And I think the more you do it, the better you get at it.
What are some of the things that you say to perform?
professional athlete before they're about to take the court at an NBA game. How do you encourage them?
Or what words do you share? One of the things that I think is vitally important for a professional
athlete, it could be a coach or a player, is got to have fun. Got to have fun. Sometimes the check
is so large, the media pressure, all of these talks around the sport, what it can do is actually
suck the life out of what used to be how you get.
got started was you went to a park where kids go and you have fun. Now you're a businessman.
Now you're a businesswoman. Now it's your job. It's a career. And sometimes the person that's
paid the most has lost their passion for the sport. So what I try to do is bring them perspective
to say, hey, just so you know, did you know you get paid to play a game tonight? It's amazing.
like we can't lose sight of that.
And there's just times where I'm getting ready to speak
where I'll say that to myself like,
did you get paid to talk today?
That's insane.
It's remarkable.
Like, do you know, like,
there are people who work all year long
to get paid what I can get paid to speak one time.
It is absolutely absurd.
But I just, I always have to just step back
and just go, man, we got to enjoy what we do.
do because we can't take it for granted. We worked so hard to get where we are. But you can go
to so many conventions, so many conferences and read so many books and listen to all these different
podcasts on how to get success. There's not many resources that teach you how to enjoy it once you
get it. And so I just, I love to tell an athlete right before a game, hey, enjoy the fact that
you get paid to play a game that kids play in parks. Don't forget to have fun.
in the midst of all that is going on.
And ESPN is not real life.
Okay, like your life is here right now.
Enjoy it.
And I just try and give them a little bit of perspective in that
because I just remember even being an athlete myself.
There's so many games I had.
It was like the pressure of the world was on my shoulders.
And I look back and I go, I didn't enjoy it enough.
Okay.
I love that you just shared that you were an athlete
because that takes me into the best story
that is really the foundation of chasing failure.
which I would love your first book, Chasing Failure, How Falling Short Sets You Up for Success.
If you could get into that amazing, it's literally mind-blowing.
I still can't even believe you did it.
It's so incredible.
Yeah.
So I played college basketball at D3-ish school.
The is that it wasn't fully D-3.
Our D-3 status was pending the years that I played there.
And what we were in the NCCAA, which stands for National Christian Collegiate Athletic
Association. So I like to tell people amongst Christians, I'm really good at basketball. Church
League MVP is how I like to see myself. But I had never pursued the pros. Me and my wife, we went on
the Queen Latifah show because of a surprise wedding, which is a whole other thing. But my wife
told her friend, she thought it would be cool to get engaged and married on the same day. Had no
idea what that meant. So I guessed, planned a wedding behind her back over the course of two years.
that's a viral wedding story documentary on YouTube.
Because of that, we got to go on the Queen Latifah show.
On the Queen Latifah show, my wife and the Queen
has surprised me by getting me connected with the late great Kobe Bryant.
And Kobe comes on a video, says,
Hey, Ryan, heard about this fabulous wedding that you had for your bride
and just wanted to return the favor and invite you out to Staples Center
to come hang out with me and the Lakers.
I passed out on Queen Latifah's couch.
and I had three months to prepare to meet Kobe, and I was thinking like, man, I've never actually
like tried to really go for this professional basketball day, but I've always like,
I would go to games, and I would be like, man, he should have went left, man, he should have
went right.
Like, I always had this idea, like, I could do their job better than they could, but I'd never
actually done anything about it.
And so in getting ready to meet Kobe, I said, I'm going to get back in all-American D3
is shape, and I'm going to go for it, started playing a friend of mine who,
just got cut from the Chicago Bulls.
And he beat me every single time pretty easily.
I'm 6.3, 205 pounds.
He's 6.5, about 2.45.
So there was a pretty big gap between us.
And I was like, man, just forget this, dude.
Like, you're not going to make it in the league.
Just go meet Kobe, take a picture like a normal person, and just go home.
And I thought, man, that was pretty fast.
Like, you had a one-percenter idea, like being an NBA.
and you gave up on it in like 24 hours.
That's like giving yourself a failing grade on a test you refuse to take.
Like, how do you know you're going to fail unless you actually try?
Way too often we pre-calculate failing and this abort mission altogether.
We literally talk ourselves out of our own dreams every single day.
And so this was a day where I say, I'm going to actually talk myself into it.
And so I started asking people, you know, what would you do if you knew you couldn't fail?
And so when I answered that question, it was like, well, hey, I'd be in the NBA.
So I meet Kobe and I say, hey, I'm doing a documentary called Chasing Failure.
I'm actually going to ask a lot of people, what would you do if you knew you couldn't fail?
And I'm going to go for something that I think I'll probably fail, but there's only one way to find out.
And that's for me to try.
So I say, I'm going to be in the NBA.
And he's like, yeah, do it.
And I was just like, no, dude, that's the wrong answer.
You were supposed to tell me how hard it is.
You were supposed to tell me about 4 a.m. workouts.
You were supposed to tell me about the nutritionist.
You were supposed to tell me about the politics of it.
But no, he just stuck with the Nike slogan, just do it.
And so I did not know how to get into the NBA for people that don't understand how the NBA works.
It's the National Basketball Association.
It's not a church league.
There's a protocol.
You need to go to Duke, North Carolina, play overseas.
You need to have an agent.
You need to go to the combine.
There's a protocol.
They're not really looking for motivational speakers to join their team, the boosted morale of the squad.
Like, that's not a thing.
So I did the thing we all do when we don't know what to do.
I googled it and I found the public relations emails for every MBA team.
And I just started emailing them one by one, say, hey, you got a bunch of fans across the
city that are afraid to fail.
I don't think they should be.
I think they should embrace failure.
I think you should embrace this idea enough to let a complete stranger work out for your
basketball team.
I'll probably fail, but what if I don't?
My name's Ryan Link.
I'm 6.3, 205 pounds looking for failure.
And I had sent, it felt illegal.
I was like, Ryan, what are you doing?
This is crazy.
And then the Celtics showed me back and they're like, hey, this is a great story.
not for us. And I was like, that sucks. Man, Ryan, this idea is so bad. They won't even let you
fail at it. Like, this is terrible. Like, what are you thinking? But then I thought, did the Celtics
just email you back? Like, this is amazing. Like, I'm going to make a documentary about being told
no by all 30 MBAT. This is going to be amazed. Like, what can we learn from no? And so I always
encourage people. You want to take notes on every single rejection because there's a lesson in
there. So they weren't actually even giving me a rejection. They were actually giving me NBA
language that I didn't have before. So I started changing my pitch every single email. Fifth email goes
out to the Phoenix Suns. They're like, hey, we love this idea. Come on Monday. I was like, Monday, what?
Are you serious? They said, yeah, bring your camera crew. I was like, camera crew. Got no camera.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. You know, like, we'll be there. First thing, Monday boarded. So I called my
homie Chuck. I said, hey, man, let me hollage for a second. We ain't talking a little bit.
We need to go to Phoenix. He's like, what we're going to Phoenix for? I said, don't ask questions.
just trust me is going to be awesome.
So I got a two-day workout with the Phoenix Suns,
and I made a whole documentary about it.
And it's called chasing failure.
Spoiler alert, I fail.
And so now I get to teach people all about all of the lessons that I learned
from failing in Phoenix.
And at one point, the drills were basically like,
hey, you're going to take 20 shots.
Our guards make 18 out of 20.
That's the NBA standard.
I was making like 15 or 16 out of 10.
20. So again, I'm good, but they're great. I fit in, but that's the problem. NBA players don't
fit in. They stand out. They're outstanding. They are absolutely remarkable. So at one point,
I'm looking down at the court. I got my head down. I'm feeling shame. I'm feeling embarrassed.
Like, man, like, you're not good enough. And I look down and I see this logo and it's the Phoenix Sun's logo.
And I asked myself, Ryan, how did you get here? Because there's a lot of places you could be. And I realized
chasing failure took me further than chasing success ever did. Because it got me way out of my comfort
zone and landed me in an NBA practice court. I've done a lot of things in my life up until that point,
none of which landed me on an NBA practice court. And so now in hindsight, it's very interesting
to think, number one, NBA teams don't give workouts to motivational speakers from convincing email.
That's not how it works. But what I learned in Phoenix is sometimes they make an exception.
and you'll never know if you're in exception unless you're willing to send an email.
The second thing that I've learned in hindsight from that whole experience,
now that I get to work with about five different NBA teams is there's more than one way
to be in the NBA.
And I never, I would have never seen that or known that had I not been willing to go out
there and say, hey, let me, let me give it, let me give it a shot.
So, yeah, so that's the chasing failure story.
That's what I try to help people get past some of their own barrier.
and trying to help people get out of their own way.
And so for you, you no longer are stopped by fear.
Is that correct?
Oh, I mean, I deal with it all the time.
I just have to just, as weird as it sounds,
Glennon Doyle says it this way.
If you can't beat the fear, just do it scared.
So for me, I'm just consistently doing a lot scared.
I just sign myself up for stuff that I can't do.
And I just like, just go for it.
And if it flops, it flops.
But I just kind of have that model of just like, hey, let's just see what happens.
And you won't know unless you decide to put yourself out there and try some stuff that you've never tried before.
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Were you fearful writing the first book, Chasing Failure?
Oh my gosh. So in chasing failure, I tell a story about the first version of chasing failure. The chasing failure that's out with Thomas Nelson now, nicely buttoned up and whatnot, is the fifth version of chasing failure. So the first version, I self-publish. It was like 60 pages. It was essentially the same story. Somebody watched the documentary. It was like, hey, I don't really like documentaries. Can you write any of the book? And I was like, oh, sure. So I self-publish. So I self-publish.
published it, hit print on like a thousand and just like handed it out to my friends and people
of my church. And somebody walks up to me, they go, hey, I hate to break it to you, but there's three
typos in it. I'm like, oh, crap. So I fixed those three typos and reprint it. And then I'm
speaking at one of the largest churches in America. And a woman walks up to me, she says, hey,
there's about four typos in your book. Can I help you? I'm like, Jesus, what is wrong with you,
Ryan? You can't get, and you have no idea how many people proofread it, including me. So then we do
a third version and we're like, hey, why don't we, why don't we update it and like give it a new
look and feel? It's been like two years now with all these typos. And then somebody was like,
hey, can you add like some verses to it? Like I like it to be a little bit more spiritual. So I made a
little bit thicker one and never even put that one on Amazon. So there's like four versions out
there. My mom has every single version of chasing failure. And so I talk about typos in chasing
failure because people have this idea. I'm not going to move forward until it's perfect. And I'm just,
like, well, guess what? Then you will never move forward. It's never going to happen. So I just decided
I'm going to move forward with imperfection. So I'm reading the audiobook, doing my own audiobook for
Chase's failure, and I find two typos. And I was livid. I was livid in the studio. But then I just
thought, yeah, but in the book, I write, hey, you might find two typos. Ironically, people haven't
actually found them yet. I know where they are. But I actually haven't. It's been out for 18 months,
and no one has actually caught it yet.
And that's just me just maybe being super anal about it, whatever.
But I am consistently every single day moving towards something that intimidates me,
but it's good for me because that means I'm always learning and always moving forward.
Well, I'll tell you, that book, as you know, became a USA Today bestseller.
And I mean, to have that level of success is incredible.
It's funny.
My first book, Conference Creator, I self-publish, much like you, I just said,
okay, I'm just going to write this book having no idea what I was doing. There's three mistakes
in the book. I never thought to redo it, by the way. So kudos to you. I just left them and thought,
you know what, let my imperfections rock. I'd always rather be the person that wrote the imperfect
book than the person on her deathbed that said, oh, I never wrote that book that I had inside me,
and never got it perfect. Right. So to me, I love that you had the mistakes. And I also love that
you continue to evolve it.
And that once it got to this level,
that's when it completely took off.
But that would have never happened
had you never sat down and written that small first version.
Oh, for sure.
And, you know, it's interesting.
When we were first working on this latest version of chasing failure,
talking with the publisher, talking with the team.
And, you know, one day I'd just say,
hey, it'd be great if I hit New York Times.
Like, let's just go for it.
And then here's what's interesting.
everybody started working harder.
I'm like, where was this at before?
Like, where are you, now I get you A game?
Now that I've set our goals a little bit higher and I started working harder.
So that was for everybody.
Well, we sold, within the first two weeks, I think we sold like 13 or 14,000, which is incredible.
Which is enough to hit New York Times.
In fact, like you can, first of all, this is all public information.
you can see how many units every book on the New York Times, like, you can see it.
So I should have been number three, week one, and number six, week two.
But you can literally see the numbers.
So when a book comes out, it comes out, and then you have to wait a whole week before all of the numbers come in.
And so that whole week was just so nerve-wrecked because you're like, yo, like, we are
we're going for New York Times, we have enough to hit New York Times, but it's like, are you a big
enough name? Are you, you know, there's a whole bunch of unknown boxes that you have to check.
And so when I get the email, it says, hey, you did not hit New York Times, but you hit USA Today.
And, oh, we're talking with the Wall Street Journal. We don't know why you weren't on their list because you obviously
sold enough.
I mean, and we put like a six-figure marketing plan together.
That worked.
Like, we did everything in our power to get the dub, and we lost.
And it's just like, oh, poor you, you landed on USA.
I was going to say, and Ryan, how many people have come to you after reading your book
to tell you their story of how they broke through fear and failure because of chasing failure?
Oh, thousands.
thousands of people. I mean, people, I got people out there trying all types of stuff.
Even stuff that even I'm like, hey, man, I think you might have took the book a little too
literally. I don't know. I don't know about that one, buddy. Yeah, did that one? I didn't say
get a second mortgage, okay? I said, explore it. Okay. I said send them an email. I, like,
you took it a little too far, but people are so resilient. People are so brave. I'm impressed
with the emails that I get from people every single day.
There are people that have just pitched movies, business proposals, book proposals,
that have started podcasts and YouTube channels, all because they just did it scared.
And I just, I'm so impressed with what they've done way more than what I did to play a part
in that.
But like, there's a lot of brave people out there.
And there's nothing more rewarding than that.
I'll never forget interviewing Sarah Blakely from Spinks.
And she explained her father every day when they would sit down for dinner, would say,
share your failures.
Tell me your failures for the day.
And her family celebrated failures so much so.
It was ingrained in her that this idea of trying something new that she knew nothing about,
it was very normal for her.
Of course I'm going to do this.
Unlike 99% of us who had been, you know, basically the messaging of you've got to be able to win.
and don't do it. You'll look bad. You're going to be judged. You're going to feel, you know,
a shame. And cut to, you know, this woman becomes a billionaire by stepping into failure on the regular,
which is entirely your message. It's incredible for me to see how many of us, the majority,
are held back by failure. And I think a lot of people aren't just held back by failure.
The fear of it. They predict, like they're predicting, all right, according to my assessment,
will fail, therefore I won't even try. That's where I try to help people go, hey, you can't
sell a book that you don't write. You can't get people to listen to a podcast you won't record.
Even this morning, it was like, hey, are you going to do a book tour? I'm like, well, what if I go to a
Barnes & Noble in New York and nobody shows up for this book sign? I'm like, man, I'm just sitting
in Barnes & I myself. It's just like, no, like, you got to put yourself out there. I mean, you got to have
plan too, but yeah, I think the difference between people who are successful and people who
don't get all that they want from their life is that successful people were willing to go sit
in the bookstore and be by themselves. They were willing to try the thing and fail, whereas
most people would rather just acquiesce to the status quo and settle for mediocrity.
I'll tell you, I settled for my version of mediocrity being in corporate America for, you know,
14 years and saying I have golden handcuffs. I've got to stay, you know, because this was my excuse,
right, but it was because I was afraid of what else, what else could be out there beyond what I saw
in front of me and what I knew to be what I thought a truth. And it was funny. I was on a call
yesterday with this very successful gentleman and in his business, quote unquote, corporate world,
right, which again, golden handcuffs. And I get the whole thing. I understand at the end of the call.
says one more thing I wanted to bring up to you.
I've been dreaming about launching a podcast for five years.
I've actually recorded episodes.
I have a whole list of the people that I'm going to interview when I actually launch it.
I have, and he tells me this whole business plan.
It was incredible.
And his face was lit up.
Nothing like the last 20 minutes when we had been on the call.
He was a different person.
And at the end of the call, I said, I really don't care about anything.
set on this entire call other than the podcast. I'm holding you a Canvaal to launch this thing.
I will get you the right people. I will plug and play. You have got to launch this.
You've got to pull a trigger because otherwise you're going to let that dream die.
I mean, isn't that the real reason? Oh, absolutely. I think people, I think people overcomplicated.
I really do. I think people really overcomplicate their dreams. And there is this mentality
championship or bust.
It's got to be
the number one podcast
in the world, or
it's failure. It's
an Academy Award or bust.
It's Grammys or bust.
Like it's...
So I think people feel like they have to be the best
in whatever industry
they're in. I'm like, no, dude, just give your best.
Like there's millions of podcasts
out there. Just be good at the one you got
and do your best with what you've been given.
But I think that there is this intimidation factor of like,
you know, I was talking to a friend two days ago.
He said, man, I just feel like the things that I have to say have already been said.
I'm like, yeah.
But the other person that said it doesn't have the people following them
that are following you.
So say it in your way and help the people that are listening to you.
Like there can be this, well, so-and-so is already doing it.
And I already follow this person who's already,
it's just like, yeah, but the world doesn't follow them.
Just because they have a million followers,
it was like, oh, man, that's the whole world.
No one, that's actually a very small portion of the world.
Like, there's, what I've learned in business is the pie is incredibly large.
It is the biggest pie that we, and we just feel like, man,
if they already own the pie, so there's not enough.
It's like, nah, you can eat and I can eat, which is why I'm like, like, I love plugging
you with different clients in my.
I love plugging our friend, Jordan Montgomery.
I love plugging different friends of mine that I think are good speakers, and they're just
like, well, you're plugging somebody else?
I'm like, guys, you know how many events there are in the world every single day?
You know, well, one, I'm one person.
I can maybe do 100, 120, maybe, and that's pushing it.
It's like, what are we afraid of?
Like, I think we feel like, well, I can't say this and I don't want, like, I heard
this other person.
It's just like, no, like leverage your perspective, leverage what you've got to say,
bring it to the table and there's enough pie at the table, I think, for all of us to eat.
I love that.
And I heard this analogy the other day that resonated with me, you know, when we open
up the door for abundance and we, you know, offer abundance to others like, like you do so generously
and connections and whatnot. That is the normal way of being and it allows abundance to flow back to you,
much like the same way you would with your health. You wouldn't say, oh, I'm working out a lot,
taking care of myself. I should probably stop for a while. Maybe somebody else needs this health
out in the world and hopefully it will find them. I'll be sick for a year or two, right? No, we say,
I'm going to show up as the best version of me every day. I'm going to give it my all. Hopefully I inspire other
people to do the same. There is no, you know, finite group of people that can be healthy or
can't be or can't be or can be. We have just bought into this scarcity mindset from media,
from the messaging that we're receiving out there that really has so many people stuck.
And that's where your books and work resonate so incredibly well. One of the things I wanted to
ask you, because I've never done this, I've never preached in a church, I've never done some of the
spiritual work. You haven't? I have not. No. No, I never. Okay. We're going to have to change that. I got you.
I got you. I would be so honored. Oh my God. But so I've never done that. It's interesting to me. I've always
spoken at events, corporations and business, because that's my past, right? That's what I feel comfortable doing, right?
So it's interesting to me, in my mind, I try to reason. How can you communicate the same message? Like you said,
that first time someone said to you in business, they saw you in a church and then they said,
hey, can you take out the verses and still be as effective? And you're like, yeah, I'll,
figure that out. To me, it's so interesting to think, how can you communicate effectively and
profoundly in a church as well as in a business, as well as with youth, right, versus not just adults?
You're crossing so many sections of people and locations and diversity. How are you able to do that
effectively? Great question. The way I see communication is it is a speaker's job. It is a communicator's
job to solve the audience's problems. So if you can understand a business's problems,
if you can understand a churchgoers problem, if you can understand a student's problem,
I think you can be an effective communicator. And so what I started realizing, the more I started doing
business coaching versus pastoral counseling is people in the church as well as people that work
at a Fortune 500 company often have the same problem. They often have the same hurdles.
People in church and people in business have mental health issues. People in church,
people in business, they get divorced all the time. I mean, the divorce rate in the church is the same
as the divorce rate. In fact, there are people that are in business that go to church. And so I
just started seeing the world sort of blending a little bit of just going, hey, wherever you
are, there are people that are hurting. Help them. Encourage them. Make them smile today.
Help them have a good day. Give them something to think about. Help them overcome their biggest
hurdle. What I also learned from the church that I bring to business is business is so
numbers driven, more than people driven?
So when I walk in a room and I say, hey, how are you?
I was like, good.
I'm like, no, but for real.
Like, how are you like, how are you like, how are you doing?
People are like, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute.
Is there somebody here that cares?
I'm like, yeah.
And like that, giving people that space in a business setting to tell somebody else,
like how they're actually doing.
It's like revolutionary for some people.
They're just like, no one has actually asked me how I'm actually doing.
And I'm drowning.
I'm about to quit.
I'm about to, hey, don't quit, man.
Hold on.
Wait a second.
And it's the first time they've been able to actually talk about it.
Because it's go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, deliver results, deliver results.
And families falling apart, marriage falling apart, many things in their life that are just plaguing them.
And so I just started talking about those things in the workplace.
And I started asking questions.
I started saying things like, hey, here's, we all get 6,000 thoughts per day on average,
6,000 thoughts.
Some people get 60,000, those are overthinkers.
They, whoever they is, I don't know if it's a scientist, whoever I just read about it,
says 80% of our thoughts are negative.
80%.
It's 4,800 to 48,000 negative thoughts every single day.
95% are repetitive, which means you and I have the same negative Spotify playlist going on in our
brain every single day. So the question that I would ask in the church is going, how are you supposed
to grow in your relationship with God with that much thinking thinking? The question I would ask in
business is, how are you supposed to grow a business with that much stinking thinking?
How are you supposed to be a good leader with that much negative thinking? How are you supposed to be a good
parent? How are you supposed to be married? How are you supposed to have a thriving romantic relationship?
How are you supposed to be a good parent? How are you supposed to lead a team? How are you supposed to come up with creative ideas with that much stinking thinking? So I think that's how I sort of bridge the gap between the two of just saying, hey, whether I'm at a church in elementary school, a nonprofit, entrepreneurs, athletes, hey, everyone wants to thrive in their life in some way, shape, or form. There's just no way that you're going to do that.
with that much stinking thinking. So, hey, let's be intentional about our thoughts. And then that's where
I kind of, I kind of help people. So that's kind of how I, I kind of see different audiences and how I
kind of stay comfortable with it, because I could share that illustration literally in any room
in the world. Because everyone would go, man, if I'm going to be that negative, there's no way I'm
going to accomplish my goals. You're right. So, hey, let me give you some positive affirmation.
Let me give you some positive thoughts that you can take with you to help you achieve your goals.
Let me give you some positive thoughts that can help you grow in your relationship with God.
Let me give you some positive thoughts that can help you grow in your marriage.
So I can be speaking at a marriage conference.
I could be speaking at a leadership conference.
I could be speaking to a marketing team.
But no one is going anywhere with negative things.
So I just try and big stuff like that.
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You know what you did differently than I was looking at it as what is so different about each of these buckets.
You were looking at it as what is similar across all of them.
And I think that's, you know, that's a great perception shift for anybody.
Instead of focusing so much on what's different and why it can't work, let's start focusing
on what is similar and what can work. So I love that you did that. Now you've got a new book coming
out, leveling up 12 questions to elevate your professional and personal growth. Give us some insight
into what we're going to get there. So during a pandemic, I started an executive coaching practice
because I was home a lot and had a whole lot more time than I had thought. And so a lot of clients
that I speak for would say, hey, you know, would you coach me? Would you, you know, so I kind of fell
into executive coaching. Like, it was just, it just, it just kind of happened. And naturally, as I started
having these different sessions, I was learning just as much as they were like learning from,
for me. And I was, I was learning more about some of their nuances and some of the things that they
were navigating. And everyone, obviously got sent home. And so work life balance became like,
obvious because, like, right now, like, you're in my home. There is something about that.
It's like, okay, you can see my family on the wall.
Like, you're like, you're in my home office.
And so if one of my children bused through the door right now, it'd be like, oh, like,
and obviously that's happened for a lot of us.
I was on Zoom the other day and some lady had two cats in the background,
full on boxing.
I was like, ma'am, do you see what's happening in the background?
Like, that would never happen five years ago.
But it's like, now I know something about her that I didn't know before.
And that's actually kind of interesting.
And so it's like, I would have never thought, oh, what this woman had to deal with this morning was her cats are fighting.
Except for some people, it's their kids are fighting.
For some people, it's, we're actually not even on speaking terms anymore.
And those things became very, very real.
And so from those sessions, I started to realize people were really struggling with burnout.
People were really struggling with like just kind of been a lull, really stuck, coasting.
people were kind of having a life that they tolerate,
but they didn't really feel like they had permission
to really thrive in their life.
And so I started, the way I do executive coaching is,
I don't like to tell you what to do.
I like to ask you questions.
I like to get you thinking.
And so as different questions began to formulate,
I came up with 12 questions that I think are essential
for a person that really lead themselves.
If I equip you with the right question,
you don't need me in the room.
Because you're asking the right questions
without anybody in the room. And sometimes when people are in the room, it's good to ask them that
question too. And so, for example, one of the questions in the book is, what's it like to be on
the other side of me? What's it like to be on the other side of me? I think every single person
should be answering that question. Hey, what's it like to be on a date with me? Hey, what's it like
to be married to me? What's it like to be on the other side of an interview for me? What's it like to
to be travel with me? What's it like to be at a Thanksgiving table with me? What's it like to be stuck
in a group chat with me?
is it like to get an email for me? What's it like to get a reply all for me? What's it like?
Like, I don't think people really think about what it's like to be on the other side of them.
And so we can all think of somebody in our life or our business that isn't self-aware.
Like, that definitely aren't asking that question. But at some point, I think we all have to be
considerate that. Because sometimes I say, hey, you know, have you thought about what it's like
to be on the other side of you? They're like, yeah, it's awesome. Yeah, it's amazing to
be on the other side of me. To be married to me, are you kidding? They're lucky. They, they struck gold,
you know? And I'm just like, are you sure it's as awesome as you think it is? Because it may not
be. And so I think each of us should enter into every room going, man, it might be harder than I think
it is to work for me. Like, I think, like, right now, I think, if somebody works for Ryan League,
it's awesome. Like, of course it's awesome. It's like, Ryan, are you sure it's awesome? Like,
it's like you're driving a school bus going 120 miles an hour. People are in the back scared.
You're like, ooh, isn't this fun? It's just like not for everybody else in the back that doesn't get to wear seatbelts, you know?
And so I consistently have to think about that even for my family and the people that I work with and live with and just think, man, what's it like to be on the other side of me?
What's it like to be led by me? What's it like to have me on the team? What's it? You know, and it's one of my friends,
friends, he told me, because I asked, because I think it's important that you ask yourself this,
because I think it's a nice self-awareness question. It helps when you verify it with someone else to go,
hey, what is it like to be on the other side of me? And he said to me something the other day
that I just thought was show so on point. And he told the story. He said, you know,
sometimes I think about if I ever meet Matt Damon, my biggest fear is that my life would not
be interesting enough for him to pay attention. That's what he said. He goes, and I wonder
if you have that effect on people. He said, because you, you do cool stuff. You meet cool people. You
always have a story. You always have a travel story. You've always met someone. He goes, so sometimes
people will come up to you and share a story. And I wonder if they have somewhat of a meter of going,
how interested is he in my story, given that it's not on the level of his? He's like, so if I were you,
I would just be mindful of what it's like
to be on the other side of you.
So when someone comes up to me after an event,
like I just shared some stories about Kobe Bryant
and the Lakers and NBA team,
sometimes people will walk up to me
and they don't want to tell me their story
about how they scored a touchdown in seventh grade.
And for me, because he told me that,
I have to put myself on the field with them in seventh grade
and be on the edge of my seat.
So did you score?
Okay, wait, did you?
Now, did you jump over the guy? Or did you, like, because now it's like, it's no longer about me.
And I don't want them to feel like this like, well, I guess I got to be an NBA superstar to keep Ryan's attention.
It's like, no, no, no, like, whoever you are, like, I'm, I'm right here. I'm locked in.
It's like, so again, I think that's the power of asking a very simple question.
What's it like to be on the other side of me? So I call them 12 loaded questions in this book.
and it helps a person really lead themselves.
I think you should be asking yourselves the right question.
Obviously, I can talk about every question all day long,
but that's chapter two right away.
It's so powerful because no matter how self-aware somebody is,
we all have moments where we lose it.
I was at a wedding last weekend with a bunch of friends,
and everyone was just, you know, taking the selfies,
and we noticed that the groom had a setup
where he wanted you taking Polaroids and leaving them with notes.
We noticed this.
hour after we got there, Ryan. I mean, it was one of those moments where you're like,
okay, guys, we need self-awareness right now. Let's dial it down. So I so appreciate your questions.
And this time, you didn't stop with just creating a book. You're also launching a course alongside
of it. What does that look like? So it's a self-leadership course. It's taking people through
six areas. I think that they can master to level up in their life. Like I said, I think a lot of people
settle for a life that they tolerate. Most of their life is, I have to. This course is designed to help
you move into a place where you get to. And so one of the things we outline in the course is that
there are six levels to live in. The lowest level is aimless. Level six is mastery. Mastery is where
you are in a position where you are doing so well that things aren't perfect, but you're doing
well enough that you're actually investing in other people and teaching them how to do it as well.
That's the goal of the course is to get you in a position where you're at minimum thriving of going
like, man, you know what? I am not just on autopilot. My life is not on cruise control. We are going
somewhere. It doesn't mean we're going there fast, but it does mean that we are very, very
intentional about our relationships and about our goals. And for those that like really are like,
No, I feel like I want to live exponentially.
Well, then the last module in this course is all about how to master that
and how to essentially make an impact on other people.
Yesterday, one of my friends and I were talking, he goes,
so what's your goal with all this speaking stuff?
I said, well, my goal is actually to build other speakers.
That's what I want to do.
Like, at the end of my life, I want to be able to look at hundreds of speakers that I've said,
hey, I've helped you figure out ways to communicate your story and help people solve their problems.
And now they've built up whole speaking businesses and whole empires and books and podcasts and courses
and being able to pull content out of people and help them package it in a way that actually helps other people.
It's like for me, that's exponential living.
That's ripple effect living.
It's not just about how many courses can I create in my lifetime.
How many books can I write in my lifetime?
how many companies can I speak for around the world?
No, those things are going to happen naturally based off of the trajectory of my life.
But for me, I'm measuring that exponential growth of going, man, how can I invest into some other
people and help them grow their businesses and see things take off of them?
Oh, purpose, passion, legacy, joy.
You just nailed all of it.
I couldn't agree more.
Ryan, tell us where can we get the book leveling up and where can we get the course?
RyanLeak.com. You get everything. Anything Ryan League is at Ryanleak.com. I'm on all social
platforms. Ryanleek.com is where you can see some motivational keynotes, some previews.
You can see book stuff, core stuff. Everything's going to be at Ryanleek.com.
All right. I will link that in the show notes below and check out the elevation youth keynote.
It is incredible. Gave me chills. Ryan, thank you.
you so much for the amazing work you're doing. I appreciate it. All right, guys, until
next week, keep creating your confidence.
