Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - Unlocking the Secret to High Achievement: Moving Beyond Mediocrity
Episode Date: October 22, 2023Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyReady to break free from the shackles of mediocrity and reach ...for the heights of success?Get set to unlock the secret to high achievement as we guide you, step by step, through the critical stages of personal and professional development.** Connect **▸ Website: https://www.findingpeak.com▸ Instagram: https://instagram.com/ryan_hanley▸ Subscribe to the Podcast: https://www.findingpeak.com/podcast*** More About the Episode ***We explore why so many people get trapped in the second stage - specializing in their strengths and becoming known for one thing.Uncover why this can limit your growth and how stepping outside your comfort zone can catapult you to the third stage - absolute excellence in your chosen field.Drawing insights from six mind-opening books, including:Bo Easen's No Plan B for Your A Game - https://amzn.to/402AlulDarren Hardy's The Compound Effect - https://amzn.to/3s4RXJlDr Benjamin Hardy's 10x is Easier than 2x - https://amzn.to/3FqwAFlMiyamoto Musashi's The Book of the 5 Rings - https://amzn.to/46Wag2bBrendan Burchard's High Performance Habits - https://amzn.to/470rmMwGary Keller's The ONE Thing - https://amzn.to/3QqWMWEWe delve into the power of focus, determination, and doing whatever it takes to win.You'll discover how to make a real declaration and take proactive action, and why it's critical to concentrate on that five percent activity that can bring 95% of results.It's not about doing things right – it's about doing the right things. Let's embark on this enlightening journey to true success together - your thoughts and questions are always welcome in the comments.--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZThis show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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everyone and a happy holiday crude laboratory in the basement of his home
well everyone and welcome back to another episode of the monday mindset today we're going to talk about
the three stages of high achievement and why most people get caught on phase two. Now, the three
phases of high achievement, pretty straightforward. First, we focus on our weaknesses. So we look at the
things that we don't do well, the things that hold us back. We may not be a great communicator. We may
feel introverted or shy. We may talk too fast. We may be too aggressive.
We may not be great at sales or communication.
Whatever our weaknesses are, we focus on our weaknesses.
And that will draw our achievement up and give us some good initial gains,
especially if we're able to either work around those weaknesses or actually work on those things and make them better.
That's phase one.
And most people, early in their career, start to realize what their weaknesses are and address them.
They might go to do trainings.
They might read books.
they might find a mentor who helps them understand what their weaknesses are specifically
and begin to address those weaknesses and work on making them at least moderately successful
aspects of their personality and of their work product.
The second phase is our strengths, doubling into our strengths, thinking about the things
that we're really good in and becoming specialists or focusing on those areas.
So you might be an incredible communicator on stage in front of a group, whether it's the not-for-profit
that you're working for or your corporation or if you are great at speaking to the board or being
in front of a camera, et cetera, right? That communication skill, you double into it, you find the best
in the business, you pay up for coaching, you go to seminars, workshops, you practice at home,
and you become incredibly good at that strength.
And that accelerates you beyond most of the pack
and gets you accolades.
You might get awards.
You might become the top salesperson in your region
or nationally, et cetera.
Your business, if you're an entrepreneur,
may take off and start to get articles written about you
in the paper or in a trade publication
and success starts to gravitate towards you.
It is the second stage of high achievement.
And unfortunately, this is where most people get caught.
Most people get caught between stage two and stage three.
And the reason is they start to feel those early wins.
They start to feel that success.
They start to feel like they've made it.
They start to get known for being a thing.
You're a great communicator.
You're a great visionary.
you're an empathetic leader, you're incredibly creative, you're a problem solver, and you get labeled
as a thing, and because you're labeled as that thing, it becomes your identity, and it becomes
very difficult to break free of that. In fact, most people don't want to break free of it,
because the next stage of high achievement is the scariest stage. That first stage, focusing on your
weaknesses, everyone has to do that to survive in culture, right? So to continue in business,
to see any kind of progress, you have to address those really poor aspects and bring those
really poor aspects of your product in whatever. It's a hobby, a sport, your work, et cetera.
Maybe it's your communication with your spouse. You've got to work on those weaknesses.
If you're really terrible at something, solving those really terrible things and bringing them up
is phase one. Phase two is understanding what you're great at and becoming even
better, a defining individual for that characteristic in whatever field, activity, hobby,
etc. that you work in. But because at phase two, you start to get labeled, you start to get
known for being a thing and may even reach barely high levels of achievement for being that
specialist, the next step is so difficult. And this is the stage where you do whatever,
needs to get done to win. And I want to talk through this final stage using six books that I've
actually read in the last six weeks. I'm pretty crazy with the way that I read. And I read about a book
a week at least. I just enjoy it. And for that reason, I want to work through these six books
as I prove through this point of why when we get to get to get to
the next level to become the absolute best, to create a gap between you and everyone else,
to build that moat around yourself, around your personal brand, around your business brand,
around your product, your company, around your marriage, around your relationship with
your kids, around the community group that you're part of, around your relationship with
a group of boys or girls that you coach in a sport or a club or whatever, to do that,
to become the absolute best,
there is a whole other stage of high achievement
and has nothing to do with strengths and weaknesses
and everything to do with figuring out and focusing on
exactly what needs to get done.
That one thing, and it's really defined in the first book
that I want to discuss, the one thing by Gary Keller.
I'm going to have all these books linked up in the show notes,
whether you're watching on YouTube or you're listening
on the podcast.
This book, the one thing,
absolutely incredible book.
You can go through it pretty quick.
I have it all diced up with tons of marks
and folds and stuff.
I brutalize my books.
But this book clearly outlines
exactly why stage three is so tough
because you have to break through those labels.
You have to start to do different things
that you've never done before.
It's not about just solving your weaknesses
and focusing on your strengths.
It's about doing whatever needs to get done and becoming incredibly good and incredibly focused at,
whatever the skills are that are necessary to be the best in that thing.
You know, Gary writes right here, a new answer usually requires a new behavior.
We have to think big and be specific.
If we look, there's a great quote later in the book from Peter Drucker.
Efficiency is doing the thing right.
effectiveness is doing the right thing.
And it's that idea of what's the right thing.
I might be an incredible communicator, but to be the best for my business,
to go even further for my business, what I really need is a detailed or a detail oriented,
neurotic, you know, type A individual who, if this were, say, EOS or traction, would be like
that integrator.
So my visionary communicator style that I have as,
leader, which is really my personal style and where my individual skill set lies, right?
For me, I might be a great fit to get to phase two, but for a particular situation,
I may need to bring in an integrator or I may have to dedicate myself to learning integrator style
skills in order to take my business or my brand or my product, et cetera, to a whole other level.
Now, sometimes what this means is bringing someone in to help you and having the mental fortitude,
the foresight, and the humility to know that while you may have gotten your business to stage two of
high achievement, right, to that second level, but only through a partnership or bringing someone
else in or a mentor who understands how to tweak your specific skill set to fit and match
exactly what needs to get done can you get there.
Right? So remember, efficiency is doing the thing right.
Effectiveness is doing the right thing.
That's Peter Drucker, but you can find it in this tremendous book,
The One Thing.
The next book that I read after that one was actually the Five Rings,
The Book of Five Rings by Miyamoto Musashi,
one of the greatest samurai that ever lived.
And in here I have,
it does not matter who is stronger or who is fast.
what matters is that you attain your goal.
And what Musashi is talking about, at least from my perspective, when he writes this,
is that we get caught up in the individual characteristics which might make someone special.
And we forget about none of that actually matters if, now in his case, since he was fighting to the death,
I think 66 confirmed kills for Miyamoto, Musashi in combat.
for him in the game that he played, all that mattered was did you kill your opponent and did
you survive? If you were slower, if you were weaker, if your weapons weren't as good,
none of that actually mattered if you had the ability to maneuver yourself in a way to
attain the goal. And again, a big part of reaching stage three of high achievement and success
is dropping the ego. Not caring or not caring or
or being able to abide the fact that whatever the labels are
that were applied to you in stage two,
when you're focusing on your strengths and being a specialist,
those labels that were applied to you,
being able to toss those away or understand
that as you transition into this even higher level of achievement,
some of those labels, people are gonna question you for making that, right?
Some of those labels may not fit anymore.
People may look at you and go, man,
I always thought you were this tremendous communicator,
and I haven't heard from you in a year.
I haven't heard from you in two years
because you were behind the scenes
becoming a problem solver
because that's what was required of you to get there,
to get to the goal.
Tremendous book, The Book of Five Rings,
another quick read.
Really, really highly recommend that one.
The next idea that, again,
just building on this concept
is from one of the best books
that I've read in 2023.
10x is easier than 2x by Benjamin Hardy.
In here, Hardy writes,
You have higher ambitions with greater and deeper scope
requiring more and better of your attention.
To make something 10x better involves deep, deep work.
Innovation occurs as you break everything down
and put it back together in a simpler, easier, and better form.
And why, again, this continues to build on this idea
that it's not going to be a focus on improving our weaknesses.
It's not going to be doubling into our strengths.
It's going to be tearing down what got us here
that's kept us plateaued at stage two
and rebuilding to get to stage three
in a way that is not just efficient but effective, right?
Not just doing the thing right,
but doing the right things in a simpler, easier, better form, right?
Focusing on what needs to get done,
not what we want to get done.
That is a very tough delineation.
It seems nuanced than it is,
and it maybe even seems a little like semantics,
but it's not, right?
It is a clearly defined idea
that what needs to get done
for you to get to stage three
and what you want to actually do
will oftentimes not be the same thing
and it takes an enormous amount of humility,
personal strength,
and intestinal fortitude
to push through,
to stage three to get those things done, to do what needs to get done. Another incredible book,
10x is either in 2x. Moving on to the fourth book that I wanted to share with you here,
just kind of building on all these concepts. And there's, there's so many narratives that you
could weave through all these different books. These books are phenomenal. I highly recommend them.
The next book is High Performance Habits by Brandon Bruchard. And in here, he writes,
being on your A game means that you are giving your best effort with full focus on a singular task at hand.
Ask yourself who or what needs my A game today right now in this moment.
What do I need to do?
What do I need to do to get to that next level?
Now what do I want to do?
Now what do I feel like doing?
not what would be easy for me to do,
but what do I need to do?
Who needs my A game right now?
That focus on what needs to get done,
regardless if it's a strength or weakness,
by focusing on that thing,
making it a priority because that thing,
more than anything else,
is going to be what takes us to that next level.
Whatever that thing is for your business,
and it's going to be different
for every individual, for every business,
for every community organization,
for every team, for every relationship.
It's going to be different figuring it out, focusing on it,
and doing whatever needs to get done to make that thing a priority
and to execute that.
That is how you reach stage three of high achievement.
That's how you reach that next level of success
beyond just focusing on our strengths.
That stage two, we're so many plateau at.
Our fifth book and second to last book
is another one of my absolute favorites from 2023
that I read. I think he wrote this earlier, but the, you know, books that I read in
23, there's no plan B for your A game by Bo Eason.
This book was phenomenal. I have this book just terrorized. But in here, he said,
if you've made a real declaration, then this, that this thing is going to happen, come
hell or high water. What's up, guys? Sorry to take you away from the episode, but as you know,
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Unless you proactively decide that you're going to pursue mediocrity instead.
People do that all the time.
They don't consciously declare that they're going to be mediocre,
but that's what they do.
They settle for the scraps.
And that line that's,
settle for the scraps line just like punched me right in the face because I don't want to settle
for the scraps. That whole concept or idea of settling for someone else's scraps sounds
horrible to me. Like it is the antithesis of everything that I feel in my soul every single day
is the idea of settling for the scraps. And basically what Bo is outlining in here and the concept
behind this book is that we have to operate as if we are the best every,
day in order to become the best. And there's more, there's a ton more to it. I don't want to underplay
the idea. But this, this concept of declaring how we get to that stage three of high achievement,
that third stage, what needs to be done and then taking proactive action, as he says,
come hell or high water, is the only way to get there, which means that you, you may not
know what the path is. You may have to go hire somebody to help you find the path. You may have to
drop your veil of strength and confidence for a minute and ask for help. You may have to bring in
somebody who has a skill set that complements your own. You may have to go out and learn a whole new
skill together. You may have to get a mentor or a coach or pay up for an executive assistant to free up
your time. There are so many things that we don't want to do or we procrastinate on because
we feel scared, nervous, anxious, etc. But at the same time, what we're, the decision that we're
making when we choose to not take action or operate in stage three of high achievement is that
we're settling for the scraps. And if that concept of selling for scraps doesn't like just make
your skin crawl, then maybe stage three of high achievement is not for you. That could be the case.
For me, if someone ever referred to me as settling for scraps, I would want to run head first into a wall.
That would mean that I was failing in my life.
And I think that if you plateau or settle or stop in phase one of achievement, right, just fixing our weaknesses, or even phase two of achievement, of just focusing on our strengths, ultimately, your success is being dictated to you by those who've pushed past.
both phase one in phase two or stage one and stage two and got into stage three where they do
whatever needs to get done to make the thing happen. There's another great quote in here later in
the book from Bo. Another thing to keep in mind is that after a certain number of hours of deliberate
practice focused practice, you reach a place where at Andrews Erickson who wrote the book
Deliberate Practice calls the point of no return. And you know, this this is this this this
This is where, and this is what Erickson defines, is that when you commit to the journey of going
from stage two to stage three and you execute that plan through deliberate practice, focused
on the thing that you know is going to, you know, that 20% activity that's going to give
you 80% of results or that 5% activity that's going to give you 95% results, whatever it is
for you, you eventually hit a point where no one can catch up to you, where you've become
so good, so strong, so competent, right?
Your moat is so deep and so wide
that no one can catch up to you.
And that, my friends,
is when you're no longer settling for the scraps.
That is when you are dictating downstream.
When everyone else is just trying to operate around
what you decide not to take,
that is stage three of high achievement.
And I'm going to leave you with this quote
to finish off this week.
Monday Mindset. I hope you enjoy this. If you've enjoyed this video so far, if you've enjoyed
this podcast, if you're listening in the audio and you're not subscribed, I'd love for you
describe either on YouTube or wherever you listen to podcasts, comment. If you're on the YouTube
channel, send me a comment. Which one of these quotes do you love the best? Have you read these
books? Do you enjoy these books? Leave me a comment. If there are there books that you think
complement this series of books that I haven't listed here that other people should read,
would love to hear from you guys. And like I said, if you're not, subscribe,
on YouTube or if you're listening to this on the audio version of the podcast, please do.
That's how you get all this great content delivered to you directly, right through whatever app you
choose.
The last book, and this one's been around for a while, but it's one of the best.
The compound effect by Darren Hardy.
Darren Hardy, tremendous thought leader.
Darren Hardy, and I'm finishing with this one for a reason, the biggest difference
between successful people and unsuccessful people is that successful people are willing to do
what unsuccessful people are not.
My friends, this is the thing.
Are you willing to do what needs to get done?
Or are you going to settle for small improvements in your weaknesses
or maybe even pressing into your strengths a little bit?
Right?
Like, are you going to settle for the scraps, the runoffs?
Or are you going to do the things that need to get done to be successful?
It's a binary choice.
You're either making the effort to be the best.
You're focusing on your one thing, right?
That 5% activity that gets you 95% of the results, or you're not.
And if you're not, then you have to be okay having your success to some degree being dictated to you.
And if you've stayed through this video, listen to this podcast for this long,
then I do not think you are that person.
If you have questions, if you have thoughts,
if you have things that you don't understand about this concept,
leave them in the questions.
You can also DM me on whatever social platform you want.
Guys, I love you for listening, for watching.
I'm out of here.
Peace.
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