Leap Academy with Ilana Golan - From Childhood Trauma to Building High-Performance Leaders | Mick Hunt | E141
Episode Date: January 20, 2026At just 10 years old, Mick Hunt made a promise that would shape the rest of his life. Growing up in a home marked by abuse, Mick stepped into a role no child should ever have to carry. He became the p...rotector, the emotional anchor, and the one who believed he could change his family’s future. That moment didn’t just force him to grow up fast. It forged a lifelong mission around leadership, accountability, and purpose. In this episode, Mick joins Ilana to share the raw story behind that promise, how it shaped his drive to build businesses and high-performing teams, and why leadership starts with something deeper than your “why.” Mick Hunt is a leadership coach, entrepreneur, and speaker known for helping ambitious individuals unlock their full potential. He works with leaders who want to grow their influence, scale their thinking, and build companies and teams that people genuinely believe in and follow. In this episode, Ilana and Mick will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (02:14) How a Traumatic Childhood Built Mick’s Drive (08:48) The Childhood Promise That Defined His Life (10:26) Entrepreneurial Beginnings and Challenges (16:36) His Passion for Building High-Performing Teams (17:14) Why Your ‘Because’ Beats Your ‘Why’ (21:50) The “What If I Fail” Mindset (27:46) Understanding The MICK Factor (30:42) Mick’s Book: How to Be a Good Leader (36:09) The Future of Leadership and Staying Relevant (38:53) The Value of Mentorship (42:28) Daily Practices for Success Mick Hunt is a USA Today bestselling author, international speaker, and leadership expert known for his impact in modern leadership and emotional intelligence. He is the host of the highly rated Mick Unplugged podcast and the author of How to Be a Good Leader When You’ve Never Had One, a modern leadership guide with hands-on insights and actionable frameworks to help you lead with transparency, resilience, and influence. Connect with Mick: Mick’s Website: https://mickhuntofficial.com/ Mick’s LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/mickhunt Resources Mentioned: Mick’s Book, How to Be a Good Leader When You've Never had One: The Blueprint for Modern Leadership: http://amazon.com/Good-Leader-When-Youve-Never/dp/1394357958 Mick’s Podcast, Mick Unplugged: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/mick-unplugged/id1731755953 Leap Academy: LeapCon is the #1 Conference for Reinvention, Leadership & Career — a powerful 3‑day experience designed to help you unlock what’s next in your career and life. 📍 San Jose, CA 📅 Feb 26–28, 2025 If you’re ready to step into clarity, confidence, and bold action, this is your moment. 👉 Grab your ticket before doors close at leapacademy.com/leapcon
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At 10, I made my mom a promise I was going to change her life, that she would smile one day and not feel ashamed to smile.
I made myself into the person that I needed to be to fulfill the promises that I made.
Mick Hunt, he has the voice behind one of the most popular podcasts on leadership, self-approved, which is Mick Unplugged.
He's also the author of The Best Seller, How to Be a Good Leader, When You've Never Had One.
We don't talk about leadership enough. We don't talk about leadership theory and principles of what that.
should look like and since society has changed,
some of our leadership principles need to change too.
When I mentor people, I always say,
tell me what your team is gonna look like
and you need to start with a few team members.
And if you can't do that, then you're not ready.
We don't give ourselves enough credit
for being really damn good at some things that we do.
And if you can zero in on those things that you do really well,
you can impact other people's lives.
How do you see leadership in the future
What do you think are some of the things that are changing?
Leadership in the future is almost like...
Mick Hunt.
I've been actually following him for a while on his podcast.
You might be listening to it as well.
He is the voice behind one of the most popular podcasts on leadership, self-approved,
which is Mick Unplugged.
And he's also the author of The Best Seller, How to Be a Good Leader,
When You've Never Had One, which is so fascinating.
Mick has built himself, and that's why I'm going to be.
I'm so passionate about this conversation from one childhood promise that became a lifelong mission.
And I just can't wait to dive in. Mick, thank you for being here.
Thank you for having me. It's a pleasure to be here with you. And I was telling you before,
I've been such a huge fan of yours for over a year and just seeing all the amazing things that you've been doing.
So this is like a bucket list moment to get to be interviewed by my favorite host in the world.
So fun. And I'm going to take it.
you back in time. We're going to do like a little time machine here. But I wanted to take me,
first of all, to who is Mick as a child, but before age 10. How do you grow up? Where do you grow up?
Give us a little bit of lay of the land. Born and raised in an area in the upstate of South Carolina,
so Greenville, South Carolina area. Me as a kid, before I know the story you want to go to,
was the most competitive person in the world. Like, I grew up in a family of Abbottville,
of business leaders and competition was the norm.
So I joke all the time.
Me and my uncles would have challenges to see who could tie their shoes the fastest.
If there was something that can be competed, if there was a competition, we were doing it.
So I was one of the most driven kids that there was.
I wanted to be the best athlete on the team.
I wanted to be the smartest kid in school.
And so me growing up from the age of like three or four, I was trying to set the mark.
I was trying to set the standard.
That was me.
Wow.
Okay, so now you're age 10, and we all have moments that define us.
And I think this is definitely one of those moments for you, Mick.
Take us there.
Alana, it was not an unusual circumstance in my home growing up to see my mother being physically,
emotionally, financially, sometimes even sexually abused by my father, who she was married,
to who lived in the same household.
But I also knew that I couldn't make that feel normal.
I knew it wasn't right.
And at the age of 10, Christmas Eve morning, which should be the second happiest day
of the year, right?
My mom is sitting on my bed and she's wailing, right?
Not just crying, but wailing.
And I knew what that sound meant.
I knew what those tears meant.
And without saying a lot of words, I just asked my mom to leave.
I said, you don't have to deal with this.
You leave.
At 10 years old, I couldn't define my father as a narcissist because I didn't know what that meant at 10 years old.
But I knew his ego that if I stayed, he would be okay, right?
He didn't want to be alone.
So I said to my mom, take my sister and you both just leave.
And my mom looked at me and she said, no, I'm not going to leave.
leave you and I said, Mom, I can handle it. I can do it. And she said, no, because I love you,
I wouldn't feel right if you were going through what I go through. And Alana, I got angry.
I got angry because I felt like I was giving my mom a path to be happy to escape. And she said,
no. And so that moment I grew up, I was no longer a 10-year-old doing what 10-year-olds did.
I started to understand what today we would call emotional intelligence in not just myself, but in others.
So I got to understand what would trigger my father so that instead of him welling off on my mom, just hit me, right?
Instead of him finding a way to mentally embarrass or punish or psychologically embarrassed or punish my mom, just do it to me.
because when I know it's happening, I'm prepared for it, right?
It's a game to me.
And so at 10, that just became who I was.
And so I still was a 10-year-old.
Don't get me wrong.
But at the same time, I was thinking future.
I was thinking, how can I get my mom out of this situation?
How can I understand my dad and make life somewhat easier for my mom?
And so I grew up very different.
I never wanted to go spend the night or hang out at other people's homes because I
had to protect my mom and my sister. When school was over, I'm going home to make sure my mom's
okay. When my mom is up at night, I don't sleep much now because as a kid, I always stayed up. If
my mom was struggling, I wanted to be there. I wanted to make sure that she was okay. So I would
sit by my door every night, every night, making sure my mom was okay. I never slept as a kid.
That's incredible responsibility that you have at such a young age.
Are you scared at all?
I'm scared for her?
Are you scared for yourself?
Is that fear?
Or is that just worry or responsibility?
I would call it responsibility now.
I would also call it privilege because I could do something about it.
At least I felt like I could do something about it.
Was I ever afraid?
No.
Was I worried for my mother?
Absolutely.
And it's crazy.
I've never said this out loud.
I've never said this to my mom.
I've never said this to my sister, my brother.
I'm saying this for the first time to you, because I trust you.
Growing up, I didn't think my mom would live to C-40.
I prepared myself at a young age to say goodbye.
And I've never said this out loud because I internalized a lot, but I was prepared.
And then I realized that maybe I could do something to not allow that to happen.
And so no fear, no worry.
I just knew that I had to do what I had to do.
And if I could take the abuse, if I could take the blame, the responsibility.
But I knew I was purposely doing it.
I was okay.
Wow.
That is something incredible to wait on your shoulders as a kid.
So where did that take you in your teenhood?
And then you've been part of different teams and different companies.
But how did that drive you?
Where did that go?
At 10, I made my mom a promise I was going to change her life,
that she would smile one day.
and not feel ashamed of smile.
And so where did that lead me in teenhood?
I was still that competitive person.
I still wanted to be the best
because I felt like the only way to fulfill the promise
was to be the best dot, dot, dot, dot.
Whatever comes after the dot, dot, dot, dot,
the best student, the best athlete,
the best teammate, the best manager at Subway,
my first job, right?
The best whatever I was doing,
I had to be the best.
because if someone else was better, then I might not have this promise, right?
Like, if I didn't get a scholarship, someone else was.
If I didn't go to college, maybe I can't fulfill what I need to do.
So it just instilled me in my teams that I needed to be the best.
But also what I realized, the easiest way for me to fulfill that promise was through business, right?
It was through entrepreneurship, the skill sets that I started learning and that I started developing,
were social skills and communication.
It was networking.
It was understanding finance at a young age.
How do dollars and cents actually work?
And so that became who I became.
I made myself, it sounds weird to say it,
but I made myself into the person that I needed to be
to fulfill the promises that I made.
So tell me, so you started,
it sounds like, in Starbucks and other places,
and you got a decent salary or whatever it is,
what made you decide?
Entrepreneurship is insanely hard.
We'll probably dive a lot more about it
because I think there's a little bit of a myth
around how easy it is and it's not.
So take me there to that moment
when you're saying,
I'm okay, was not having a salary,
I want to start something.
Was that excitement?
Was that fear?
Where did that take you?
It was all of the emotions.
And you know as an entrepreneur,
right? You have them all and you have them all sometimes in two minutes of each other. The idea,
the excitement of the vision that I can do it, that I can solve a problem that exists, the excitement
of, wow, if I do it really, really well, I can make a ton of money. And then the fear of,
holy crap, I have to do it, right? And for me, that fear was never about me personally. The fear was
I have employees that depend on me. Every decision that I make, every final sign-off that I do,
affects home life for other people. And so the first business I started, I was 27. And every business I've
ever started, I've always brought on at least one employee. Moment one, like a W-2 employee,
like at least one. My other companies, I started with 10 or 20 or 100, right? Because I need that
accountability. I need to make sure that everything that I do, someone else can survive and
thrive, right? Because when it's just yourself, when you're a solopreneur, I can go two months
of sacrificing. I can go, you know, a year into savings. But when you have employees, it's not
like that. It's not like that. So when I mentor people that are entrepreneurs or they want to
start businesses, I always say, tell me what your team is going to look like.
And you need to start with a few team members, because that's real accountability right there.
And if you can't do that, then you're not ready.
Oh, that's beautiful.
And tell me, Mick, because the truth is, I think there's a myth.
And it was for me, too, that it's going to be the hardest to create all of this.
But once you actually have a team, this is where it gets really hairy, really scary,
really expensive, really fast, right?
And I think we all have some near-death experiences.
The times when you're like, okay, like, I don't know if it's going to survive this.
Share a moment, Mick, that comes up for you.
My first business insurance agency, my second hire was my sister-in-law.
And it got to a point where I was a salesperson.
She and another person were more like the account managers.
And I had a couple of months of low sales.
And we were literally two payroll periods away for me having to have a conversation with my sister-in-law.
So imagine a conversation with your sister-in-law of, I might have to let you go.
And I don't have an alternative.
I don't know anybody that's hiring.
And you came to this industry because of me.
Anybody can go into insurance, but you need licenses.
And like, no one wakes up and says, I want to be an insurance agent.
Nobody.
But luckily, that didn't have to happen.
But that was the moment for me where when people talk about the ish got real, the ish got real because that's business, but that's also family.
And a lot of things could have gone wrong in life.
And so to luckily not have to do that was tough.
But, you know, I think we all have those moments where as Anzanty,
entrepreneurs, yeah, you got to keep the lights on, but holy crap, how do I keep the lights on?
And what's that moment going to be? They keep telling me, a lot of there's going to be brighter days. I need this brighter day right now. I need this grass to be very green right now.
And it's pretty amazing how creative entrepreneurs become.
When your back is actually against the wall, you just like hustle your way out of this and
you're like, okay, I can breathe again for a little bit and then it comes back again.
Yeah, for me, it was focused.
And it also became a framework for something that I do in all of my businesses now,
is it made me understand who my ideal clients really were because we all know the 80-20
rule, right? We all know that that bottom percentage causes most of your headaches and most of your
strife, right? They pay you the least, but they call you the most and you do the most service for them.
So I needed to figure out what's a real ideal client and what are the real margins that I need to
bring in for my businesses. And so from that moment on, that's principle number one. And people that are
my clients that are listening to this are probably laughing because it's the first thing we talk about.
If you work with me and you want me to help scale your business or look at your company culture,
I talk about who's your ideal client and what does your ideal employee look like?
And from those two pieces, we can now build a path to scale.
So strong. And it's so true because sometimes from scarcity we bring in the wrong person and
The instinct always knows better and we fight that instinct.
But tell me, sometimes those hard moments cause you to rediscover yourself and push you to go deeper into what do I really want?
Do I really want to continue in insurance and teen and other things?
Like, how did that path to rediscover founded the podcast and eventually the book and the leadership?
So walk me through a little bit.
you come with the Mick Factor and, you know, all the things that you're about today?
What I started realizing was of the things that I do, and we can start with insurance,
like, what do I really love? And what I found that I really loved was building high-performing
teams and really building culture. And that's what I cared more about. I had gotten to a point
in insurance where I really could be the CEO, right? I didn't have to make sales. I didn't
have to answer phone calls. My job was to paint the vision and build the culture. But I found out
I loved that. And so then after I sold my insurance agency, you know, I went to head up another
company that I inherited and I immediately changed the culture and built high-performing teams,
and we doubled our revenue in four years. And at that moment, I said, this is what I'm supposed to do.
And so I started consulting and coaching and all the other things, but it really was.
for me reinventing myself was finding out what am I passionate about that I'm also exceptional at, right? And I think as humans, we don't give ourselves enough credit for being really damn good at some things that we do. And if you can zero in on those things that you do really well, you can impact other people's lives. And for me, that's what it became for me was how do I impact others with culture and high performing teams? And teams could be in the corporate world, teams
could be in the athletic world.
Team could be, hey, I'm a solopreneur trying to get to that next level.
That's what really my passion was.
And so that led me to why did I start the podcast?
It wasn't to start a podcast.
What I wanted to do was talk more about what I call my because, right?
That promise that I made my mom to go deeper than your why.
Because to me, that was why my teams outperformed others.
That was why my culture was what it was because we were centered around our because.
We need to pause for a super brief break.
And while we do, take a moment and share this episode with every single person who may be inspired by this because this information can truly change your life and theirs.
Now, I want to check in with you.
Yes, you.
Are you driven, but maybe feeling stuck in your career or a fraction of who you know you could be?
Do you secretly feel you should have been further along in your income?
income, influence, or impact?
Do you ever wonder how to create not just a paycheck, but the life you want with the paycheck,
the thought leadership, the legacy, the freedom?
Because that was me, and that's exactly why I created the Leap Academy program,
which already changed thousands of careers in lives.
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Let's talk about the difference that you see in terms of the why versus the because.
And why is that a greater meaning or how does that drive people?
We'll do this together, Alana.
So if I were to ask you, what's your why?
Be honest, what's your why?
I want to change lives because that was one of the hardest times in my life.
And I want to give that to more people.
Right.
So your why is that you want to give back to more people.
right? You want to change lives and give back. That's great. And Simon Sennick told us to start with that. That's the starting point. Now, I'm going to ask it again. Alana, why is impacting lives and changing lives important to you? And that's powerful. So for me, one of the moments I rarely talk about, but I remember holding my mom's hand. She was passing away from cancer. And I was debating, is there regret? Like, you know, what's for real?
And I was afraid to talk to her about it.
But, you know, when she passed, it was like a huge brick on me.
I was like, I can't feel regret at the end of my life.
And I will do whatever I can to live this life and this one precious moment in the most incredible way.
So that's the because.
Your because is because you never want to feel regret.
Do you see how deeper that feels?
Oh, it's crazy.
My why is I want to impact lives.
That's awesome.
It's cool.
But when you say, because I never want to feel regret, that's earth moving.
And so that's to me why your because is your true reason.
It's your real intent.
It's your real purpose.
And so I teach people and I talk about being moved by your because.
being held accountable by your because.
Your why doesn't give you accountability?
Your because does.
And so my because most of my life is the promise that I keep.
I'm always going to keep my promise.
And that's my because.
If I tell Alana, I'm going to do something, I'm going to do it.
And so I never want to be the person that doesn't fulfill missions or doesn't fulfill
promises.
And so your because is what really stirs you and moves you.
And I love that because I think when you do deeper, you find motivation and fire and fuel in a way that will drive you and drive the teams and drive everybody.
And I think the other element that you talked about is that zone of genius, which is a big piece of what we try to help people in Leap Academy.
It's like, how do you find that zone of genius?
How do you know that you're great with teams?
It's amazing.
So first of all, I'm just curious and I have to ask, was all your success in the podcast in the book?
with that. How is that creating your relationship with your mom and that promise and your sister,
et cetera? What did that do to you as a person of family? One, they're my accountability,
but I make sure that they're proud of who I am, right? And that the legacy and the story that we as a
family are rewriting is impactful. And so that's what all of the, and I don't,
even like calling it success, but the things that have happened in my life, it's all going back
to that promise, but it's also rewriting our family legacy because at the age of 10, our family
legacy wasn't going to be good. The family name was good because no one on the outside knew
what was going on. On the outside, we were a perfect family, right? Outside, everything was great,
but on the inside, it was like walking on eggshells every day. And I didn't want that to be our legacy. I
I didn't want that to be who we were.
And it's not about me.
And that's what I always make sure.
And my family knows.
It's always about us.
So the things that I'm doing is for us.
My sister is a phenomenal educator.
My brother is one of the best creators in the world, right?
My mom is a minister of three churches now.
So like, collectively, we're just doing it.
And that's what's honorable for me.
On our show, we have a lot of people that are right now in that decision point.
Maybe they ticked a lot of boxes of success, but now they feel either stuck or they want to do more or they,
they're trying to figure out what it is and what is my zone of genius, what is my passion,
like I want to achieve more in life. And again, you've been entrepreneur for a lot longer than
most, but I want you to take me to that moment when you feel like, okay, I'm going to do this
leadership thing that people don't really understand or coaching or whatever, right? And I don't know if
it can pay the bills and I don't know if it's going to work. Take me to that decision point in the
beginning, if you will, because I think a lot of our people are afraid to take that action.
What if it doesn't work? What if I fail? Do I look ridiculous? What if I can't pay the rent?
And it's all valid and you do it anyway. So Mick, take us there. We'll make this workshop now
because this is how I love to operate. If it stays up here and if you're listening, I'm pointing to
my head in my temple. If it stays up there, I can promise you it's never going to go anywhere.
It's going to be really cool ideas. And it doesn't mean that you're not going to start it that
you can't do it. But when distractions happen, when obstacles happen, everything was up here.
You never saw a real roadmap. So the first thing that I want everyone to do, and I know,
Alana, you do this too, is you got to write things down. I'm a vision board. That's just who I am.
So when I first started, I wrote on a wall, here's what I want to do and here's how success is measured.
And that's going to be different for everyone.
How you measure success is personal to you.
So don't listen to someone that says these should be the five things that are important.
No, it's what's important to you is what's important to you.
But write down what success looks like.
And then go backwards.
In order to achieve step one, what are the three things that have to have to have?
happen and when do they need to happen? And that's where people, I think, go wrong of understanding,
yeah, these things need to happen, but when, right? Is it the first six months, the first nine months,
the first 30 days? Whatever those steps are, when do they need to happen? And to me, that's how
success really goes in. Like, I've got to see it. And then I've got to go backwards into the steps of
whatever the milestones are to track. So now, if we talk about me and what I did,
It was, okay, starting an insurance agency from scratch, I'm not buying a business.
It's me and one person.
Eventually, I knew that they were going to be two.
So I needed to write down what does success look like.
So for me, success meant a million dollars of revenue, right, at the time.
A million dollars of revenue within two years.
That was success.
Part two meant having a team of four to six people to manage this business and grow this
business with me.
And then the third step was my customers and my clients love me.
And they send me as much business as possible.
And it was as simple as that.
I try not to overcomplicate things.
Like that's what success was going to look like for me.
And so then for each of those steps, a million dollars of revenue, okay, let's back
into what needs to happen to make that happen, having four to six team members,
okay, where do the milestones of when I hire?
And my clients rewarding me meant, we've got to be.
be great at service. We've got to be optimal when it comes to providing customer service and
being proactive. And so it sounds simple, but scaling and growing is simple. I love football, right?
I love tackle football. At the end of the day, football is blocking and tackling. Everything
else you see is charades. It's blocking and tackling. So when you can keep things simple in your
business and in your entrepreneur vision, like, that's where successful start to happen.
I love what you just said, and I think this is for our listeners. I think sometimes when you were laid off, you have a rejection, something horrible happened, it's actually hard to breathe. And it's hard to dream. And I think sometimes when people ask you, what does success look like? For some people, it's like, I just want to breathe again, right? I just want to know that I're going to be okay. And for me, like, one of the big things,
that I'll say to people is, hey, first of all, you're going to need to put your own oxygen mask on
and save yourself first. Otherwise, it's true, you can't dream, but also cover yourself with people
that are dreaming, right? Because if everybody in your life is a non-dreamer, guess what? There's not going to be
a lot of dreaming. Mick, what do you say to people that are right now just trying to breathe?
Take a step back and center yourself. And this isn't like therapy or anything, but if you're just
trying to read, take a step back and analyze what's really causing that anxiety or what's causing you
to be stuck. Because when you take a step back, you're able to see much more clear, right? When you're
trying to analyze while you're in the midst of it, all you see is that one thing that's right in front of you,
which may or may not be the problem. And so I'm a huge believer in, all right, take a step back. Let's take a
moment, let's visualize. And hopefully, the right moves will reveal themselves. I'm spiritual.
I'm not going to say I'm overly religious, but I'm definitely spiritual. Like, I believe that
the universe will show you what you need to do, but you just got to be able to take that step back,
exhale, let that oxygen happen naturally. And I promise you everything's going to be okay.
And I love that because when you actually do what you just said,
that's when you bring the data, not the drama.
And I think what you just shared, Mick,
is also attaching so well to the Mick factor
and the mindset investment.
I wanted to talk about it.
Talk to me about where did that make factor come from?
And how do you use that?
And, you know, what do you do with people, Mick?
So one of my mentors is the legendary Les Brown,
probably the greatest motivational speaker that we have.
less is, I call him my mentor, but he really is more like a father figure.
We talk every day all day.
He's someone that I look up to.
He knows my story like the back of my hand and his hand.
And he said, Mick, you know what made you different?
And I said, what's that less?
And he said, the Mick factor.
And I was like, what's the Mick factor less?
And he said, think about all the things that you've done really well.
Like your mentality, your mindset to dominate,
was at an early age.
And I was like, yeah?
You invest in yourself.
And I think all great leaders and entrepreneurs invest in themselves, right?
Like, we never have it figured out.
A lot of us are at the top of our organization.
And we don't have people that we can talk to or that we relate with.
So invest in coaching, invest in networking, invest in like-mindedness.
So I've always invested in myself to take myself to the next level.
And then the character.
Everything I do is with character.
I'm always going to do the right thing.
It might not be the most popular thing, but it's always going to be the right thing.
And then keep going has been my mantra for life.
Life is going to hit you.
Life isn't easy.
If life were easy, everybody would be skinny billionaires that walked on the earth, right?
We all would.
If it were easy, but it's not.
And those that make it are those that keep going.
And I tell people all the time, like, the reason I'm not.
I keep going is because I'm afraid. So now we'll talk about what I have a fear and one thing I'm
afraid of. The one thing I'm afraid of is that if I stop, I was just right there. And I never want to be
just right there. Like if I stop, I'm going to feel like, man, if I would have just given it
one more day or one more push, it would have been there. So I'm afraid of that. And then my fear,
The only thing I ever fear is that when this life is over,
and if you believe in the afterlife, if you believe in heaven and all that,
I don't want to meet the person I was supposed to become.
So I drive every day for that.
So the Mick factor, mindset to dominate, invest in yourself, character,
and no matter what, keep going.
You're talking our language because one of the stories that I tell is, yes,
my fear of meeting that person that I was supposed to become, and I didn't,
because of excuses, right?
I was afraid.
I didn't have time, like all the excuses.
And now you wrote this incredible book,
which I find it fascinating
because it's like how to be a good leader
when you never had one,
which is really, really interesting
to look at that.
And it's kind of a blueprint
for modern leadership, right?
So talk to me about the book
and what made you stop everything.
I mean, I'm writing a book now.
Mick, it's annoying as heck.
But okay, so what made you do
this. So the book. I was sitting down one day with two of my kids. So I have three kids and my two
boys. And I said, tell me who some of the best leaders that you know are. And at the time, I think
my kids were 21 and 18. And they started giving me the names of popular people, not necessarily
saying that they were leaders, but just popular people. And so I said, great, why did you
choose that person? And I said, oh, because when I'm on the internet or social media,
they're everywhere. And I said, but how do you know that they're a good leader? And then my
sons were like, oh, I guess you're right. I don't know. And it made me pause for a second.
And I said, growing up in school, we were required to learn about some of the best leaders in the
world and we all know who they are. But since then, I don't know if we put a highlight on good
leaders. And it's not a bad thing. So I'm not saying this is a bad thing, but I think because of the
internet and because of social media, popularity and visibility became most important. And so I just
started curating a list and doing some studies for my sons of who some good leaders that they
should research are. But through this, I also started to realize, wait a second, in the next few years,
we're going to have a ton of baby boomers that are going to retire from corporate jobs and C-suite,
that they're going to get replaced with people, that if my kids don't know who good leaders are,
they probably don't know who they are either because we don't talk about leadership like that anymore.
And so that became the pretense of writing the book was how to be a good leader when you've never had one,
because I don't know if we're at a time where people have had good leaders.
And I'm not saying we've had bad leaders.
I'm just saying we don't talk about leadership enough.
We don't talk about leadership theory and principles of what that should look like.
And since society has changed, some of our leadership principles need to change too.
And so that's really what the book is about.
It's like, hey, you're probably going to go watch a movie and think that that's leadership.
Or you're probably going to hear from your leader today who's walking out.
of the door who doesn't care about emotional intelligence, who doesn't care about active listening,
who doesn't care about being present. Well, these are the things that are important to the
modern employee. And so that's why I wrote the book. Oh, that's powerful. I actually didn't think
of the fact that our kids don't really look at leadership in the same way. That makes a ton of sense.
For me, one of the biggest mentors in my life is Richard Branson. And he's been embodied.
this incredible leadership with so much love and so much caring.
And so, and I was just like, oh, my God, this is who I want to become.
This is what I want to learn from.
But you're right.
If you don't have that inspiration, you don't know what leadership is.
How do you learn?
This one thing that we definitely not taught in school, right?
Not anymore.
I think leadership went away with cursive writing, right?
They don't teach cursive writing anymore and they don't teach leadership anymore.
So somebody has to do one of the two.
leadership's more important than cursive.
I vote for that too.
We need to pause for a super brief break, and while we do, take a moment and share this
episode with every single person who may be inspired by this because this information
can truly change your life and theirs.
Now, every cool opportunity you will ever find is most likely from a hidden market.
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This means that the people you hang out with truly matter.
That's why we created our flagship live event in San Jose, California, in the heart of Silicon Valley.
It's February 26 to 28th and is the number one conference for reinvention, leadership, and careers in the United States.
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How did all of this make you, if that's okay to ask as a dad? What do you think?
So I've always believed in raising my kids to be adults. Let them build their journey,
but raise them to be adults. So writing this book or going through the process of writing the
book got me to ask my kids more questions just about them. How would you handle this scenario?
What would you do?
If you were in charge of a company
or if you were the leader of a department
in this situation happened, what would you do?
It allowed us to have real conversations about scenarios
that at some point they're going to go through.
And now my kids are a little bit older
because it took me a while to write the book, right?
But my oldest son coaches football.
So he gets to live leadership principles.
My youngest is in grad school in Miami
and, you know, he's now thinking about his real
career. So he gets to think about leadership principles. So this helped me from a father perspective
of just seeing how they think, helping shape them as adults that are going to be leaders of other
people who like me when I started my first business, realize the decisions that I make are going to
impact others' lives. And so that's what this book is allowed, or that's what this journey has allowed for.
And what do you think, Mike? I mean, I think this world is changing so fast on so many levels.
We are big believers in portfolio career, that people will have multiple streams,
the tech is moving really quick, the corporates are moving really quick,
entrepreneurship is easier than ever to at least jump on.
I'm not saying it's easy, but it's easier than ever to jump on.
How do you see leadership in the future?
What do you think are some of the things that are changing?
Leadership in the future is almost like when you talk about having multiple streams of income,
you're going to have to as a leader, be aware that your team member isn't there for the long haul.
When I was growing up early on, and I'm sure for you as well, too, we were taught go get a job and stay there forever.
Yeah, 40 years.
Build your 401K, build your pension, do whatever, right?
And it is not uncommon, and I see this in the insurance industry.
Someone who started as a CSR 30 years ago is still a CSR today, meaning they're not trying to climb the corporate lap.
Well, that's different today. People that get hired today, and I don't mean age. I just mean in general as society, it's like, okay, how can I get promoted? How can I get ownership in the company? How can I get stock? Those are the things that matter. But also understanding, yeah, I'm going to be a creator on the side too, or like I'm going to have my phone out recording while I'm helping this customer over here or doing whatever. So I think the first thing that's going to change in leadership is just understanding that just like we talk about,
multiple streams of income, there's going to be multiple streams of leadership,
meaning you've got to touch people at different places. My team and one of my companies is a
thousand percent remote. We don't have a corporate office. We don't even meet on Zoom as much.
I do because I'm the CEO and I want to paint the vision. But departments, everybody knows what
they're doing and they just go do their thing. And like, you've got to get used to that in this
remote world, too. Another thing that's going to change and
leadership that I think is critical is allowing your team to stand on their own and make mistakes
because the world changes so fast. You and I know this just in podcast technology. The workflow that
we had two weeks ago isn't the workflow that we have today for anything, right? Because things
change so fast, you're going to make a mistake. You're going to be outdated. You're always going to
need to be working on whatever your systems or processes or workflow, whatever terminology that
you use within your business, you're always going to need to be updating that because you're
going to be stale at a much faster rate in 2026 and moving forward.
That's so powerful. I do believe that there is no stuck in the world today. I think if people don't
move very fast forward, there are losing relevance at a pace we've never seen before. And
you will need to constantly, constantly be intentional, strategic with every move you make.
You're absolutely right, Mick.
Based on everything that you've done and you've done so much, Mick, and you talk to so many
incredible leaders, what would be something that you wish somebody talked to your younger
self and tell you?
Invest in mentors.
I figured it out later in life.
But if I would have known that at 18 and really asked,
more than one person to truly be my mentor or my personal coach or my accountability partner,
I probably could have done things that I'm doing now much faster.
I can't tell you what a Robert Irvine has done to change my life.
I can't tell you what a Damon John has done to change my life.
A Chris Voss, a Gary Vee, who your Gary Vee episode is definitely one of my favorite episodes.
I heard you talk to him.
And mentors, the right mentors.
And again, I think you need multiple because mentors have different skills.
You talk about opening doors and getting seats to the table and networking.
For me, with mentorship, it's about shortcutting the challenges or the problems that I would have run into.
It's real cool to take the stairs.
But when you have an elevator, take the elevator.
It's cute to talk about the journey.
I went up 10 flat as the stairs.
Yeah, well, I took the elevator.
Had the same journey, but I took the elevator to get there, right?
Like, it's okay to take elevators.
And for me, if someone would have told me at 16, 21, 25, that just having mentors, being a part of coaching programs, that investing in yourself piece, if I ought to know how powerful that was a long time ago, I would have accelerated much faster.
much, much faster. It's funny because I say exactly the same thing, Mick, and unfortunately
it took me a lot longer than you to realize that this is important. And I think a lot of times
I came from the military world, which I think comes with like, you should be able to persevere
anything. And, you know, like there's a lot of that. And I think then in corporate, it's just
an uncool thing because why wouldn't you figure this out on your own, right? So if I'm being
honest, I didn't believe in coaching. And I wish, I wish, I would.
I wish I woke up a lot earlier because I think I had all this ego of like can figure this out.
And like you said, I can have a vague map or I can take the train.
Which one do I prefer, right?
Try to walk around with a vague map and hope that maybe I'll get there or take the train and actually get there fast.
You know, like with a lot of energy to breathe.
And I think you're spot on, Mick.
That's incredible.
There's no secret to my success.
It has been the right mentors, just being there as a resource, and holding me accountable,
which to me is the biggest piece, the accountability.
So where do people find you, Mick?
And obviously, it's pretty easy to look at Mick unplugged and find you.
But where do people find you?
Website to see the things I have going on, Mickhunt official.com, Instagram,
Mick unplugged. That's where you'll find me interacting a lot. And then LinkedIn, just me,
Mick Hunt. Like, I spend, I'll be honest with you, social-wise, I spend most of my time,
LinkedIn and Instagram. But yeah, all the cool things I have going on, Mick Hunt Official,
that's me. For those listening and kind of final wrap up, what would you want them to know
about themselves or what action, except for investing in hope, what actions should they do?
If they're in the crossroad, they're trying to figure things out, they want more from their life.
What should they do?
Write it down.
Everybody that's listening, journal, especially for the men that are listening, it's okay to journal.
And I don't mean write paragraphs, write novels, write books.
I write down three things every day.
What went well in a good sense.
What really went well?
What mistakes did I make?
and what do I need to do tomorrow to make sure that I can say I had a good day?
Every single day.
And sometimes it's business related, sometimes it's personal,
but I make sure that I answer those questions every single day.
And when I start my day, I read the day before because if something went really, really well and I need that to happen again, I need to know why that happened.
What steps happened?
If something went bad or if I made a mistake, I don't want to make that same mistake.
And then how can I set all this up for success?
What did I tell myself I need to do today?
I need to make sure I do that today.
This is so powerful.
Mick, there were so many mic drops here, like, folks, listeners.
I hope you just like rewind and listen to this whole thing and start taking notes.
Like, this was so, so valuable.
Mick, thank you for sharing this beautiful story and this calling of yours.
I thank you for having me.
Like I said, the podcast host.
I listen to the most is actually you.
Your podcast, I can go on record and say it because, you know, if you don't say it publicly,
then you don't mean it.
I'm saying it publicly.
My favorite podcast is Leap Academy podcast.
So, like, I need you to know that.
I am your number one fan.
Oh, my God, you made my day, Mick.
Thank you.
And I'm incredibly inspired.
You've had incredible guests.
Your journey is insane.
And thank you for sharing it with our listeners today.
Thank you for having me, dear.
Remember this episode.
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