Right About Now with Ryan Alford - Mindset Hacks to Unlock Your Full Potential with Evan Marks
Episode Date: September 9, 2025Right About Now with Ryan Alford Join media personality and marketing expert Ryan Alford as he dives into dynamic conversations with top entrepreneurs, marketers, and influencers.... "Right About Now" brings you actionable insights on business, marketing, and personal branding, helping you stay ahead in today's fast-paced digital world. Whether it's exploring how character and charisma can make millions or unveiling the strategies behind viral success, Ryan delivers a fresh perspective with every episode. Perfect for anyone looking to elevate their business game and unlock their full potential. Resources: Right About Now Newsletter | Free Podcast Monetization Course | Join The Network | Follow Us On Instagram | Subscribe To Our Youtube Channel | Vibe Science Media On this episode of Right About Now with Ryan Alford, we’re joined by Evan Marks, mental performance coach at M-1 Performance Group. Evan shares how success is built on mindset, emotional awareness, and intentionality—whether in business, sports, or everyday life. From his Wall Street career to coaching top performers, Evan explains how to use emotions as data, practice aggressive patience, and build resilience through repetition. If you’ve ever struggled with procrastination, distractions, or mental blocks, this episode will give you practical strategies to unlock potential, minimize interference, and create lasting growth. Key Takeaways: Mental performance = the difference-maker in success Why intentionality and repetition build resilience “Aggressive patience” and slowing down to speed up Reframing emotions as powerful decision-making tools The performance formula: Potential – Interferences = Performance How to build mental toughness and overcome procrastination 🔗 Connect with Evan: m1performancegroup.com
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What we say at M1 always is that you have to slow down in order to speed up.
Slowing down has nothing to do with the gas.
It's really the art of intentionality.
As you become more intentional with this practice, with repetition, you start to build this foundation that you can leverage.
And there's this speed up.
What we're saying is very intellectual.
When you read one self-help book, the same as a 900 one, if you don't execute on it.
And you have to give yourself room to grow.
What do they always say?
Quit tomorrow.
Keep going, because you don't know when it starts to click, when it starts to connect.
Give yourself a chance.
This is Right About Now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network production.
We are the number one business show on the planet with over one million downloads a month.
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Well, it starts right about now.
Hello and welcome to Right About Now.
We're always talking about what's happening today.
How is it to make you get right in business, in marketing and life.
It all works together, people.
We know that.
So we're talking to the best, the brightest here on Now in 20.
We got Evan Marks.
He is a mental performance coach, M1, Performance Group.
What's up, Mark?
How are you, man?
It's a pleasure to be here, Ryan.
Hey, pleasure to have you, brother.
I like what you're doing.
We don't talk enough about mental performance.
I host another show called Vibe Science, and we talk a lot about mind, body, energy and the interconnectedness of it all.
We all need a mental coach, brother.
I agree with the.
Mindset is everything.
But there's so many different components of building a strong mindset.
I'm an ex-Wall Street guy before I became a coach about eight and a half years ago.
And in the world of hedge funds and trading, there's always 90% mental.
Everything is 90% mental.
You get your head right and you get conscious about your behavior.
Not void of feelings, by the way.
Imagine what you can accomplish.
No kidding.
What's the biggest blind side?
I mean, you're working with enough people.
What are people missing?
There's usually something that's out of their own perception.
And it'd be easy to go, well, it's self-awareness.
It is that.
I'll give you that.
But there's something, man.
What is it, Evan?
People try to dismiss emotions.
What happens is when you don't acknowledge emotions, you know what happens?
It gets on the field.
And what does that mean?
They're unconscious.
When I train people, we live in the world of responding, not reacting.
I coach athletes, business owners, CEOs, and obviously Wall Street professors.
The biggest thing that you need to take away is mental space.
Emotions are just data.
We can label negative emotions, positive emotions, but in the end of the day, they're data.
The question is, how do you put space between an emotion of how you feel and actually
how the hell you want to behave?
That is a conscious choice.
When you talk about blind spots, when people say, I can't believe I did that again.
That is reacting.
Imagine if you had the power of choice, the power to say, I can feel whatever I want, but
I also have that power to choose a behavior.
And what happens, Ryan, is that it starts to form new experiences.
And then neurologically, at M1, we always say we marriage, the why and the how?
Why do I do what I do?
And how do I get better?
We take psychonical theory meets the latest research in neuroscience.
And what happens is when you start to experience things differently, you really start
to build new habits and new networks in your brain.
And that soon after repetition, repetition, repetition, becomes your default action.
So when you talk about blind spots, it's really.
It's almost like stop reacting.
Give yourself a chance to respond.
It's a game changer for anybody.
We talked with our kids before we came on.
And we teach them and in life, we know this too, you know, playing sports and doing what we do.
Whether you play golf or whatever you do, you've got to practice over and over and over again to be good at something.
And repetition creates muscle memory.
And then it's less thinking and more doing and having success from it.
And we know this.
We're smart people.
Most people listening to this show are smart people.
But for whatever reason, though,
of we don't apply that same principle or a lot of people don't.
I didn't.
I do now.
You don't apply this principle of this muscle memory and knowing how the white way to
respond and taking coaching and taking learning and taking feedback to then apply the
same way in business and in life.
People need to get their head around that opportunity or you're always living within limits.
You know, what we say at M1 always says that you have to slow down in order to speed up.
Slowing down has nothing to do with the gas.
It's really the art of intentionality.
As you become more intentional with this practice, with repetition, you start to build
this foundation that you can leverage.
And there's the speed up.
What we're saying is very intellectual.
When you read one self-help book, the same as the 900 one, if you don't execute on it,
and you have to give yourself room to grow.
What do they always say?
Quit tomorrow.
Keep going because you don't know when it starts to click, when it starts to connect.
Give yourself a chance.
When we talk about things intellectually, there's such an emotional component about that.
If you're able to acknowledge that and tolerate it long enough, the doors of opportunity
swing right open.
One of the most important, give yourself a chance.
Quit tomorrow.
Hang in an extra day.
You will be massively pleasantly surprised.
What are some of the techniques that you guys do at M1?
What's the mental exercises, the coaching exercises, the things that people can do?
the highest performers, did they come by this by nature or nurture?
It's always fascinating to me, the 0.01%.
Did they just learn what you teach?
Were they just ahead of the curve or were they built that way?
Two parts there, how you help people.
I'll start with the last one, you know, nature or nurture.
I believe anybody can do this.
Now, listen, I'm not 6'5, 290 pounds, so I'm not going to try out for the offensive line of the Cowboys.
There are certain limitations.
We don't live in the positive psychology, Kent.
We live in the opportunistically reality camp.
I like it.
But when we talk about mental resilience, perseverance,
anybody can do this.
So why did the Kobe's of the world, the NJs of the world,
the Tom Brady's of the world,
obviously some of them were gifted.
There's no doubt about it,
which you cannot take away the resilience of these superstars.
Kobe Bryant's working out after winning an NBA championship at 4 in the morning.
This guy didn't make teams, NJ didn't make teams.
Tom Brady was whatever they missed.
They were relevant.
it. Anybody can do this. It really is giving yourself the opportunity to go and see what's possible.
We always talk about emotions. Emotions are important. Without emotions, you can't make decisions.
Why are emotions the enemy? They're not. They're actually just data. If I said to you, Ryan,
I give you permission to feel whatever you want. All right, so almost like, let go of the rope.
Now let's put mental space. Take a breath. A pause. Then we have a chance to choose how we want to behave.
I can't guarantee results, but I can guarantee you you will experience something different.
Now, if we put down the work consistently, we always say consistency with evidence builds confidence.
If we are intentional about that one sole practice, it puts you in a different lane.
If you're able to give yourself space, we call it mental space, to choose something, to choose a behavior that serves you, it's game over.
Because then you start to what?
You start to trust yourself, that you are not a slave to people's,
emotions, actions. We have the power to choose. And who would not want to have that in their mental
arsenal? Yeah, you would. You would choose it every time. How powerful is that? Yeah. And what's
interesting is we're coached, especially as men growing up, we're sort of built to hide the emotion to
kind of sink it away. I don't even know if it's always intentionally coached into us. It's just
sort of the way it is. And I think for good, bad, or indifferent men are pretty good at swallowing the
emotional side of it. Let's flip that script. Say, you know what, Ryan, you're entitled to feel
disappointed, embarrassed, judged. You can have fear of rejection, shouldn't failure, whatever it may be.
And if I say, that's not a weakness. I go, you know what the real weakness is? Is when you
react. When you have an adult tantrum, and all of a sudden you wish you could have taken that
back. Let's flip that. You feel whatever you want. You have to. We're human beings. We live
this human experience. Allow it. Acknowledge it. We always say behavior changes before feelings.
When I'm happy I'll do this.
When I've made this much money, I'll do this.
It doesn't work that way.
Because what happens is as behavior changes and we start moving down the field, eventually
feelings change.
But if we're going to wait for a feeling to change, I'm like, I don't want to be this way,
I don't want to feel this way.
We're still up to five-yard line.
We could have been on the opposing team's 20 already.
It's all about conscious behavior.
And how do you get that?
That's mental.
Giving yourself this mental space is a game changer.
And how do you get there?
It's repetition.
It's reminding yourself to take a pause, reminding yourself to ask a question.
What am I trying to accomplish right now?
Where do I want to be?
How do I want to behave?
And when you ask yourself questions, we call them self-exploratory, you know what it does?
It puts you in the seat of influence.
Talking with Evan Marks, he is a mental performance coach with M1 performance group,
is saying a lot of times we're fire, aim, ready as men.
And what you just crystallized for me was, let's get back to ready, aim, and then fire.
Because if you do it the other way around, you're not hitting the target.
I'm a move fast guy.
I am.
I can admit it.
And it's worked for me on the whole.
But I've also realized the pitfalls that it can have when you don't stop to kind of ask these important questions and that you don't truly get ready.
Because a good friend of mine named Christopher Lockhead, one of the smartest guys I know in marketing.
And he says, we need to think more about thinking.
That's called metacognition.
Amen.
It's true.
You've had success.
When we get curious, like, imagine if what this kid from M1 performance group is saying is
true.
What could it have looked like?
But what could it look like now?
I'm not a motivational guy.
Even though I'm a New Yorker and I speak with a lot of passion, I'm all about momentum.
Motivation is a fleeting feeling.
It's the momentum that takes you across the finish line.
But it's really putting yourself in that seat of what if.
What if I slow down?
And that's nothing to do with speed.
We don't have to go back.
You can't tweak inconsistency.
Do you really get consistent with your behavior?
Name a door.
It's going to open.
And that's how you get better.
If you got other things figured out and then you unlock that, it does.
It truly becomes the world as your oyster.
You can take that proverbial step back and get that internal footing and take that breath.
What do I need to do now?
What do they say, wait, what's important now?
That's seconds.
But it puts you in a different state.
We talk a lot about when we talk with clients about aggressive patience.
Patience sounds very passive.
Just be patient.
Aggressive patience is almost like a jaguar in the rough where you know the heart rate is going down.
The intentionality is there.
The focus is there.
So when you said ready, aim, fire, that's what aggressive patience is.
How long can you sit in the pocket?
Think about like Tom Brady's as Edelman's coming through the middle.
Everybody's coming on.
He can feel it.
But he has that composure.
He has that breath.
He's slowing things down.
Imagine thinking about that as a practice.
How much more effective you could be?
We're talking seconds.
Time can be an ally, but time can be a nemesis as well.
How is time an ally?
We're talking about repetition because we know stacking, days, weeks, months stack.
And when you look up five months from now, time is an ally.
How did I get here so quickly?
It's a nemesis also.
Because nothing changes of nothing changes.
We aren't intentional about improvement, about understanding our minds and our behaviors and our emotions, time doesn't work for us because all of a sudden it's Jan 26. Wow, nothing's changed.
Intentionality, that's the key word that I keep coming back to and locking in. There's a lot of motion and there's a lot of activity that lacks intention.
It's seeking intention. It's not taken with intention. We do things because we're seeking to find the intent. I've done this. I'm going to find. I'm going to find.
some intent. I'm going to stack all these things up. An intention will manifest itself. No, intention's
on the front end. That's the key here. That's what I keep coming back to and everything you talk
about. What am I trying to accomplish? What you're saying is extremely from the past.
You all seek validation. We don't validate ourselves. So we start stacks. Procrastination
isn't the lack of effort. It's the fear of a future feeling. What we do sometimes if we stack all
these, I got to do this, this, this and we know nothing gets done. I'm going to go to the
gym. I'm going to go five times a week. You don't even.
I'm going to go once. Start small. We always talk about money compounding, but behavior compounds
the same way. Trust me, two and two and four means nothing. Four and four and eight,
eight, whatever, eight and eight, 16, nothing. But as you go up, this megaphone, there is a threshold
you go through. And then you're like, wow, I am so glad that I was aggressively patient with myself
to give myself the opportunity for this. That's meant to performance. Performance is an easy
equation. Performance equals potential minus interferences. If we're able to minimize
interferences, which is a lot of unconscious behavior, the equation explodes. The calmness comes
down. We could focus on potential and what we need to do. Performance goes. Evan, where can
learn more about what you're doing and how to take performance to a higher level?
We have an awesome website. My team has put together over the course of a couple of years now.
It's M1 Performance Group.com. We put out four posts a week on all social medias, which is
LinkedIn. I'm Evan Marks. Instagram's E. Mark 72. We're on Twitter. I think it's Emark 72 as well. I should know that, but I don't. Our website has a lot of articles, a lot of insight, and we have a lot of podcasts that we've been on. And we have a discovery button. If this is something that where you want to take your game to a different level, I'm here.
I love it, brother. You're doing some great things. I really like your approach and just your overall vibe, man. Thanks, Ryan. I appreciate it.
Hey, guys. You know, to find us. Ryan is right.com. We're going to have all the links to Evan's stuff in one, performance.
group, go check that out. I cannot
understate, overstate.
I can't put enough emphasis on
how important it is to get
your mind, right, to unlock
ultimate potential in business, in
life, in relationships. Guys like
Evan will help you. We'll see you next time on
Right About Now.
This has been Right About Now with Ryan
Alford, a Radcast network production.
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