The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Extremely Honest Q&A
Episode Date: March 1, 2021For this weeks podcast I decided I was going to do something a little bit different. This week all of you will be interviewing me. I asked you to ask me any question you like about my business, my lif...e or any advice you might need. My team went through and picked the ones that could bring the most value to you. This is my extremely honest Q&A. Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who, when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. And one of the thoughts
that continually gets me to the gym and continually makes me show up and work hard is,
and if you're good at it, if you're great at it,
then you might just be great at everything.
But for me, that really is the meaning of life.
On this week's podcast, we're going to do something very different.
Something I've never
done before, but something that you've requested time and time again. This week, I posted online
asking you to ask me any question about me, my life, my business, whatever you want to ask me.
And I promised that in return, I would give very brutally honest answers. My team went through all
of the questions that were submitted and they went through and picked the ones that they thought were
most interesting. They've written them in my diary here. So I'm going to
start from the top and answer these questions with the objective of giving you the most valuable,
honest advice that I possibly can. So without further ado, I'm Stephen Bartlett and this is
The Diary of a CEO. I hope nobody's listening, but if you are, then please keep this to yourself.
Okay, so the first question is, what is the most important lesson that this pandemic has taught you or reconfirmed for you? And for me, that is, it relates back to a podcast I did at the start of
the year. And it's that uncertainty is not predictable, but it's preparable.
And I don't actually think that's a word,
but here's what I mean.
What I know for sure, and this relates to everybody,
is that your life is of course going to be full of a lot of joy
and amazing things and breathtaking moments
and rapturous moments of ecstasy, right?
But it's also going to be riddled with moments
of unexpected uncertainty and chaos.
Joy is much easier to handle.
You just kind of let go and go with it, right?
The good times.
Not a lot of action or thought required,
but uncertainty and chaos require a real rigid set of principles.
And for me, those principles over the last 12 months
have become acceptance, optimism, and action.
And these three principles have a real linear connection
to the outcome you're seeking.
Without acceptance, when bad things happen,
there's no optimism.
And without optimism, there's no action.
And without action, there's often no victory,
or at least victory is delayed
and hard times are elongated.
So when bad news visits,
whether that's being unexpectedly fired from your job
or dumped by your partner or evicted by your landlord or losing a loved one in the case of a pandemic, you have to do everything you can
to stick to these principles despite the intense cloud of natural emotions that will try to convince
you and me otherwise. And you know, like I do a lot of sort of introspective thinking for a living
and even I am not immune from letting emotion get the best of me in times of intense chaos.
I like, no matter how much I've read or written in my diary or how many podcasts I've done,
even I fall victim, especially in the short term, to all of those emotions and sometimes to the
instructions those emotions give you, which will lead you to pretty dire outcomes. So, you know,
you get dumped by your partner, you immediately think revenge, right? You get fired by your boss, you think,
you know, I'm going to sue them, right? I fall for those traps too. And I don't think,
I don't necessarily think it's the aim of all humans should be to try and avoid those emotions
and that thinking, because I think it's quite impossible. But it's to be better at the response,
right? To shorten the time that those emotions sit with you and to be better in your reaction.
And I want to clarify that acceptance, when when i talk about acceptance it doesn't mean being emotionless
it can often mean the exact opposite you have to accept how you're feeling accept what's happened
and importantly retire from trying to change the unchangeable or from wallowing in regret and you
have to do everything you can to get yourself to a place of optimism i see that as your responsibility
people won't like me saying that, right? People typically, especially
in hard times, don't like to delegate responsibility to themselves. So as hard as it can be, you have
to find and create hope for yourself and have faith, just like everything else has in your life,
that this too shall pass. And then you have to use that optimism to drive you into action,
which is for me, the third principle that I've learned over the last 12 months. If your partner's dumped you, it's time to dust yourself off and get yourself into the gym to fight back. And I don't mean fight back as in bomb their house. I mean, fight back in a mental capacity to stop stalking their Instagram, to triple down on your friendships and your meaningful relationships, to stand tall and weather the unavoidable emotional
storm and have faith and acceptance sit by your side the opposite of these principles of course
is like denial is pessimism and is inaction and these are the principles of a baby gazelle that's
decided to fall asleep with its toes dipped into crocodile-infested waters. This is a decision to lose twice.
And when I say L, right, I mean loss.
And when unexpected chaos happens like this pandemic,
which smashes our businesses and destroys our social lives
and apparently steals a year from our youth,
the first L we take is involuntary.
Shit happened and you didn't choose it.
Totally out of your control.
I get that.
But the fateful decision to choose denial, pessimism,
and inaction as our response is a voluntary second L. You're choosing to increase the chances
that bad times will become even worse times. You can make the choice not to lose twice. The first
L wasn't your choice. The second L, well, that's a byproduct of how you choose to respond. Acceptance,
optimism, and action. And I guess the second lesson I've learned this year is a lesson in
the importance of prioritization. You know, this advice of which people often give and I've often
given of protecting your time and saving your time really feels somewhat incomplete to me now
because it's like the first half of the sentence. You've got to then ask yourself, saving time to do what?
Saving time just to spend more of it doing the wrong things? Saving time to spend more of it
being more productive, just so you can get more work done? I guess better advice is to prioritize
better. If you told 19-year-old Stephen Bartlett just to save more time, he probably would have said no to a couple of things and then just spent that saved time working alone in his office all weekend, all weekend.
And that advice would therefore lead him to a less joyful, more depressive existence.
And if you told 19-year-old Stephen Bartlett to prioritize better, the first question that comes to mind is, what are my priorities? And my long-term priorities,
as I think is the case for all of us, are ultimately linked to the things that make our
life meaningful, which are friends, the joy of work, our relationships, the satisfaction of pursuing
our goals, the challenge, you know, achieving greater freedom, knowledge, the pursuit of
knowledge, health and fitness. And I guess I would have reviewed the allocation of my time through
that lens. I would have saved time only on the things that aren't connected to my macro priorities
and reinvested it in better places. And this year, because we've, you know, been forced to realize
what matters in many cases, I guess now I'm not trying to save time just for the sake of spending
it more on optimizing my productivity.
I realized that that's an incomplete sentence. And really the most important thing is just to
prioritize all of my time better and allocate it to those things that ultimately will matter the
most. Okay. So the next question in my diary is how do I maximize my earning potential? Let me
tell you a little bit of a story based on a friend of mine and his company. My
friend has a business which is listed on the stock exchange in Germany, one of the very small stock
exchanges in Germany. And having spoken to banks and from my own knowledge of how the stock market
and the public markets work, him and me both know that right now his business is worth $1 billion because of the stock exchange
he's on. If he moves his business to the New York Stock Exchange, the banks and everybody knows that
the valuation will be $4 billion. It's the exact same company, the exact same team, the exact same
products, the exact same mission. Everything's exactly the same. But because he's on the wrong
stock market, because he's on the wrong stock exchange, the value is 25% of what it would be
if he just took that same business, the same people in the same products, the same skills,
the same experiences, and just moved it to a different stock market. And I reflect on this
analogy as a wider, broader sort of life analogy, Because if I look at my career decisions over the last,
I'd say 10 years, I remember working in one call center in Plymouth and Devon, where I was getting
paid about four pounds per hour. And for whatever reason, I decided to move to a different call
center with the exact same skills, the exact same experience. And I got paid 10 times what I was
getting paid at that call center. And this is what I've started to notice in my own life is I've had this particular set
of skills, whether it's social media, storytelling, marketing, brands, whatever you want to call
it for the last, I don't know, maybe six, seven years.
And as I've moved into different rooms and different markets and different companies
and different industries, I've noticed that that exact same set of skills is valued completely differently.
And this made me reflect with that story of my friend's business in mind,
that one of the questions you have to ask yourself sometimes in life isn't just,
you know, how do I improve my skills?
But it's like, how do I maximize the earning potential for my skills?
And where are my skills going to give me the greatest reward?
Let me give you another analogy just to cement the point.
My ex-girlfriend, my ex-ex-girlfriend is a flight attendant
and she currently flies for Emirates, right?
And Emirates pay, they pay okay, right?
A lot of lifestyle perks there, but they pay okay.
She's told me that she'll get paid up to 10 times more
if she manages to get a job flying on private jets
because of tips and things like that.
The same set of skills,
10 times the return for the same set of skills
if she can move her skills
to a different theoretical stock exchange,
if you get what I'm saying.
And this is just like one of the principles
I've learned about life over the,
really over the last year,
because skills I was paid,
you know, X amount for a couple of years ago, I'm getting paid 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 times
for the same set of skills, just because I found a market where those skills are more in demand,
they're higher valued, and they're probably more rare. And so that's something I think we can
all ponder, which is asking yourself where your skills will reap the greatest return. Okay, the
next question is, do you have imposter syndrome? Have you ever had it? And can you relate? And then
there's a little question underneath, which is, and how do I shake this off? Here's the thing.
Whenever somebody does something that's outside of their zone of comfort and that they don't have a
ton of experience in doing, we all feel the same thing, right? We all feel that sort of low-key
inadequacy or that slight fear, but the reaction that everybody feels and the way that we label
that feeling is completely different. I actually think it's how you label that feeling that
determines how you perform in that scenario. So some people will say, okay, this is an exciting challenge.
I'm going to learn.
I'm going to throw myself at it.
I'm going to use that energy that I'm feeling,
those nerves or whatever it might be to focus.
Some people will say, oh my God, and they'll implode
and they'll try and retreat back
into their zone of comfort, right?
And so the response to that, the feeling is human.
The response to it is optional.
If you go through your life,
avoiding situations that give you that feeling of imposter syndrome, then I would bet everything
that I have that you aren't going to reach your full potential. I genuinely believe the feeling
of imposter syndrome is both healthy, natural, and a sign that you're putting yourself in a position
where there's pressure, which will make you grow.
And I've literally, I can't think of a moment in my life,
if you look at any sort of two-year period in my life,
where I didn't feel out of my depth.
However, that feeling of being out of my depth
never meant that I retracted from the challenge.
It meant the exact opposite.
It meant that I attacked the challenge.
I put more hours in, I focused on it.
That reaction is ultimately the reason
why you can hear my voice now.
It's the reason I have this podcast.
I very, very unfundly remember the first day ever where I tried to make a video down
the lens of a camera and in the microphone. And oh my fucking God, was that a shit show.
My friend tells me we should make a YouTube video. It's about something political. So I sit in his
house, he turns the cameras on, puts a microphone on me, and I sit there and try and get just two
minutes of spoken word out down this camera of the lens. And I sit there and try and get just two minutes of spoken word out down
this camera of the lens. And I sit there for seven hours, so much so that at the start of this two
minute video, it's light outside and it's sunny. It's like the morning. By the end of this two
minute video, if you were to watch it on YouTube, it's dark outside and you can see stars. It took
me that long, right? That long because I was sat there feeling like an imposter. People aren't
going to give a fuck what I think. I'm an idiot. I'm just sat there sweating. And ultimately it was my decision not to let that sort of knock me back and to swerve
that being in that uncomfortable situation ever again. That's taken me to this place today where
I'm doing this podcast and there's all these people that listen to it. We've got this YouTube
channel and all of these wonderful things. And that is the defining thing. It's not about avoiding
imposter syndrome. That's a very human thing. It's learning the art of embracing it. Okay, so next question is, how do you do things you don't want to do?
I've had this cross my mind a lot lately, and I'll tell you why. Because I've committed myself
to working out in the gym downstairs every single day. And I have been going every single day for
many, many months now. I think the first time I started going gym consistently was actually March last year when all of this craziness was thrusted upon us. But some days, as I've talked
about this podcast, and I know people get tired of me talking about the gym, but it's just a place
where you learn so much about yourself and discipline and your body and your brain and all
of that. So I always refer back to it. But some days I just can't be bothered. I can't be bothered to go. I can't be bothered to
train hard when I'm there. And in many ways, that's kind of like synonymous of life. There's
so many things in life that I just don't want to do. And one of the thoughts that continually gets
me to the gym and continually makes me show up and work hard is this principle I live by, which is
comfortable and easy are like really short-term friends,
but they're long-term enemies. And here's what I mean by that. Comfort in the short term makes
me feel warm and fuzzy, but then it might lead me to being obese and having arthritis and having
high blood pressure and having a heart attack in the long term. So like comfort and easy,
I just view anything that's comfortable and easy, like super comfortable and is inherently avoiding hard work
or discomfort, I kind of view that decision or that thing with skepticism. I think you're trying
to fuck me in the long term, aren't you? And I genuinely cognitively have that thought process
sometimes when my brain flutters and flirts with the idea of, oh, just skip it, Steve. You know,
you don't really want to do that. Just get an early night and swerve that thing um i think that's going to stab me in the back one day in 12 months time or 10 years time that
decision to choose comfortable and easy as my friends well they're going to become enemies and
they're actually not on my side if you're looking for growth my general principle is to choose the
challenge i'm not saying choose the thing that you fucking hate. I'm not saying choose the toxic thing
that's going to destroy your mental health.
I'm saying if you're looking for growth
and you're looking to achieve the future
that you envisage in your mind, your ambitions,
then you should choose the challenge.
And that's the thing that I continually come back to
every time Steve, you know, it hits 6.30
and I know I've got to go to the gym in half an hour
and I'm manically busy
and everything in
my head is saying, make an excuse. No one will know. Go tomorrow. Just tell yourself you'll go
tomorrow. You'll do it another time. Procrastinate. Or when I get to the gym and I don't really want
to show up and I don't want to work hard, the same little thoughts whisper in my brain.
But then I think maybe that's the enemy. Have those thoughts really got my long-term ambitions
and my values in mind
they nearly always haven't and that goes back to the podcast i did with miriel where he says that
you know when we try and procrastinate or we convince ourselves to do the things we don't
want to do it's because of some kind of psychological discomfort because i know that
these weights are heavy and i know that it's uncomfortable and i know that i'm tired and
those are if you are able to overcome those moments where it's easier and I know that I'm tired. And those are, if you are able to overcome those
moments where it's easier to quit, those are your growth moments. Those are in fact the most
valuable moments. And this again comes to another point, which I always think, which is the moments
where I want to quit, right? The days that are the hardest to get myself up and going are probably by
definition, the most valuable moments to overcome. Because that's probably,
again, thinking logically, where most people decide to stop. So, you know, that's where the
greatest returns are. It sounds like fluffy bullshit in hindsight. No, I think this. I think
that in the moment. I think it before I go to the gym. I think, yeah, this is the day when most
people wouldn't go, you know, after the week you've had, right?
So hopefully that helps.
And the conclusive point here is like,
you're connecting yourself to who you want to be
in those moments.
You're reminding yourself of the person you want to become.
And this, you know, I read this on Twitter,
I think nine months ago,
but it's stayed with me ever since,
which is how would the person you want to become
behave right now?
And if you ask yourself in those moments, how would the person you want to become behave right now? And if you ask yourself
in those moments, how would the person I want to become behave right now? What are the decisions
the person I want to be would be making? That's usually a good way to decide what the best answer
is, right? Hope that helps. Okay, so the next question is a very deep question. It's what is
the meaning of life? Very good question. Something I've
actually pondered a little bit over the last year or so as I've got more into Elon Musk's work and
space and his motivations for wanting to understand meaning. He actually says that when he was really,
really young, he started pondering the meaning of life and actually made him depressed. And it
wasn't until he read Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy that he found some meaning and optimism. But to answer that question myself, I would say
the meaning of life is to create and live a meaningful life. I know that sounds like a bit
of a cop-out, right? But what you consider meaningful is totally subjective and nobody can tell you what that
is or what it isn't. But I think you can spot it when you get that feeling inside yourself that
your efforts are resulting in progress or outcomes that feel deeply worthwhile and fulfilling to you
in any facet of your life, whether it's raising your dog or whether it's your relationships or
your work or whatever it might be. And some people find that sort of connection and meaning in building their businesses, in writing,
in hobbies or training their body through exercise or raising kids or practicing their religion.
One of the most important things I've learned on this podcast from interviewing guests and asking
them about the toughest moments in their life, specifically guests that suffered with depression. I remember we had Dan Murray on the podcast who had lost his father and talked
about how it wasn't until he did ayahuasca and saw that the world was interconnected that he
refound his meaning. And we also had Ben Williams on the podcast who said he was suicidal and
considering taking his own life until he saw an advert to be a military commando and went off on that journey
to pursue his intrinsic career ambition of becoming a commando that he found meaning in
his life and stability. And also from writing my book, there are some just crazy mind-bending
studies that I read about in the preparation for my book that totally changed my thought process
on this. One of them, right, is studying Johanna Hari's work and the
work he's done to understand the true causes of depression and anxiety. And his work continually
points to the fact that depression and these depressive feelings and this sort of lack of
orientation in life comes from people who have had something happen to them, often who have lost a
sense of meaning through trauma in their life, not what's wrong with them,
not because of some sort of chemical imbalance in their brain. The other really sort of example
that I just can't shake that's in my book as well is this study they call Rat Park.
Very, very simple. They took a group of rats, they put them in cages, and they took all meaning from
their life, literally just a white cage on their own. And they gave them a choice. Do you want to drink heroin water or do you want to drink normal water? The rats that are stuck in a white
cage alone become drug addicts, right? Then they have Rat Park, which is this rat utopia where
there's female and male rats. There's a little running machine where you can exercise. There's
food. There's a space to roam around and to explore, there's toys
for stimulation. And those rats don't become drug addicts when they're offered either heroin or
normal water. They avoid the heroin. If you zoom out a little bit and apply the same thinking to
humans, the science says that over the last two years, the life expectancy had dropped between,
I think it's 2018 and 2019, because of opioid-related deaths, because people
are getting addicted to opioids and that's resulting in their death. And again, that is
because we have an epidemic of meaninglessness, of purposelessness. That's what my podcast has
taught me and that's what my research and my book has taught me as well. Commonly prescribed
antidepressants do work for some people. I think it's important to sort of caveat my points with that. But adding additional
meaning and connection to your life does seem to be one of the most powerful antidotes for those
feeling lost, depressed, and unhappy and lacking that orientation. And just to relate it to what
we're going through now with this pandemic, you know, a lot of my friends have been calling me
and telling me that they're feeling down, right? They can't particularly describe what
exactly is causing them to feel down. But over the last three months in particular, as the UK
has gone into this, I think, third lockdown, I've really grown concerned about some of my friends.
And the advice that I continually give them centres around the point I've just made,
which is to find things that will
give them meaning. Life before pre-lockdown gave you meaning. You wake up in the morning, you go to
the office, you've got colleagues and friends, and then you, you know, you go to the club, you go to
watch your favorite football team play, you go and see your mom and your dad, your grandparents.
Life was full of meaning before. Now it's been pulled from you. So now it becomes your
responsibility if you want to, you know, maintain those good feelings to go and get that meaning right to go and create that meaning in
your life you can't assume that it's just going to show up like it used to so we and this is goes
back to one of my points which is we really have to fight back you have to go and get it and you
know i'll give you an example that relates to me personally the weekends right, right? So my team and me, we work,
you know, in this building through the week, the weekends come around. I have fucking nothing to
do. I'm a single guy. I have nothing to do. It's me and my dog, right? And he's not a barrel of
laughs, to be honest, very simple guy. So he doesn't do an awful lot. And so what I've started
to do on the weekends is to really take time to pursue some of my hobbies, which I would never
normally do. I've started to DJ all the time. I'm now learning to DJ. I do a DJ lesson every
single weekend via Zoom. I'm reading books that I used to love reading, philosophy books, and I'm
doing this actually not because I want to, but because I know I have to keep my life full of
intrinsic passions and meaning, especially at a time when so much of that has been robbed
by this pandemic. So that's the long way around the houses. But for me, that really is the meaning
of life, to create a meaningful life. And as I say, in these times, it's more important than
ever that you fight for that meaning. Okay, so the next question is a really,
really great question, which is, what is something you miss about being poor that
you think you'll never get back?
The Stoic people used to talk about this concept of hedonistic adaptation and the hedonistic treadmill. And I'll give you an example that's really easy to understand. I remember at 23 years
old when I took my first flight to Thailand, I think it was 21 years old, to Thailand with my
business partner Dom. And I remember getting on that plane and just like, because I'd never really
been on a plane before, other than when I was a baby coming over from Africa
I remember like being so in awe of the fact that we were on this like metal ship that was flying
across the ocean and they were like giving me snacks and free water and do I want a coke and
I'm sat there in the economy section just like oh my god? Totally like full of like joy and appreciation for everything.
And the principles of like hedonistic adaptation
say that once you've been exposed
to a certain level of joy
or a certain level of like,
I don't know, gluttony or like, you know,
material possessions,
your satisfaction starts to decay over time.
And obviously as I got, you know,
more and more money
and I got on flights every week
and then eventually I upgraded to business class and then like first class. And, you know,
even got myself on a private jet a couple of times. Your appreciation for the small things
wanes. The stoic people would take the good things out of their life as a practice just so that they
would appreciate them again. And I think that's one of the things that I definitely miss. I've
got nice things all the time and that is a blessing
and a curse. Imagine some rich guy talking about he's sick of nice things, but there's truth to
that. Like you lose appreciation for things that used to mean so much to you. And when you look at
hedonistic adaptation and the hedonistic treadmill, you now require even more to give you that same
level of thrill and joy and satisfaction. That's a really sad
thing. It's kind of an unavoidable thing to some degree, but with all things in life, you can really
make a conscious effort to be grateful and to take moments, not to let life pass you by,
all these wonderful things pass you by. So the other point is, you know, there's that phrase,
ignorance is bliss, and it totally applies to this question as well. When I was 18 years old,
and I thought the meaning and point of life
was to buy fast cars
and to have a million quid in the bank account
and to pursue those kinds of things,
there was some bliss to that.
I thought I had it figured out.
I thought I understood
that the pursuit of greater happiness
was just more stuff, more money.
And that was quite blissful.
I didn't have it now at 18.
I didn't have it.
So I thought, okay, that creates real meaning in my life. All I have to do is get more money. And that was quite blissful. I didn't have it now at 18. I didn't have it. So I thought,
okay, that creates real meaning in my life. All I have to do is get more money and then my life
will be more meaningful and full of joy. And then upon getting the money, I realized that that's not
the case. And I remember watching an interview by the founder of Spotify, Daniel Ek, where he says
the exact same thing. He's an insecure kid growing up, bit of a geek,
and then he gets all this money, not from Spotify, but from the business before.
And he has this deep existential crisis where he's like, oh my God, this wasn't it.
And he had to then go on the journey of finding out exactly what mattered to him.
And I'm still on that journey. This is why I talk so much about meaning and purpose in this podcast,
because I'm still figuring out where I should I still, this is why I talk so much about meaning and purpose in this podcast, because I'm still figuring out
like where I should be prioritizing my time
in order to reap the greatest returns
as it relates to fulfillment.
And I think, I didn't think about those things
when I was 18 and I was broke,
but getting what you aim for
is the best way to find out
if it's actually what you wanted.
And I was this young kid chasing material things
and probably passion, mistaking it for happiness.
As I got closer to it, it moved off into the distance like a mirage or something or a rainbow.
We all know that guy who has a two-bedroom house in a small area, married to his wife,
one kid, two kids, looks forward to going to the pub on the weekends and supporting his favorite
team. Those individuals who live the most simple lives and who are happier with less, to me, from my experience generally,
seem to be much more fulfilled than my friends that are successful billionaires. And my friends
that are billionaires, but also intellectuals and sort of like low-key philosophers, are the most
fucked, right? Because they really have got pretty existential and asked themselves, what is the purpose of life? That's what I mean by ignorance is bliss. And my third point in
answer to this question relates to challenge. When I was 18 years old, starting out in business,
living in Moss Side in Manchester, I had absolutely nothing. I just dropped out of university and I'm
basically stood at the bottom of this big ambitious mountain that I've told myself I'm
going to climb and I've told myself I'm going to accomplish. And I'm looking up at it excited, terrified, but hopeful and yeah, excited. That's
the key feeling. And then you climb the mountain, right? The mountain for me was like financial
freedom. It was accomplishment. Maybe for my ego, it was like recognition to some degree. I have all
of those things now. And so when you get to this point
where you've accomplished many of your goals, you have to make a very conscious, active effort
to create new, even bigger goals. Goals that will match the same level of excitement and challenge
that you had when you're 18. And it's not easy because you don't become financially free twice
unless you lose it all, right? So my goals have to be way bigger to give me that same level of like hunger and grit and,
you know, determination that I need to stay stabilized and to be happy. And I guess it's
a crazy thing to say, but to some degree, I miss like not being at the bottom. I miss not having those massive,
this just Mount Everest in front of me. And this is what I've seen in, you know, many of my friends
who are entrepreneurs and even some of my idols is when they get to that point, when Elon sold
PayPal or when Bill Gates sold Microsoft, they then go and take on some of these tremendous,
you know, philanthropic challenges. It's no surprise that every billionaire becomes this crazy, massive philanthropist
and tries to take on
some of the world's most existential problems, right?
It's no surprise that Elon is doing,
trying to save the planet and take us to a new one
because he will not be able to find a sense of fulfillment
and happiness in doing another PayPal.
He just won't find it.
And in many respects,
this is why I think people who are tremendously ambitious
have a bit of a curse.
I've spoken to a lot of my friends that run businesses. You are obsessive about progress
and challenge and ambition and reaching the next milestone. And I think a lot of them would
actually, if they could just press a button and trade their life for a much simpler life,
someone who doesn't wake up every single day and check their WhatsApp for 30 different messages
about their business on fire in five different countries. If they could press a button and live a simple life and be content in that life, I think
most of them probably would. Many of them would. If they wouldn't, maybe they're twisted enough not
to realize that the meaning of life is to be happy. So if I gave them a happiness button,
maybe some of the psychopaths would still opt for their current life. I've got one particular
friend in mind who I won't name, who sat me down about two
years ago, and he's very, very successful. He's probably a billionaire by now. And he confided
in me that he wished his life could be simpler. He wished he didn't have the level of ambition he
had. He told me this one story about going around to someone's house, and they're a very, very normal
family with not very much at all. And they just sat there drinking tea. And he said, I was sat
there thinking, I wish this was my life. This is a billionaire with more sports cars than
I've ever seen in my entire life in one driveway, wishing he had a simpler life, but realizing that
he is infected with this virus, which many of us have, the most ambitious amongst us,
which stops you from being happy without pursuit and without climbing that mountain.
Okay, so the next question is, what is my greatest weakness? And when I first read this question,
a bunch of different things came to mind and different sort of parts and areas of my life. So
I'm just going to share as many of them with you as I possibly can. The first thing that comes to
mind is I'm really bad at prioritizing against the things that
really matter to me. And I know that will matter long-term. I've talked about this a lot in this
podcast. I don't call my parents enough. I don't see my family enough. I probably don't give enough
time in person to like meaningful friendships and connections and those kinds of things.
And I know I'm completely, totally convinced that those things are really, really important.
It's not that I don't understand the importance of them. It's that like my work priorities always seem to be just one, you know,
one step higher on the to-do list. My work has urgency to it. There's no urgency with calling
my mom, right? And that's kind of one of the things that I know is a weakness in myself that
I continue to strive to be better at is trying to prioritize things that aren't urgent, but in the long term are
really, really important. The next thing is in relationships. I'm like really self-centered. I,
I just want to do what I want to do. And I like, I am generally like really unwilling to compromise.
And that's an awful thing because relationships are all about compromise apparently. So I've been
told many times. Um, but I know it's a weakness of mine i am kind of like i kind of live the world in my own head
and if i want to just get up and go and dj or walk down the street or go in my room and just
look at my laptop and watch youtube videos doing that is quite hard when you're in a relationship
and you've got someone else to consider you have to consider what they want and you know the things
that they want to do that day and and also in relationships generally, I don't want to do much because nine to five, like throughout the week, my brain is fucking chaos.
So on the weekend, I'm not really all up for doing much, you know, that's my downtime.
And that's become a real weakness of mine. And it's made forming romantic relationships harder
because on the weekend, I don't want to get out of bed. And if I do, I just want to do something,
I just want to do nothing or something very, simple but the problem I have there is through Monday to Friday I've spent all my time on my work so
Saturday and Sunday by definition like logically have to be the time that I commit to you as my
partner so this is why I continually struggle in relationships because Monday to Friday it's not
about you and on the weekend it's about me it's about me and my downtime watching Manchester
United play and I have to I
have to learn to compromise I'm sure a lot of people can relate to that the last thing would be
because I'm so mentally bombarded with a billion things I have to do at all times
over the years the one thing that I've definitely noticed in myself is I get more and more
arguably rude and to the point which is like when at the start of my career, I was very,
I had more time and there were less things like less tabs open in my brain. So I could take more
time about how I respond to things and I could be a little bit more fluffy and soft and whatever.
But when you have tons of urgent priorities, your brain is so funny. I was talking to a friend about this this
morning, in fact, and I was just giving some feedback to one of the teams I'm working with
at another company because the CEO had basically got in touch and requested that all comms become
much more streamlined. Because when the team were using extra words, he basically, to some degree,
gets a little bit
frustrated with that because we're trying to move fast as an organization and i totally related to
that i noticed myself getting annoyed when anything takes longer than it should and this is something
that's really changed like totally changed in the last couple of years so i guess the thing that i
have to be aware of is that even in the situations where i'm just desperately trying to save time
is that i don't compromise on being a decent human being.
And I can't explain to you how hard this is
because we tend to have a philosophy
for how we act and how we behave.
And that philosophy sits deep within us.
And whether it's a landlord showing me
around a new apartment or a new office,
or whether it's an email or whether it's a phone call,
the philosophy tends to be the same, right?
And it's hard to switch between different philosophies
so i tend to treat very personal things sometimes in my personal life whether it's a landlord showing
me around an office with the same rapid urgency or my mom having a conversation with me with the
same rapid urgency that i might treat business things and i need to get better at like switching
between the contexts and behaving differently in each scenario and realizing that in some scenarios, the saving of the time is not more beneficial than the just remaining
a decent person and engaging in the situation. It's hard. And I say it's hard, not just because
of my own experiences, but I've seen pretty much, pretty much, I'd say over 70% of the highly
successful people I know become so incredibly impatient that it almost verges on
looking like rudeness, like they don't care about you, and like they are not present when you're
with them. Now, this is a really hard point to explain, but I think people who are incredibly
busy will understand this. Over the last couple of years, I've noticed that I've got incredibly
impatient with any request I get. And it's something I've noticed, not just in myself,
but in some of my friends who run very, very big, really, really sort of ambitious global businesses who are
constantly bombarded with stuff. They are some of the most like antisocial, slightly rude people
I've met. You just can't get 10 seconds of their attention. And like, just to give you context of
what's going on in my head now, right now, as I'm making this podcast, I know that I'm missing this
phone call with this PR firm. I know that I've got this major IPO coming up with this one company. I know I've got this board
meeting coming up with this company. I know I've got this IPO coming up, got this other conversation
about joining this board and this other IPO coming up. And I've got all of these other personal
things going on in my life. And this, you know, I've got to record this podcast. My brain has
just got all these tabs open. So when my PA walks up to me and she goes, hi, Steve, how's your day
going? Would you, you know, shall I pablo some dog food it just it's just
it's almost the only way i can describe it is the question is like an irritant um and what you what
i've got what i've learned over the years is like i have to understand that people don't understand
and i have to try and respond on that basis, which sometimes, especially when I'm like really tired, can be a challenge. Something that I've really tried hard to work on, but I'm still
like really not that great at is remembering to be like gracious and just a decent person,
irrespective of what's going on in my head and treating people and being super polite and trying
to be my best self every single day in every interaction. You know, I talked on this podcast once upon a
time about the day I got on a plane, I was sat in business class and I look up and it's that guy
from Man Vs Food. And we were running at the time, one of the biggest food publishers in the world,
Love Food. And so I messaged the Love Food team. There was about 150 people that got this message
in the social chain chat at the time. I said, oh my God, that guy from Man Vs Food is on the plane.
And they all said, okay,
go up to him and ask him this like famous social chain question we have, which is what's your
favorite sandwich? Long story short, when you join social chain, you get asked the question,
what's your favorite sandwich? So I jump up and I walk over to his seat in business class and I say,
hey, I got quite, boom, shuts me down. Not right now. Like shouts in my face. So I like slowly
tiptoe back to my seat in business class
and like slouch down. And then I have to message 150 people saying, oh, by the way, that guy we
all really like is an arsehole. And he would have had no idea that he was speaking to somebody who
ran at the time, the biggest food publisher in the world and had hundreds of employees.
And at some, you know, some point in the future might've wanted to do some business with him
or work with him, but now thinks he's a total arsehole. And this, for me, that moment, I'll
always remember as teaching me how important every interaction is, even the ones that don't seem that
important. And I try and bear that in mind. If you've ever come and watched me speak anywhere
in the world, which I'm sure a lot of you have, because I was a bit of a speaking hoe over the
last couple of years, then you would have known that I never ever would leave a venue before everybody's got a chance to
like take a photo or meet me or ask me a question. I would be the last one to leave my own talks
because that's the way that I would want someone to treat me. Someone that I followed and admired,
that's how I would want them to treat me. And I'm scared of being an arsehole.
Yeah.
And it's much easier to be an asshole
when you've achieved some level of success, right?
Powerful people find it easiest to be an asshole.
They can therefore also probably do the most damage
by being an asshole,
but also get away with it a lot of the time.
I believe in being a good person
as much as I possibly can be.
And I'm like clearly imperfect in many, many ways.
And I still struggle with this,
but I'm doing my very best to be a good person and to be kind and to, you know,
to never forget who I am and where I come from. Okay. So the next question is I'm scared to post my business online at the risk of failure or humiliation. Do you have any advice? This is a
very interesting thing that I don't think people talk about enough, especially when they're starting out in business,
which is how do you overcome
the sort of public transition
from just being Steve
to now being this entrepreneur
who's running this business and raising money
and giving people advice and has a podcast?
How do you like square that with,
especially in your friendships
and your personal circles,
with the person that they knew first, right?
And when we
started the business, when we started Social Chain, my business partner, Dom, who's come on this
podcast to talk about it, was ridiculed by his friends privately. Like, you know those kind of
jokes that people do where it's like a joke, but it's also not a joke. So he would post on his
Facebook page saying, we've just started Social Chain, just started this business, it's going
really well, or whatever he'd say. And like five or ten of his best friends in the world from his hometown
would jump on there with these kind of snide jokey like patronizing bantery comments uh but they were
like inherently mean comments and i remember back in the day continually jumping into his comment
section and trying to defend him and i'd get some of my other friends to jump in there and just be a bit nicer he was posting his
achievements and being like ridiculed with like not funny kind of funny banter and for me as i
reflect on what that actually was and the psychology behind his friends and knowing his friendship
group back home i'll be completely honest i think his friends saw him changing and somewhat didn't like who
he was becoming because his success kind of alienated them. And nobody, this is just a
principle of psychology that I've actually written a little bit about in my book, people are most
envious of people who they can relate to. So if your colleague at work or your friend or someone
your age is achieving huge amounts of success and they look like you and went to the same school and came from
where you come from, that inadvertently shines a mirror on you.
It means you've got no excuse and that your, you know, success or lack thereof is probably
a consequence of your own actions.
And as humans, we just don't like that thought.
And so Dom's, my business partner, Dom's social circle back home, many of them, not all of them, there was one or two key exceptions, were trying to
rein him in and saying, you know, you're one of us, stay here, don't become something that we can't
resonate with. And if you find yourself in the scenario that Dom did, you basically have a really
simple choice to make. It feels complicated and it feels like a bit of a minefield, but it's not.
The central question and the most important question you have to ask yourself
is who do I want to be and what makes me happy?
And this is a point you can extrapolate to any sort of area of your life,
even those outside of your career.
Who do I want to be and what makes me happy?
And decide what that is and pursue that thing.
Anybody that you lose in the pursuit of your happiness
is probably not someone you needed or wanted in your life
Anyway, they're probably not someone that had your best interests which by definition are you being happy?
At heart they're probably someone who was riddled with a little bit of jealousy who didn't want you to become everything you could become
So that's the framework in which you make your decision
Which is who do I want to be and what makes me happy pursue that and be open to losing people
Who no longer resonate with you
pursuing your happiness along the way. And I distinctly remember going through this myself,
which is facing ridicule and banter and little snide comments behind the scenes. I remember a day
where I'd posted something on Facebook, like one of my quotes, whatever it was, or some of my
content on my daily vlog. And a friend of a friend had made some snide little
comment about like who the fuck does steve think he is the friend had told me and it's those moments
where you can make that decision to like fall back in line and conform and to avoid criticism
had i can you imagine my life if i'd done that if i'd let a couple of comments stop me from pursuing
my my career and producing all this content, which gives me so
much intrinsic joy and fulfillment. Can you imagine if I'd let the fear of a few comments
hold me back from my potential and the things that make me happy? I'm so glad I didn't.
And in that particular case, where that guy was ridiculing me behind my back, that same person
four years later, when he went through some troubles in his life and some mental health issues, reached out to me because he was in love with my podcast now and met me in a sushi bar in
London and just sat there and asked me advice because of something I'd said on the podcast
that he initially ridiculed. And that kind of shows, that teaches me a lesson that, you know,
even some of the people that ridicule you at the start, you've kind of got to forgive whatever it
is in their nature that's making them try and hold you back. But you've also got to understand that it's not
a you problem. It's not your responsibility to control what people think of you in their head
or the image that they've created of you in their mind. That's not your responsibility. Your central
responsibility as a human being is to pursue your happiness, your truth, and the things that give
you the most intrinsic joy. That's your responsibility. And one of the things I've come to learn about
success generally in life is that it's the small, seemingly invisible, seemingly insignificant
decisions piling up over time that have the greatest impact on you. It's not our big life
choices, it's the small ones, the ones that are easiest to do or not to do. And it's the same with
bending under public pressure or criticism. It's easy if you see a friend of a friend slagging you off just to stop
doing that thing. If you allow these small, seemingly insignificant comments to nudge you
one day at a time away from the person you want to be and the person you want to become,
can you imagine how far you're going to be from that person in 10 years time?
It doesn't bear to think about.